Rhode Island Woman of the Year

GoLocalProv News Team

Rhode Island Woman of the Year

Henrietta “Henrie” Tonia White-Holder
Henrietta “Henrie” Tonia White-Holder is an unrelenting ball of energy. She has taken the most unusual path from Liberia to Rhode Island. 

During her journey, she has fought thyroid issues, breast cancer, and nearly died from COVID.

Today, she leads High Ground International, an organization that she founded seventeen years ago and has provided services to tens of thousands of Rhode Island refugees, immigrants, and citizens.

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The Story 

White-Holder left Liberia in 1980 amidst the country's civil war.

“I came —  the President was assassinated, his whole cabinet was killed, there was dysfunction in the country in terms of ethnic divisions and killings. So that's when I came here," she said. 

“My family was displaced. They were living in a refugee camp in Ghana. And when I finally found my family, I was able to help support them, money to make sure that they had clean water, a place to live, food, and what have you,” she said.

In Rhode Island, she began a professional career. She returned to Liberia and saw a country that had been ravaged by war. 

“So in 2005, after there was a transitional government in place in Liberia, I decided to go with a friend because we're looking to start an organization and do an assessment on the ground. And I got there. And I got to see a level of poverty that I could never even imagine," said White-Holder. "Across the landscape of that country, there was a displaced people camp. Everybody's homes were bombed out or destroyed. And people hadn't even stayed.”

Like White-Holder, many Liberians came to Rhode Island.

Somewhere around 15,000 immigrated to the state — only North Dakota has a higher percentage of Liberians.

 

Creating Higher Ground International

When Higher Ground was founded, it focused on West Africans, but today, it serves everyone who needs it.

When White-Holder was battling both breast cancer and COVID-19, she still worked to ensure that Higher Ground continued to serve those in need. She said many social service agencies closed during COVID, but Higher Ground continued.

“Thousands of people lined deep down Prairie, past Thurber's, Broad Street, all over the place waiting to receive food from us. And so, we did that, we served people every week. We provided. We partnered with Providence Community Health to provide COVID testing and provide vaccines with health,” said White Holder. 

“People came from Newport and Barrington, and they came to distribute the folks in communities that they've never, ever been to before. You know, and the feedback was, ‘Oh my God, Henrie, we didn't realize, even right here in Rhode Island, the level of need and poverty that people are facing,’” she said. 

The organization has served more than 50,000 Rhode Islanders. And she is far from done.

 

Now, New Facility

Higher Ground is now in the midst of transforming the property at 7 Ninigret Avenue in Providence, just one block from Cranston Street, for their new headquarters. 

White-Holder said the total cost of the project is $7 million, and the first phase — $3 million — has been raised. Funding has come from the likes of the Cox Foundation, Champlin Foundation, and the Rhode Island Health and Educational Building Corporation (RIHEBC), which provided a $250,000 loan.

Cox’s commitment runs deep. Their volunteers help out throughout the year at Higher Ground's monthly food packing and distribution days, and the business has supported Higher Ground's Cultural Gala & Village Awards.

Most recently, the James M. Cox Foundation provided a $150,000 donation to Higher Ground for their new headquarters in Providence.

 

 

3rd grade class photo from Saint Teresa's Convent, Monrovia, Liberia. Henrie is the first on the left, third row from the bottom
A Better Life

"Higher Ground doesn't just serve West African people, now we serve other groups. We have Latinos. We have people from Haiti. We have Afghan refugees, so we have a mix of people who've come to other places, and these are very good decent human beings who are here basically located, so I have a better life,” said White-Holder.

“You know, one of the Afghan refugees who is a member of our group said to me - she calls me her mother, she's learning how to speak English - she texted me a message; she was so afraid. She said you know, the new president said that you're going to deport us and send us back. She said, ‘I don't have a passport and the Taliban is back in Afghanistan operating and women and girls don't have rights there anymore,'” said White-Holder.

White-Holder said the refugee's concerns were not unique. 

“She said,'So where am I going to go with my family?’ and those kinds of questions and concerns come up regularly,” added White-Holder.

For her tireless efforts, her passion, and her relentless effort to support the American Dream, GoLocal names Henrietta “Henrie” Tonia White-Holder Rhode Island’s Woman of the Year.


GoLocal's Rhode Island Women of the Year - 2011 to 2023

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