COF’s Mother’s Day Brunch!!!

On May 3, Constructing Our Future hosted our annual Mother's Day Brunch, bringing together residents, former residents, family members, board members, volunteers, and friends for a morning of food, fellowship, and celebration.

Mother's Day can be a particularly meaningful time for women who have experienced incarceration. Many have worked hard to rebuild relationships with their children and families while creating new lives in the community. Our brunch provided an opportunity to honor that journey and celebrate the strength, resilience, and love of the mothers in our COF family.

Guests enjoyed a delicious meal, shared stories and laughter, and spent time reconnecting with one another in a welcoming and supportive environment. Events like these are an important part of our mission, helping to strengthen family bonds, foster community, and create opportunities for joy and belonging.

We are grateful to everyone who attended and to the volunteers and supporters who helped make the event possible. Together, we continue to build a community where women can heal, grow, and construct their futures.

Michelle Daniel

Michelle Daniel Jones, ABD is a sixth-year doctoral student in the American Studies New York University. Michelle’s dissertation focuses on creative liberation strategies of incarcerated people. As an organizer, collaborator, and subject matter expert she creates opportunities to speak truth to power and serves in the development and operation of taskforces and initiatives to reduce harm and end mass incarceration. She has joined Second Chance Educational Alliance as a Senior Research Consultant and the Women Transcending Oral History Project as a co-researcher. and serves on the boards of Worth Rises and Correctional Association of New York and advisory boards of the Jamii Sisterhood, the Survivor’s Justice Project, The Education Trust, Urban Institute and ITHAKA's Higher Ed in Prison Project.

She is Executive Director of Constructing Our Future, a housing organization created by incarcerated women in Indiana. Michelle author and co-editor of the award-winning Who Would Believe a Prisoner: Indiana Women’s Carceral Institutions, 1848-1920, published by the New Press. As an artist, Michelle finds ways to funnel her research into theater, dance and photography. Her co-authored play, “The Duchess of Stringtown” was produced in 2017 in Indianapolis and New York and her artist installation about weaponized stigma, “Point of Triangulation,” ran in New York 2019 and 2020, Philadelphia 2021 with a public mural. “Makes Me Wanna Holla: Art, Death and Imprisonment, explores COVID-19 in prisons, ran in Chicago 2023 and producer on the film, Degrees of Freedom that premiered in 2024.

https://www.michelledanieljones@gmail.com
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