Gilgal Community Open House

Celebrating 20 Years of Restoring Lives Through Christ

Date: Thursday, September 12, 2025
Time: 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM
Location: Gilgal Campus | 541 Mobile Avenue, SW Atlanta, GA 30315

Experience the Heart of Gilgal

For the past 20 years, Gilgal has walked alongside nearly 1,000 homeless women seeking to break free from addiction and begin new lives rooted in hope, purpose, and lasting freedom through Christ.

RSVP

Email your RSVP to info@womenofgilgal.org

Gilgal Board & Community Day of Service

Come Be Part of a Legacy of Transformation

This summer, as part of Gilgal’s 20th Anniversary Celebration, we invite you to be a part of something deeply meaningful: the Gilgal Board & Community Day of Service—a morning where board members, alumni, ministry partners, volunteers, and friends unite to bless the campus and community that has helped hundreds of women change their name and their story.

Whether you’ve served with Gilgal before or are new to our mission, this day is your opportunity to join hands, roll up your sleeves, and help create a space of beauty, dignity, and healing for women on their recovery journey.

What You’ll Be Doing

Together, we’ll complete a variety of service projects to refresh and maintain Gilgal’s residential and administrative spaces:

  • Lawn care & landscaping
  • Tree trimming & flower planting
  • Pressure washing & outdoor cleaning
  • Painting & beautifying key areas
  • Organizing, decluttering & window washing
  • Detailing Gilgal’s transport vehicles

No special skills are required—just a willing heart. We’ll provide step-by-step instructions. Volunteers will work in teams with clearly defined roles and team leaders to guide each
project.

Schedule of the Day

  • 8:30 AM – 9:00 AM: Welcome, Introductions & Team Assignments
  • 9:00 AM – 11:45 AM: Service Projects in Action
  • 11:45 AM – 12:30 PM: Closing Remarks, Refreshments & Tours

Meet our Board of Directors, staff, clients, and other community partners. Join us for a closing reflection, ministry update, and guided tour of the Gilgal campus.

Why It Matters

Your service does more than improve our grounds—it sows hope, dignity, and restoration in the lives of women working hard to reclaim their purpose. Your presence communicates: “You matter. You’re not alone.”

Together, we’re building more than clean spaces—we’re helping build new lives in Christ.

How to Get Involved

Ready to serve? Sign up today by emailing info@womenofgilgal.org with your name and the number of people in your group.

Date: Saturday, July 12, 2025
Location: Gilgal Campus, Atlanta, GA
RSVP by: Wednesday, July 10

Spread the Word!

We encourage you to:

  • Share this event on social media and in your church bulletin
  • Invite your friends, ministry teams, or small groups
  • Encourage youth, young adults, and alumni to participate

Download our Event Flyer PDF and tag us on social media @womenofgilgal!

Let’s Serve Together

Be part of a legacy of transformation. Join us as we serve, celebrate, and reflect on 20 years of changed lives.

Together, we can make July 12 a morning to remember—and a mission that lives on.

Businesswoman Gives 20 Years to Setting Homeless Female Addicts on New Path

Val Cater grew up solving math problems over breakfast. Her parents — both math professors — turned a meal at the kitchen table into a mental workout for their four kids.

“I thought that’s what every family did,” Cater said, laughing. “But it was just limited to my house.”

That early knack for numbers eventually led her to IBM and then to her own tech company. But for the last two decades, Cater has been focused on a more human equation — helping homeless, addicted women find stability, sobriety and purpose through Gilgal Inc., the Christ-centered recovery program she founded in southwest Atlanta.

Since opening its doors in 2006, Gilgal has welcomed nearly 1,000 women, offering yearlong stays funded entirely by grants and donors. Women in the program pay nothing until halfway through, when they’re expected to find jobs and contribute 30% of their paychecks as a “ministry fee,” a sign they’re ready for real-world responsibility.

Val Cater, executive director and founder Gilgal, the residential treatment center for homeless women addicted to drugs or alcohol, addresses the Gilgal Blue Jean Gala 2024. The next gala is in October 2025. Courtesy of Gilgal Inc.

Cater said just over 100 women have completed the full program, leaving with jobs — and, in many cases, hope — for the first time in years.

“They have a new trajectory for their lives,” she said.

The typical Gilgal resident is around 41 and has battled addiction since her early teens. Some come voluntarily, others under court order. The center houses 25 women at a time, offering safety, structure, and an opportunity to reconnect with family and faith.

Breaking cycles

One woman, fresh off landing a hospital job, once ran up to Cater to ask, “What’s a 401K?” Another recalled how her childhood home had a house rule: Don’t throw “blunts” in the front yard.

“Weed would start growing, and everyone knew you were smoking dope,” the woman told Cater.

Stories like those fuel Cater’s mission — and underscore the transformation that’s possible.

Stephanie W., now five years sober, came to Gilgal under court order. She’d been arrested at least 20 times since 2012 for crimes tied to addiction — robbery, theft, prostitution.

“I have spent more time in jail than I’ve been free, and that’s bad,” she said.

Stephanie completed Gilgal’s program in 19 months, using the extra time to earn her GED. Today, she lives with family, holds a steady job at a staffing agency, and is pursuing a college degree in business.

“I had tried everything except God,” she said. “But this is the path he put me on, so I just said, ‘Why not try it?’”

