Shreveport non-profit works to help domestic violence and sexual assault victims

For over 10 years a Louisiana-based non-profit has been serving domestic violence and sexual assault victims of Northwest Louisiana.

Project Celebration Inc. is a small team non-profit that provides direct services to survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and children experiencing violence in Northwest Louisiana.

Their reach covers parishes such as Bossier, Caddo, DeSoto, Natchitoches, Red River, Sabine and Webster.

This non-profit got its start in Many, Louisiana in the 1980s and began serving the people of its area. Northwest Louisiana was being serviced by the Providence House.

Project Celebration information available to the public.
Project Celebration information available to the public.

In 2012, the Providence house shifted its help towards homelessness in Northwest Louisiana. This shift left the area without any source of aid for advocacy in sexual assault and domestic violence.

"I was here when Providence House had a sexual assault program," said Angela Henderson, Assistant Executive Director for PCI.  "They did away with it, and then there was nothing."

This left Northwest Louisiana without any source of sexual assault programs and PCI embarked on a journey to move north. Now PCI has been serving Northwest Louisiana for over a decade.

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The women behind PCI

The work at PCI is only accomplished through dedication and heart of the women who work there.

"We just want to help any survivor of domestic violence and sexual violence know that they are worthy of living a life free from violence, that we believe them and we're here to help them," said Henderson.

Project Celebration workers De'Nita Washington (left), Director Angela Henderson and Aslan Godfrey.
Project Celebration workers De'Nita Washington (left), Director Angela Henderson and Aslan Godfrey.

Angela Henderson- Assistant Executive Director of PCI

Henderson has always had a heart for serving. After she graduated college with a psychology degree she went on to work at CHRISTUS Schumpert doing heart telemetry.

"I would monitor every heart patient in the hospital," said Henderson. "I got to learn every facet of the heart but I was unfulfilled."

This unfulfillment lead Henderson on a journey that would forever change her life.

After church one Sunday Henderson asked God what he wanted her to do. She took a phone book out and randomly pointed to the YWCA.

Knowing that she would get the job Henderson was ready to embark on a journey of working with kids but was surprised when she was taken into the domestic violence shelter.

"I didn't know it was a domestic violence shelter, they gave me a packet of stuff to go home and read," said Henderson. " I knew I was going to get the job. I knew the Lord was gonna be faithful."

Henderson got the job and worked as an advocate at YWCA until they closed in 2010 due to insufficient funds. She would then go to work with the forensic nurses as an advocate until 2012 when PCI moved to Northwest Louisiana.