Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, International (“WRWF” or “the Organization”) is a
nonprofit entity supporting the rights of women and girls, first in China, then in other
countries’ communities. The Organization’s original mission was to raise public
awareness regarding the coercive enforcement of China’s One Child Policy (now Three
Child Policy), the connection between this coercion and human trafficking in Asia, and
the other human rights abuses that arise out of this coercive enforcement. The
Organization’s long-term goal is to champion freedom, justice and women’s rights, in
China and worldwide, by exposing violations of women’s rights, equipping the media
and the public to understand these violations, and extending help to the victims
themselves, as well as to those who stand up for freedom and justice for women.
WRWF is the only organization with a network on the ground saving baby girls and
abandoned widows in China.
In recent years, the Organization has expanded its mission to exposing and opposing
the encroachment of Chinese-style surveillance and control to the United States and
beyond, through Chinese-influenced global organizations such as the World Health
Organization, the United Nations and the World Economic Forum.
The Organization currently carries out its mission through the following programs:
Advocacy regarding Human Rights in China
The founder of the Organization, Reggie Littlejohn, is a Yale-trained attorney and
passionate advocate on behalf of the women and babies of China. WRWF played an
instrumental role in debunking the Chinese Communist Party’s narrative that the One
Child Policy was voluntary. Ms. Littlejohn provided evidence, accepted into the
Congressional Record, that the One Child Policy was enforced through forced abortion,
involuntary sterilization and infanticide. Littlejohn has testified approximately 10 times at
the United States Congress, and has presented remarks at the British, Irish, European,
Canadian and Estonian Parliaments. She has briefed the White House, United Nations
and Vatican, and has appeared on dozens of television and radio programs to raise the
visibility of the plight of women and babies in China. She is an internationally
recognized expert on coercive population control in China, which continues under
China’s three child policy.
Save a Girl Program -- China
WRWF’s Save a Girl Program is designed to empower women in China to resist
pressure – not from the Chinese government, but from their own families -- to abort or
abandon their baby girls. The combination of persistent son preference and extreme
poverty too often results in a mother being pressured to give away her daughter,
especially if that child is a second or third daughter. Some mothers in the Chinese
countryside cannot eat enough calories to produce milk. Milk powder is expensive, and
the mother sometimes feels she must give away her daughter because she cannot
afford to feed her. WRWF’s Save a Girl program offers these women encouragement
that girls are as good as boys, together with a monthly stipend to assist them in caring
for their babies.
Save a Widow Program -- China
The Save a Widow Program offers monthly stipends to destitute widows, who are the
invisible victims of the One Child Policy (now Three Child Policy). For some women,
their husband has died leaving a large medical debt, and their children do not care for
them. Some of these widows are disabled or are caring for a disabled adult child, with
no reliable income. Senior suicide occurs at an alarming rate, especially among women
in the Chinese countryside. WRWF is currently restoring dignity and hope in the lives of
more than 70 widows in China.
Save a Widow – Uganda
Widows in Uganda are abandoned and impoverished, and in desperate need of help.
Many are living with HIV/AIDS and cannot afford medication. Many have children who
have died, and their living children cannot help them. Many are sick, blind or otherwise
disabled, illiterate, living in poverty and squalor. The Save a Widow Program in Uganda
helps 30 widows by providing a fieldworker to check in on them and encourage them
every month, and to provide them with a monthly $25 stipend to help them take care of
their basic needs, such as food or medication.
National and International Advocacy
Familiar with the strategies and tactics of totalitarianism as practiced by the Chinese
Communist Party, Littlejohn was concerned to see these spread beyond the borders of
China during Covid. She co-founded the Sovereignty Coalition, a non-partisan group of
patriotic, public policy-minded leaders, organizations and individuals who share a
profound commitment to the U.S. Constitution and the God-given freedoms it
guarantees. In addition, she founded Anti-Globalist International, a worldwide alliance
of individuals united by the desire to preserve freedom and human rights in the face of
dangers posed by the spread of Chinese-style mass surveillance and control through
globalist organizations such as the World Health Organization and the United Nations.
Sovereignty Coalition and Anti-Globalist International are projects of Women’s Rights
Without Frontiers.
