The Movement for Black Girls and Women

The Southern Black Girls and Women’s Consortium is a collective of Black women in philanthropy, activism and girls’ work, who hold deep roots in movement-building.

Latest News!

Join our Youth Ambassadors on TikTok Live!

Vision Board Party!

December 27th @ 8pm EST

Out With The Old, In With The New
Come learn how to make your dreams reality with Justine & Saniya

Support Black girls and women in the South!

Year End Giving!

Your gift = impact.
Your impact = change.

A must read from

The New Political Attacks On Black Philanthropy — And How Communities Are Fighting Back

by Janiece Evans-Page, CEO of Tides and LaTosha Brown, Founder of Southern Black Girls; & Co-Founder of Black Voters Matter

World AIDS Day 2025: A Faith Call to Healing and Justice

We have given over

900

#BlackGirlJoy Challenge Awards

We Fund Dreams

We act to improve the lives of girls and women across a region where funding has lagged

We have given

220

Grants to Black women-led organizations

Since 2020, We have given

500

#BlackGirlJoy Challenge Awards

Join the Movement for Black Girls & Women

SBGWC amplifies the voices, stories, and leadership of Black girls and women, creating spaces for community care, growth, and resilience

Youth Ambassadors

We engage Youth Ambassadors as ‘program advocates’ to help the next group of Black girls seeking to win the #BGJ Challenge.

We Need Your Wisdom

Help Us Select Our Next Grantee Partners. The Wisdom Council is an intergenerational
group of leaders who represent the 13 states served by the Consortium.

Spread Black Girl Joy

The Southern Black Girls and Women’s Consortium is a network of activists and philanthropists who fund Black girls’ needs with the aim to create space for Joy.

Who We ARE

The Southern Black Girls and Women’s Consortium (Southern Black Girls) is a collective of Black women in philanthropy, activism and girls’ work, who hold deep roots in movement-building. Led by four anchor institutions including the Appalachian Community Fund, the BlackBelt Community Foundation, the Fund for Southern Communities and the TruthSpeaks Innovation Foundation, Southern Black Girls has become a disruptor in grantmaking and is positioned as a catalyst to fundraise and provide greater resources toward underfunded organizations that, intentionally, support and empower Black girls and women in the South.

Fed up with reports confirming that Black women and girls receive less than one percent of the $4.8 billion in philanthropic investments in the south, Southern Black Girls launched the Black Girls Dream Fund to embody our mission and raise $100 million over the next decade to financially empower the goals of Black girls and women. To date, we have already awarded $10.2 million to 220 organizations and special projects across 13 southern states – Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Texas.

We Fund the South

Invest in Southern Black Girls & Women, Strengthen the Nation

0%
Over half of the Black population lives in South
0%
Black women and girls receive less than 1% of the $4.8 Billion in philanthropic investments in the South
0M
To date, Southern Black Girls has given $10.2 million to fund the dreams of Black girls and women in the South

Follow on Instagram

@southernblackgirls

Black Girl Joy doesn’t need a stage, just a song we all know and the right energy. 🎤✨

Whether it’s Christmas caroling or a random Tuesday afternoon, when Black women gather, this moment is usually inevitable. Someone starts humming, somebody else picks up the harmony, and before you know it, we’re running through every 90s classic like we rehearsed.

This is what joy looks like when it’s unscripted, unfiltered, and unapologetically ours. No performance. No agenda. Just Black women creating joy together, the way we’ve always done.

Southern Black Girls exist because moments like these matter. Because joy is our birthright, our resistance, and our remedy. We fund it, celebrate it, and protect it—365 days a year.

Tag a Black woman who always knows the words, or the one who never does, the one who will make up some lyrics in a heartbeat, or the one who knows she can't sing but is determined to try to belt out every single note like she's a finalist on American Idol... 😂🤣 🎶💫

#BlackGirlJoy #SouthernBlackGirls #JoyIsStrategy #UnscriptedJoy
Merry Christmas!

The greatest gift we can give ourselves is joy. 💗✨

Today, we unwrap more than presents, we unwrap possibility, hope, and the radical act of choosing joy in every moment. Because joy isn’t just something we celebrate during the holidays; it’s the gift that transforms our lives all year long.

