Sisters on a Move is a club for women of all colors and creeds. The members meet every Thursday and also do community service on and off campus.
Sisters on a Move is a club for women of all colors and creeds. The members meet every Thursday and also do community service on and off campus.

On a Thursday night on the eve of International Womenโ€™s Day, the members of the Sisters on a Move club met in the William Raggio Building on the University of Nevada, Reno campus. A few weeks prior, theyโ€™d set up a table inside the Mathewson IGT Knowledge Center and handed out handcrafted Valentineโ€™s Day cards with motivational messages to passersby.

The group usually holds its weekly meetings on Thursdays, but on this nightโ€”with midterms loomingโ€”this one was to be less formal, a movie night for those with time to attend. The eveningโ€™s selection was Wonder Women! The Untold Story of American Superheroines.

Twenty minutes prior to the scheduled 7 p.m. start time for the film, women began filtering into the large lecture room where it was to be shown. With each new arrival, discussions of club business subsided and greetings commencedโ€”โ€œHow are you?โ€ most often met with a response of โ€œtired.โ€ When club member Kayla Duddridge arrived, sheโ€™d already been up nearly 13 hours and had a tension headache. Club Historian Keiyana Black sat Duddridge down in a chair and proceeded to give her a scalp massage as the group members chatted and club talk gave way to catching up.

โ€œItโ€™s like this every Thursday,โ€ said Faith Thomas, the clubโ€™s director of events.

The ladies of SOAMโ€™s Nevada chapter are busyโ€”but what is it theyโ€™re up to? Whatโ€™s the mission of Sisters on a Move?

Starting a movement

SOAM is a community service oriented club. Its members volunteer their time on and off campus to a variety of causes.

โ€œHonestly, itโ€™s just being a part of everywhere,โ€ said SOAM President Cecilia Diaz. โ€œWe go out into the community. Weโ€™re a part of the campus. Last semester we did tree planting here. Some of the girls got a chance to go and plant a tree. It was messy and dirty, but it was very, very fun.โ€

Last year, the club volunteered with local nonprofit Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equalityโ€”or RISEโ€”also sometimes known in the community as Rise and Dine. SOAM members served food and sorted clothes for RISE.

โ€œThat was fun,โ€ Diaz said. โ€œI was working with clothes. It was chaotic but still very, very funโ€”very fulfilling. You get to know people there, and conversations spark up so, like, unexpectedly and suddenly. I was glad I wasnโ€™t doing food, because I was starving and it smelled really good.โ€

โ€œI think itโ€™s mostly just getting a bunch of girls from different areas to come and give back to the community,โ€ said Black.

SOAM was originally founded in 2002 at Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Missouri. Itโ€™s another public, land-grant university, like UNR, and was founded in 1866 by black veterans of the Civil War. The club was established at UNR in 2010 by then-student Gregrette Perry, now Perry-Simmons. She received both her bachelorโ€™s and masterโ€™s degrees from the university and currently serves as the advising, recruitment and retention coordinator for the UNR College of Business.

โ€œGregrette usually bakes the cornbread for our fish friesโ€”and sheโ€™s usually the one gracious enough to come and fry the fish for us, because most of us are just like, โ€™We canโ€™t be there the whole time,โ€™โ€ explained Diaz. โ€œWe have classes and stuff. Also, Iโ€™m not confident in frying fish.โ€

SOAM hosts a fish fry on campus every spring. This year, the clubโ€™s members have been so busy theyโ€™d considered not having the event, but during this nightโ€™s meeting, they resolved to move ahead with it as usual. Itโ€™s an important event because it provides seed money for the club to start its yearly activities. Itโ€™s also an important way for the club to promote its presence on campusโ€”and attract new members.

With several of the clubโ€™s current board members preparing to graduate in May, recruiting new faces this spring will be crucial. And SOAMโ€™s members want other women on campus to know that while the clubโ€™s roots are as a black womenโ€™s organization, itโ€™s open to women of all colors and creeds.

โ€œItโ€™s for all women, for sure,โ€ Thomas said.

โ€œBut we do have a lot of women of color here, which is great,โ€ Black said.

โ€œEspecially here, on this campus, just because the diversity here is a little lacking,โ€ Diaz added. โ€œI think itโ€™s just feeling that you arenโ€™t the only one. At the same time, itโ€™s also just that you get to see people who look like you.โ€

For SOAM members who come from places with greater racial diversity than Reno, the club has provided some sense of normalcyโ€”or at least belonging.

โ€œSOAM was one of the first clubs I joined,โ€ Thomas said. โ€œWhen I heard it was a womenโ€™s club, I was like, โ€™What? This is so cool. I was hesitant to come to the first couple of meetings, but Iโ€™m so glad I did, because these girls here, likeโ€”theyโ€™ve become a very important part of my life. โ€ฆ Itโ€™s very important to have something like this on campus because, as women of color, as women in general, we donโ€™t really get much representationโ€”in politics or media or anything like that.โ€

โ€œComing to this university, I started off off-campus, so I lived in an apartment,โ€ Black explained. โ€œI wasnโ€™t in the dorms, and so I didnโ€™t really meet any people. And I found out about SOAM and was immediately like, โ€™I want to join that.โ€™ It was very difficult for me to adjust. Itโ€™s like, itโ€™s such a white space with a black face. So just being able to engage with people who are like-minded and had similar experiences to me was really important.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re all women in college,โ€ Thomas said. โ€œWeโ€™re all going through it, so itโ€™s definitely good to have something to come back to every Thursday night.โ€

For those curious about SOAM, the clubโ€™s members welcome new women to join them at their Thursday night meetings. Learn more by searching for โ€œSOAM Nevadaโ€ on Facebook.

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