Breaking Free's Founders, Board & Staff
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Nadia Telsey Co-Founder, Executive Director + Instructor Nadia has been involved in the anti-violence movement and teaching self defense since 1971 and gives classes and workshops throughout the world. She began training in martial arts in 1970 with Sensei Gerald Orange in NYC. Before moving to Oregon in 1981 she co founded Brooklyn Women's Martial Arts (aka the Center for Anti-Violence Education) and the National Women's Martial Arts Association. She currently sits on the self defense instructors' certification board of the latter organization. She has developed and instructed self defense programs for women, children, teens, seniors and people with disabilities, teaching thousands of people in a variety of settings. For the past decade she has been teaching at University of Oregon, throughout the state of Oregon, and in Mongolia. She believes that traditional notions of physical self defense are limited in addressing the issues women face. |
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Elly Maloney Office & Program Coordinator + Instructor Born and raised here in Eugene, Oregon, Elly has been involved in social justice activism for most of her life. She recently graduated from the University of Oregon with a Bachelor's of Arts, double majoring in Psychology and the Women's and Gender Studies. She also just finished her undergrad honor's thesis on feminist self-defense through the U of O's Women's and Gender Studies Program. Ever since taking Nadia's women's self-defense course in the Fall of 2002, she has volunteered for both Breaking Free and SASS's former "Empowerment Program," assisting in teaching numerous self-defense classes, workshops and presentations throughout the community and, facilitated the U of O class for 4 years. Hired as our Office and Program Coordinator in November of 2006, she keeps our office running efficiently and coordinates workhops, classes and presentations. She is one of the primary self-defense instructors and works closely with the YEESV grant, teaching girls/young women ages 11-18 self-defense and empowerment skills for safety. She was certified as a Breaking Free general women's self-defense instructor (for combined physical and non-physical self-defense) in 2006, and is also a certified "Self-Defense from the Inside Out" facilitator (2004). |
Phyllis Barkhurst Co-Founder Phyllis has been an activist in the field of violence against women since 1980. She has been working on the issues of sexual assault in Oregon since 1984 spending 7 years as the executive director of the Klamath Crisis Center in Klamath Falls and 8 years as the executive director of Sexual Assault Support Services in Eugene. Phyllis founded and served for seven years as the Executive Director of the Attorney General's Sexual Assault Task Force, an organization dedicated to improving the response to and reduction of sexual assault in Oregon. She has worked as a consultant on the statewide, national and international levels for the past 20 years on issues of violence against women in the public policy, funding, and training arenas. She has assisted in the development of 16 of Oregon's sexual assault programs and travels the state providing training to advocates, law enforcement, prosecutors and health professionals. Her most unusual training experience was being the first trainer on the issues of sexual assault to law enforcement and medical workers in urban and rural Mongolia and in Siberia. Phyllis has had the pleasure to work with and participate in workshops and classes as conducted by Nadia Telsey. She is a firm believer in the incredible value of this work and has volunteered her time to assist in the administration and development of Breaking Free. |
Board of Directors
Emerald Bogue She has spent most of her life in Oregon, and is a University of Oregon Alumni. While at U of O, she participated and facilitated Women’s Self Defense 399, taught by Nadia Telsey. Since 2002, she has done extensive work with SEIU (Service Employees International Union); organizing workers in several states, developing training programs, and recruiting new staff. She lives and works in Portland, OR. |
Rhonda McLain Rhonda McLain came to Eugene in 2005, after growing up and living most of her life in the Portland Metropolitan area. She is a wife, mother and grandmother who hopes to leave her daughters and granddaughters a safer world in which to grow and live. Rhonda volunteered for 20 years as a public education speaker and self defense instructor for the WomenStrength Program of the Portland Police Bureau, while also working for nine years at the Intel Corporation. In an effort to pass on the joy of reading, she also has returned to volunteering as a reader for SMART. Rhonda has a passion for teaching skills to women that will enhance their ability to lead active and productive lives, free from the fear of sexual violence and, to that end, is also in training as a Breaking Free general self-defense instructor. |
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Caroline Forell Caroline Forell is a Professor at the University of Oregon Law School. She joined the faculty in 1978 immediately after law school, where she served on the staff of Iowa Law Review. Forell's research focuses on legal issues affecting women. She co-authored, with Donna Matthews, the book: "A Law of Her Own: The Reasonable Woman as a Measure of Man" (NYU Press, 2000) (paperback 2001). "A Law of Her Own" has received national attention, including positive reviews from Gloria Steinem, Anna Quindlen, and Susan Estrich. Another area about which Forell has written extensively concerns the legal and ethical standards appropriate for intimate relationships involving various professionals and those they are responsible for, including attorney-client, faculty-student and doctor-patient. Her articles about attorney-client sex have spurred law reform and revision of codes of ethical conduct. Forell holds dual American/Australian citizenship. She grew up on Australia's Gold Coast and is currently working on a legal history article about how the law treated women such as her great-great-grandmother Ellen Murphy who, at age 12, was transported for 14 years from London to Hobart, Tasmania for stealing four books and a bolt of jeans material. Horse-riding, biking, travel, and her family (husband, Dick and children, Ian and Emily) are Forell's nonacademic passions. She is a founding member of Lane County Domestic Violence Council and is past President of the Board of Directors for Sexual Assault Support Services (SASS). |
David Pirie David is a Private Security Professional and on-call Public Safety Officer at Lane Community College. David was first introduced
to the effects of violence at an early age when he was the target of
bullies in at school. This led him to seek out traditional Martial Arts
instruction. |