From our family to yours, may you unwrap joy today and carry it with you into the new year.

Merry Christmas! 🎄

#BlackGirlJoy #SouthernBlackGirls #UnwrapJoy #MerryChristmas #JoyIsOurStrategy
✨ Out with the old, in with the new! ✨

Join us THIS SATURDAY, December 27th at 8pm ET on TikTok Live for our Vision Board Party! 🎨

Our Youth Ambassadors Justine & Saniya are ready to help you transform your dreams into reality. Whether you're manifesting new goals, celebrating growth, or stepping boldly into 2026, this is YOUR space to create, connect, and dream big.

Grab your favorite snacks, your creative energy, and let's build the vision together! 🌟

See you on TikTok Live! @SouthernBlackGirls📱✨

#BlackGirlJoy #SouthernBlackGirls #VisionBoard #DreamBig #YouthAmbassadors #SheGotNext #NewYearNewVision
In 1951, a 16-year-old Southern Black girl named Barbara Rose Johns stood up in her segregated Virginia high school and asked: "Are we going to just accept these conditions, or are we going to do something about it?"

She and 450 students walked out. Their strike sparked a lawsuit that became part of Brown v. Board of Education — the Supreme Court case that ended school segregation.

On December 16, 2025, Barbara's statue was unveiled at the U.S. Capitol, replacing Confederate General Robert E. Lee's statue that stood for 111 years. Now, millions of visitors will see her standing at a lectern, raising a tattered textbook, captured mid-rallying cry at 16 years old.

Barbara Rose Johns represents what we've always known: Southern Black girls are leaders, changemakers, and freedom fighters. They always have been.

At Southern Black Girls, we invest in this legacy. We fund the joy, dreams, and leadership of Southern Black girls and women across the South — because when you invest in a Black girl's dreams, you invest in justice itself.

Southern Black girls are not just the future. They are the NOW. They are the always-have-been. And we're here to make sure they have every resource they need to lead, dream, and thrive.

#BlackGirlJoy #SheGotNext #SouthernBlackGirls #BarbaraRoseJohns #BlackGirlsDream #CivilRights #YoungLeaders #SouthernPride
Hey Girl Hey! 💕 What's understood is YOU are the assignment—and so is your holiday shopping list!

Rep your Southern Black Girl pride this season with our cozy sweatshirts that say exactly what needs to be said. Wear more than merch... wear the movement.

✨ Enjoy 15% off now through January 1st. No coupon needed! Discount automatically applied when you add to cart.

Every purchase supports Black girls and women across the South.

🛒 Shop now: shop.southernblackgirls.org

#SouthernBlackGirls #HeyGirlHey #BlackGirlMagic #ShopWithPurpose #HolidayShopping #GiftsWithMeaning #SupportBlackGirls #BlackGirlJoy
Make your final gift of the year count—twice!

Your support for Black girls' dreams can be doubled. As the year winds down, check if your employer offers a matching gift program for employees, retirees, and spouses. It’s a powerful way to amplify your contribution and empower Black girls and women.

Visit www.southernblackgirls.org/doublethedonation to see if your company participates. Let's end the year strong!

#MakeADifference #GiveBack #EndOfYear #InvestInTheFuture #SouthernBlackGirls
"This tree didn't have to do anything but surrender to be who it is." 🌳

LaTosha Brown, founder of Southern Black Girls, discusses what so many Black women struggle with and what nature taught her about self care...

So many of us have been taught to be the sacrificial lamb; taking care of everyone and everything except ourselves. But what if the most powerful thing we could do is simply be still?

Inspired by theologian Howard Thurman and the practice of contemplation, we're learning that slowing down isn't selfish, it's necessary. When we get grounded, we get clarity. And when we get clarity, we move differently.

This is your reminder: You deserve time with you.

Check out the full interview where Stacey Abrams and LaTosha Brown join Lore’l and Jessie Woo on the MadameNoire Listen to Black Women Podcast.

#BlackGirlJoy #SelfCare #SheGotNext #SouthernBlackGirls
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