Deborah M., now 62, began using crack cocaine at 26 and stayed hooked for 25 years. She entered Gilgal twice — attempts No. 4 and 5 after several failed rehab stints.

Her turning point came after an intervention by family, who’d already called Gilgal asking if she could come back. She did — and stayed.

Through counseling, she realized her addiction was rooted in loneliness and a hunger for connection. Now more than a decade clean, Deborah now owns a home and car, and works at Gilgal, helping women like the one she used to be.

Under Cater’s leadership, Gilgal continues to help women overcome addiction and homelessness “by building new lives rooted in Christian principles of love, acceptance, forgiveness, and hope,” said Leeshu Kennedy, the center’s director of operations.

A calling confirmed

Gilgal isn’t exclusively for Christians, but faith is part of its fabric. Staff talk openly about God. Residents are encouraged — but not required — to engage spiritually.

Cater’s path to ministry came in her 40s after a church class at First Baptist Atlanta. She trained as a counselor and found she had a gift for listening and lifting women up.

Before that, she spent 13 years at IBM and later ran a tech business selling data storage systems. But at 45, her life changed course. Her late husband Tommy, new to real estate investing, had bought two dilapidated drug houses that she transformed into a recovery campus.

She prayed for a “neon sign” that this was her calling. When a $300,000 startup grant was offered to her by United Way, she got her answer.

“It was just providence, I guess,” Cater said.

Now 65, she’s preparing to pass the baton to new leadership but plans to remain involved in an advisory role.

The work was a good fit for her.

“I have a genuine love for people,” she said. “And I also recognized I had something to offer.”

What’s in the name Gilgal?

When asked why she chose the Gilgal name, Cater referenced Joshua 5:9: “Then the Lord said to Joshua, ‘Today I have rolled away the reproach of Egypt from you.’ So the name of that place is called Gilgal to this day.”

Admission requirements for Gilgal:

*Women only, no children, so focus is 100% on recovery

*Clients must be homeless and addicted to drugs and/or alcohol.

*Clients must be at least 18 years old and mentally and physically able to work a rigorous program.

*Controllable mental health diagnosis is NOT a barrier to admission.

 

ABOUT GILGAL

Gilgal is a Chris-centered, long-term, recovery residence for women experiencing homelessness due to drug and alcohol addiction. Through our one-year, two-phase program, we seek to transition women from crisis and homelessness to stability and independent living. We provide food, clothing and housing, as well as a full range of recovery services, spiritual nourishment, workforce development, life skills training, and transitional support. Gilgal as a 501(c)(3) designation and relies upon generous donations from individuals, churches, businesses, foundations, and community organizations.

Gilgal Celebrates 20 Years Supporting Women In Need

ATLANTA (May 20, 2025) Gilgal, a Christ-centered, long-term, recovery residence for women experiencing homelessness due to drug and alcohol addition, based in Atlanta, Ga., is celebrating its 20th anniversary.

Since 2005, Gilgal has opened its doors to almost 1,000 women, carrying out our mission to help them build new lives rooted in hope, purpose, and lasting freedom.

“Gilgal has always been about transformation,” said Val Cater, Founder and Executive Director of Gilgal. “This milestone is a celebration of God’s faithfulness and the courageous women who have walked through our doors and discovered new life.”

The organization will host its 20th Anniversary Celebration on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. This private, invitation-only event will honor clients, donors, staff, and board members who have made Gilgal’s mission possible over the past two decades.

On Saturday, July 12, 2025, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Gilgal will host a Board and Community Day of Service. This public event invites community members to roll up their sleeves and join in hands-on volunteer opportunities while learning more about Gilgal’s history, mission, and vision. It’s a unique opportunity to engage directly with people and purpose behind Gilgal’s work.

In addition, the public is invited to attend Gilgal’s Open House on Friday, September 12, 2025, from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at its campus in Atlanta. Visitors will have an opportunity to tour the facilities, meet the staff, hear client stories, and learn more about the mission and programs.

Now entering its 20th year of serving women through its Christ-centered recovery program, Gilgal remains steadfast in its mission to transform lives – focusing on increasing client enrollment, expanding programming and workforce development, strengthening volunteer participation and donor support, hiring on-site clinical staff, and investing in vital facility upgrades and expansion.

These events are part of a larger celebration marking two decades of transforming the lives of women in recovery.

 

SAVE THE DATE: Gilgal’s 12th Annual Blue Jean Gala

Also on the horizon is Gilgal’s signature event, the Blue Jean Gala, scheduled for Thursday, October 23, 2025, at the Atlanta History Center. For tickets and sponsorship opportunities, visit www.gilgalbluejeangala.org.

“When I walked through Gilgal’s doors, I had nothing – not event hope,” said Deborah, a program alumni. “They gave me structure, love, and a reason to believe again. Today, I have a job, my own home, and most importantly, peace.”

 

ABOUT GILGAL

Gilgal is a Chris-centered, long-term, recovery residence for women experiencing homelessness due to drug and alcohol addiction. Through our one-year, two-phase program, we seek to transition women from crisis and homelessness to stability and independent living. We provide food, clothing and housing, as well as a full range of recovery services, spiritual nourishment, workforce development, life skills training, and transitional support. Gilgal as a 501(c)(3) designation and relies upon generous donations from individuals, churches, businesses, foundations, and community organizations.