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Nov 12 - Dec 31, 2025

SPOTLIGHT: Mujeres en Accion



Mujeres en Accion helps women overcome obstacles and achieve their goals.

By Celia Jime'nez

Where some people might see struggle, leaders of the nonprofit Mujeres en Acción see opportunity. “Our main focus is to help women become economically self-sufficient and develop their leadership, so they can change issues that affect their families, so they can advocate for themselves,” says Maria Elena Manzo,
founder and executive director of the nonprofit, which launched in 2015. (The name is Spanish for Women in Action.)

Their goals are big and small, from getting a driver’s license to starting a business, enrolling in school or becoming leaders in their communities. “They talk about their goals and their dreams and then we help them overcome obstacles that stop them from achieving their goals,” Manzo says. Women sign up and receive peer support in areas including education, leadership skills and emotional well-being. They also get connected to other nonprofits or institutions that can help them advance.


Manzo says she’s inspired when she sees women reaching their goals, like transitioning from being a farmworker picking strawberries to becoming a community health worker. “We have talents, and we have all that it takes. We just need somebody to invest in us,” Manzo adds.

There are many success stories that started at Mujeres, including Celsa Ortega, a mother of four and a former farmworker. She is now a business owner who started her own organic farm, Induchucuiti Organic Farms.


Another woman is Claudia Reyes, a Mixteco woman from Salinas. She joined Mujeres as a participant during the pandemic. A year later, she became a community health worker with the VIDA project. Now she leads Mujeres’ cohorts for Mixteco speakers. Reyes says when she joined the group she didn’t have any set goals. Little by little, and while talking with other women and learning new skills she saw herself doing something other than working in the fields.

“Those opportunities made me feel like I could do it,” Reyes says in Spanish. “Working in the fields isn’t a
bad job, but it’s hard.”


Reyes adds that being part of Mujeres changed her and her family’s lives. Her eldest daughter, Maria Alexandra, 21, is one year away from graduating from university and is more involved in her community.