Men Evolving Non-Violently

Men Evolving Non-Violently M.E.N. is a one-of-a-kind program that offers several services to help men who have decided they want to change their abusive or unproductive behavior.

Men Evolving Non-Violently (M.E.N.) is a non-profit organization operating in Sonoma County, California. It was founded in 1979 to address the issues of abuse of women and children, and made up of a volunteer collective of men, many whom were once clients themselves. is a one-of-a-kind program that offers several services to help men who have decided they want to change their abusive or unproducti

ve behavior.

- Stop the Violence (STV): Peer-led weekly groups located in Santa Rosa and Petaluma.

- Skills Building: Peer-led weekly group located in Sebastopol for graduates of STV.

- Speakers Bureau: Collective members are available to speak to schools, civic groups, churches, public agencies, etc. on issues relating to domestic violence.

02/16/2026

"Jackson Katz stood before a conference room filled with male college administrators, coaches, and student leaders in the early 1990s. He'd been invited to discuss preventing violence against women on campus.
But he wasn't there to give the usual speech. He was there to completely transform the conversation.
""Let me start with something,"" he said. ""A woman was beaten by her husband last night. I'm going to ask you questions about this.""
The room leaned forward.
""What was she wearing? Had she been drinking? Why didn't she leave him? Why did she stay?""
Heads nodded. These were the questions everyone always asked.
Then Katz paused.
""Now let me ask you this: Why did John beat Mary? What's wrong with John? Where did John learn that violence against women was acceptable?""
The room went completely silent.
For over three decades, Jackson Katz has been teaching people to stop asking the wrong questions.
Because when we ask ""why didn't she leave?"" we focus on the victim's behavior. When we ask ""why did he hurt her?"" we focus on the perpetrator's behavior.
And that shift changes everything.
Katz grew up watching the violence prevention movement treat violence against women as a women's issue—something women needed to solve, with some supportive men occasionally helping. Self-defense classes for women. Safety strategies for women. Endless advice for women on avoiding assault.
""We were essentially telling women: 'Here's how to avoid being victimized,'"" Katz explains. ""But we weren't asking men: 'Here's how not to be violent.'""
The entire framework was backwards.
So in 1993, Katz created the Mentors in Violence Prevention program—the first large-scale violence prevention initiative designed specifically for men and boys. He started in college locker rooms and military barracks, places where disrespectful talk was dismissed as harmless and problematic behavior was excused.
His revolutionary approach: stop treating men only as potential perpetrators or protectors, and start treating them as empowered bystanders who could transform their peer culture.
He taught them to recognize when violence actually begins—not during the assault itself, but in the joke that demeans women, the comment that objectifies them, the culture that normalizes disrespect.
""If it takes a village to raise a child,"" Katz says, ""it takes a village to raise a ra**st.""
Perpetrators don't appear from nowhere. They're shaped by systems that excuse, minimize, and sometimes celebrate harmful behavior.
And here's what Katz discovered that others had missed: most men actually aren't comfortable with their peers' behavior.
In his workshops, when Katz privately asks men whether they've witnessed other men saying or doing things to women that made them uncomfortable, nearly every hand rises.
Then he asks: ""How many of you spoke up?""
Almost no hands.
""Why not?"" Katz asks.
The answers are always identical: fear of losing social standing, fear of mockery, fear of retaliation, fear of appearing weak or uncool or disloyal to the group.
So Katz completely reframed what speaking up meant.
He didn't call it being oversensitive or politically correct. He called it leadership. Strength. Being a genuine friend. Being authentically courageous—not the false version that requires putting others down.
""The person who speaks up when their friend makes a degrading joke isn't weak,"" Katz tells rooms full of young men. ""They're strong enough to risk their social status for what's right. That's genuine courage.""
It worked. The MVP program expanded to hundreds of colleges, high schools, and military installations. Athletes, fraternity members, and military personnel completed the training. Research demonstrated its effectiveness—participants became significantly more likely to intervene when witnessing disrespectful behavior.
But something profound happened over the years.Every father who teaches his son that women deserve full respect is creating change. Every coach who stops demeaning talk is creating change. Every young person who tells their friend ""that's not acceptable"" when someone is disrespected is creating change.
""We can't tell young people that bullying is wrong and then reward bullies with success,"" Katz emphasizes. ""We owe it to the next generation—all children who didn't choose the culture they were born into.""
His message remains crystal clear: we need to build a peer culture where harmful behavior is unacceptable not merely because it's illegal, but because it's fundamentally wrong.
Where the person who speaks up is respected, not ridiculed.
Where young people learn that real strength means protecting others, not dominating them.
Where violence against women is understood as everyone's issue that everyone must address.
""There's been far too much silence about this ongoing tragedy,"" Katz says. ""We need to break that silence. And we need more people to join this effort.""
Over thirty years ago, Jackson Katz walked into a room full of people and asked them why they were asking the wrong questions.
Today, he's still asking. Still teaching. Still believing that people can be part of the solution.
Because the alternative—remaining silent while disrespect becomes normalized—isn't acceptable.
""It's our moral, ethical, and human responsibility,"" Katz says, ""to participate in this effort together.""
Not as saviors. Not as heroes. But as human beings who understand that creating a culture of respect is everyone's responsibility.
The question he asked decades ago still echoes today: Are we focusing on the victim's choices, or the perpetrator's actions?
Because that's where real change begins—when we finally start asking the right questions."

