This event has already taken place.

APRIL 23, 2026 | 7:00-8:30PM ET

(via Zoom)

Click below to watch a video recording of the event.

EVENT DETAILS

PANEL DISCUSSION

Dismantling Sexual Assault is the first in a three-part series, Transforming Cultures of Domestic Violence, hosted by the Episcopal Diocese of New York Task Force on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault.

This opening session focuses on confronting the realities of sexual violence and advancing meaningful prevention and response. The panel discussion brings together voices from our communities committed to examining how deeply embedded systems of power, inequality, and cultural norms contribute to environments where abuse persists—and too often goes unchallenged.

Through thoughtful dialogue, the panel explores how individuals, communities, and institutions can move beyond silence, disbelief, and stigma to create spaces of accountability, healing, and justice.

Panelists address what keeps survivors from speaking out, what supports true recovery, and how we can collectively shift from reactive responses to proactive prevention—working toward a culture where dignity, safety, and equity are upheld for all.

PANELISTS

Moderator: Lindsey Curtis

Training, Outreach and Education Supervisor, Mt. Sinai Sexual Assault and Violence Intervention Program (Savi), New York

Read Bio…
Lindsey Curtis has been committed to anti-violence work in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and New York since 2016. She has served in a variety of capacities, form hotline work, advocacy, prevention education, and more. Currently working in New York City, Curtis is focused on prevention work, operating as the Training Outreach and Education Supervisor for the Mount Sinai Sexual Assault and Violence Intervention Program. She has previously served as a sexual violence advocate for Services Empowering Rights of Victims, Center for Family Services, Cumberland County. Curtis has presented at the National Sexual Assault Conference (2019) and the JBWS Conference (2020).

Gilbert Kliman, MD

Psychoanalyst, Forensic Science Expert Witness and Advocate, Medical Director, Harlem Family Services Social Justice Division, Medical Director, Preventive Psychiatry Associates Medical Group Inc.

Read Bio…
Gilbert Kliman, MD, graduated from Harvard Medical School. He is a Distinguished Life Fellow of The American Psychiatric Association and a Senior Fellow of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. After his child psychiatric training and training as an interdisciplinary Fellow in Science and Psychiatry at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, he founded three nonprofit organizations dedicated to childhood mental health services. All three are still vigorously functioning. All were derived from the Reflective Network Therapy experience (formerly known as The Cornerstone Therapeutic Preschool Method) he originated with the help of colleagues (including Elsa Guttla) at The Center for Preventive Psychiatry, which he founded in 1965. He founded the Foster Care Study Unit at Columbia University College of Medicine and Surgery, Department of Child Psychiatry, where he worked on a systematic test of a derivative of Reflective Network Therapy.
He continued to refine the method at The Children’s Psychological Health Center, Inc., the third nonprofit he founded, where he has served as Medical Director since 1993. He is responsible for that agency’s clinical research, supervision, and staff training. Using data and video archives from over 40 years of Reflective Network Therapy, he is now developing a controlled, multisite project to further replicate and study RNT’s clinical and IQ outcomes. He has supervised a Bay Area Reflective Network Therapy service site at the Ann Martin Center in Piedmont, California, the Family Services service site in Seattle, a service site at the University City Children’s Center in St. Louis, MO and at the first South American Cornerstone service site, Cornerstone Argentina in Buenos Aires. In addition, Dr. Kliman collaborates with Alexandra Harrison, MD, Assistant Clinical Professor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, who applies Reflective Network Therapy in an innovative project in Cambridge Massachusetts and works closely with Nancy Blieden Ph.D. providing SKYPE supervision at the Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute’s Walnut Lake therapeutic preschool. Dr. Kliman’s practice of forensic child psychiatry often leads to his testifying in federal and state courts on socially significant issues of children’s well-being; he has testified in over 300 major cases.
Dr. Kliman has peer-reviewed certifications from the American Psychoanalytic Association, the New York Psychoanalytic Institute, and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and has made scientific presentations at more than 100 scientific seminars, conferences and symposiums. He has received over 50 grants for research and service regarding psychological illness and traumatic experiences concerning young children and families.
His professional positions have included: Interdisciplinary Fellow in Science and Psychiatry at The Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Assistant Clinical Professor, Mount Sinai Medical School, Department of Psychiatry, New York; Director, Preventive Psychiatry Service, Elmhurst General Hospital, Queens, New York, Chief Psychiatric Consultant, Children’s Garden, San Rafael, California, (a residential foster care facility) Director, Preventive Psychiatry Services and Unit for Study of Mass Violence and Genocide, St. Mary’s Hospital, San Francisco; private practice of Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis (Adult, Child, and Adolescent) in San Francisco, New York and California; Director and Principal Investigator, Foster Care Study Unit, Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, where he was also Associate Clinical Professor in the Department of Child Psychiatry.
Dr. Kliman’s guided activity workbooks were first developed as a derivative of Cornerstone therapy at the Foster Care Study Unit. He ultimately developed a range of such therapeutic workbooks to help children cope with earthquakes, wars, and hurricanes. These workbooks have been distributed by charitable agencies, such as Mercy Corps, to thousands of disaster-stricken families throughout the world and are listed on the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s web site. He has appeared on national television features concerning psychological trauma and related children’s issues (Barbara Walters, Straight Talk, Health and Science News (KTVU), The Today Show). Dr. Kliman is the author of over 70 scientific papers and several books, including Responsible Parenthood (co-authored with A. Rosenfeld) which earned an international literary award (the Janusz Korczak Prize for Best Book Concerning the Well-Being and Nurture of Children). He is also the founder of The Journal of Preventive Psychiatry and served as Editor-in-Chief.

