ACEFOMI works with youth and women in contexts of extreme poverty, in communities resettled on the sites of massacres, or villages burned to the ground during the more than thirty-six years of civil war. ACEFOMI has a new mental health promoter who will be training facilitators selected by participants in past mental health workshops in villages surrounding Chajul. Once trained, the leaders will facilitate workshops with other women in the community, focusing on mental health and human rights as well as on helping women to analyze and better understand the social realities that contributed to the armed conflict. As importantly, they will explore the psychological effects of war and extreme poverty on themselves and others in the community,identify their rights as indigenous women, and develop programs to minimize risks affecting youth and women. The grant will also allow ACEFOMI to develop popular education materials to be used in these village-level workshops.