October is Domestic Violence Awareness month. Many organizations in Sonoma County are here to support individuals and fa...
10/09/2024

October is Domestic Violence Awareness month. Many organizations in Sonoma County are here to support individuals and families. M.E.N. has been supporting men who believe they are being abusive to loved ones for over 40 years. Abuse takes many forms, physical, emotional, financial and sexual. Abuse is learned and can be unlearned. M.E.N. Can help you realize that you are a worthy person but may have unhealthy behaviors that can be changed! Call our Helpline if you are concerned about your behaviors. 707-528-2636.

In support of local organizations providing vital services to domestic violence survivors and their families, the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors proclaimed October 2024 Domestic Violence Awareness Month in Sonoma County with a Gold Resolution.

The FJC and its partners (YWCA Sonoma County, Sonoma County District Attorney's Office, The Living Room Center, Inc, Legal Aid of Sonoma County, Ruthless Kindness, Verity, Santa Rosa Police, Catholic Charities, Diocese of Santa Rosa, Sonoma County Human Services Department, Sonoma Sheriff, Council on Aging Services for Seniors, and Victims Empowerment Support Team VEST) are so grateful for the support of our local leadership and community!

Family Justice Center services are available to ALL survivors of domestic violence at no cost. All services are voluntary and confidential.

For those seeking help, you can drop-in at 2755 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa or call 707-565-8255 Mon-Fri 8:30am to 4:30pm.

You deserve to be safe. The FJC is here to help.

Men talking about there feelings and conscious parenting!
08/04/2024

Men talking about there feelings and conscious parenting!

Men, consider this practice. Whether you’re walking behind or walking toward a woman, day or night.
06/21/2024

Men, consider this practice. Whether you’re walking behind or walking toward a woman, day or night.

05/07/2024

Truth!

In honor of Valentine’s Day, M.E.N. invites you to increase your self-care. This article from The Good Man Project  has ...
02/12/2024

In honor of Valentine’s Day, M.E.N. invites you to increase your self-care. This article from The Good Man Project has some good ideas.

No one is going to manage your self-care or your overloaded schedule. You are the only person who can make this shift.

03/02/2023

The path from homelessness to permanent housing is not an easy one.

Abusive behavior is learned. This is one way it is passed from generation to generation. While it is learned it can be u...
02/21/2022

Abusive behavior is learned. This is one way it is passed from generation to generation. While it is learned it can be unlearned. If you are aware that your behavior is harming yourself or others call the M.E.N. confidential Helpline at 707-528-2636.

Deep

Bill Talley and Jon Siberlich-Wheeler, MEN Colletive members explain how to take a Time Out, which is one way to stop a ...
12/03/2020

Bill Talley and Jon Siberlich-Wheeler, MEN Colletive members explain how to take a Time Out, which is one way to stop a dissagreement from escalting.

This explains the Time Out tool, which is a fundamental way to stop violence.

M.E.N Collective member, Jon Siberlich-Wheeler, taking about the Resuce Triangle
06/10/2020

M.E.N Collective member, Jon Siberlich-Wheeler, taking about the Resuce Triangle

This is a presentation of one of a dozen educational lessons included in Men Evolving Non-violently's (MEN) entry level Stop the Violence support group. MEN ...

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