 

Wayne Weston

Professor and Advocate, Gender and Domestic Violence Studies in the Lakota Tradition, Oglala Lakota College, Kyle, South Dakota

Read Bio…

Wayne Weston is Lakota / Dakota and a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation. He resides on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota formerly known as P.O.W. Camp # 344. Wayne has been involved in various careers as an Administrator such as Executive Director Public Safety Commission, Director of Emergency Management, Court Administrator, and Director of Oyate Circle with University of South Dakota Sanford Health School of Medicine Center for Disabilities. Wayne worked for Cangleska (Medicine Wheel) which was a domestic violence program as men’s re-education instructor. He has done National and International presentation on a variety of topics mainly towards empowerment in wellness.

Juana Cortes de Torres, Esq.

Attorney and Advocate, Director of the Immigrant Legal Rights Project, Rural and Migrant Ministries of New York

Read Bio…
Juana Cortes de Torres is a graduate of Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and obtained her undergraduate degree from Fordham University. In her decades of legal experience, her practice areas of law include, but are not limited to, immigration law, workers’ compensation law, foreclosure defense, social security disability law, and municipal law — all of which reflect her commitment to social justice.
Juana joined Rural & Migrant Ministry in 2025 as the Director of the Immigrant Legal Rights Project, where she positively impacts rural, immigrant and farmworking families throughout New York State, putting in place collaborative systems to address the needs of communities from Western New York to Eastern Long Island. Her goal is access to justice utilizing advocacy, education, and mechanisms of systemic change that impact the community Rural & Migrant Ministry serves.
Prior to joining RMM, Juana was the Legal Director of a not-for-profit organization, where she led in the representation of survivors of domestic violence, stalking, sex assault and dating violence. In this capacity, she pursued U visas on behalf of victims/survivors. Juana was instrumental in developing liaisons with the Suffolk County Family Court and the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, which are critical in the certification of U Visa petitions. She also advocated for workers who were victims of wage theft. 
In addition to her legal responsibilities, Juana also co-wrote grants to address the needs of the immigrant community. She was counsel to the Migrant Relocation Program, where she assisted newly settled immigrants with their Asylum cases, temporary protected status petitions, and respective work permits, as well as representation in the Executive Office of Immigration Review. She also supervised in-house immigration counsel.

For more information or questions, please contact:

The Rev. Dr. Victoria Jeanne Rollins, at rollins.revdrvictoria@gmail.com

Bethann Carbone, Branding Ovation, at bethann@brandingovation.com

bethann
Author: bethann