Tyler Perry’s next project: compound for trafficking victims, others

Media mogul would provide apartments, day care, training in the industry for displaced LGBTQ youth, abused women, and trafficked boys and girls

Tyler Perry to Offer Housing to Displaced Women and LGBTQ Youth. In a recent interview on ‘This Morning,’ Perry shared what his new Atlanta movie studio complex will offer. Perry said the step he was “most excited about” is the creation of housing for displaced women and LGBTQ youth. Pulling this next phase off is building a compound for trafficked women, girls, homeless women, LGBTQ youth who are put out or displaced …, Tyler Perry, via ‘This Morning’. He also plans to offer an array of programs to the w

It’s been a big month for media mogul Tyler Perry.

First, he was praised by Idris Elba and Kerry Washington as he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Then Hollywood came to Atlanta to help him open Tyler Perry Studios. The 330-acre  studio is the first black-owned studio lot and is one of the largest in the country. It features 12 sound stages, each of which is each named after an iconic black actor.

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But even while all of these honors came his way, his thoughts were about those less fortunate.

In September, he used his personal plane to fly supplies to hurricane ravaged parts of the Bahamas, which he calls his adopted home.

And now he’s focusing on building a shelter for displaced women and youth.

"You know what, right now I'm dreaming about how do I build this shelter for trafficked girls, boys and battered women," he told Essence during his gala event to open his studio.

And during an interview with Gayle King for CBS, Perry said: "Having a compound that is a beautiful place right here somewhere on this 330 acres, where they're trained in the business and they become self-sufficient, they live in nice apartments, there's day care, there's all of these wonderful things that allows them to re-enter society and then pay it forward again. That's what I hope to do soon."

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Perry's desire to help abused and displaced people comes from his own experiences. As a child, he was physically abused by his father, whom he called a functioning alcoholic, and sexually abused by three men and a woman, all before the age of 10. Perry opened up about his childhood in a recent issue of People magazine.

“I would challenge anyone who is struggling or trying to figure out what to do to press on because whatever this pain was, there is an opposite. Here I am in it and I’m loving every day,” he told People.

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