User:Emmacedmonds/Moose Hide Campaign

The Moose Hide Campaign is a grassroots movement composed of Indigenous and non-Indigenous men standing up against violence towards women and children. The campaign was created in 2011 by Paul and Raven Lacerte, and continued by their family. The campaign creates and distributes moose hide pins as a way to raise awareness about violence against women. Since inception the Moose Hide Campaign has distributed over 1.5 million moose hide pins, and helped raise millions of dollars for the issue of gender-based violence.

Background
The campaign was started in 2011 by Paul Lacerte and his daughters. After attending a violence against women conference in Vancouver where he was one of four men among hundreds of women, Lacerte became inspired to do something. The inspiration for the Moose Hide Campaign came shortly after the conference. The idea came to Lacerte and his daughter Raven during a hunting trip along British Columbia's Highway of Tears. The Highway of Tears, British Columbia Highway 16, between Prince George and Prince Rupert is infamous for being a location of many Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW). After harvesting a moose, Lacerte decided to use the Moose Hide as a way to inspire men to become involved in the movement against violence towards women. Using this initial moose and help of close family and friends, Lacerte cut the first 2,500 squares of moose hide for the campaign.

Moose Hide Pins
The campaign makes moose hide pins by cutting small square sections of moose hide attached to a safety pin. The pins are designed to be worn on the lapel. The squares are made by Indigenous women. The hides are donated by traditional Indigenous hunters or animals that have died on Canadian roadways. The campaign distributes the pins free of charge for any Canadian who wants one. Additionally, the campaign ships the pins free anywhere in Canada.

Symbolism
The Moose Hide campaign aims to raise awareness about violence towards women by distributing pins cut from moose hide as a way to spark conversation about the topic. Additionally, wearing a pin signifies ones commitment to honouring, respecting and protecting, women and children. Finally, the patch works as an act of solidarity against gender-based violence.

Ten Men Challenge
In April of 2017, the Moose Hide campaign launched the Ten Men Challenge. The Ten Men Challenge encourages young men to pledge in standing up against violence towards women and children.

The Ten Men Challenge takes ten male volunteers, all male students from ninth to eleventh grade, to fast for the day. The challenge's first pilot project was launched by Raven and Paul Lacerte at the Fraser Lake Elementary Secondary School. Graduates from the challenge go onto mentor students in the program until the mentors are graduated from school.

Moose Hide Learning Journey (K-12 Education)
In 2019, the Moose Hide Campaign launched the Moose Hide Learning Journey. The learning journey is an education initiative aimed at K-12 students as part of multi-pronged campaign to end violence against women and children.

The Moose Hide Learning Journey works to help teachers create a supportive learning environment. Furthermore, it urges students to explore values and perspectives that honour and respect women and children. The Moose Hide's K-12 education online platform provides lesson plans, videos and other resources for K-12 teachers and students. The technology has been piloted in a number of schools throughout the province of British Columbia.

This education initiative is supported in part by British Columbia's provincial government.

Moose Hide Day
To recognize the importance of the campaign, the BC provincial government has proclaimed February 13th, as Moose Hide Campaign Day in British Columbia.

BC Government
In 2018, the Government of British Columbia provided $2 million in support to the Moose Hide Campaign.

Newfoundland and Labrador Government
The provincial House of Assembly started supporting the Moose Hide Campaign in 2017 by wearing pins.