Thompson Rivers University hosts Moose Hide Campaign event to shed light on gender-based violence
KAMLOOPS — Across Canada, one in two women has experienced an incident of physical or sexual violence since the age of 16. Indigenous women are three times more likely to experience spousal abuse than non-Indigenous women. Those are just some of the issues the Moose Hide Campaign is working to address.
“I think today is about reaching out to all men,” explained TRU Social Work student Perry Erickson. “This is for men to stand up and be honest with themselves, to take accountability for our own actions. The way we think. We need to be able to walk in a good way, talk in a good way.”
The Moose Hide Campaign was founded by Paul and Raven Lacerte while out hunting moose in Northern BC. They were inspired to draw attention to the issue of violence against women, in part due to their proximity to the Highway of Tears. The hide of the moose they harvested became the symbol of the movement.