Lauren Book kicks off 1,500-mile ‘Walk in My Shoes’ trek to raise awareness about protecting children
Senate Democratic Leader Lauren Book may soon be leaving office due to term limits, but she's still running — in a way. Book just kicked off a 1,500-mile trek across Florida to teach residents about how to better protect their children and empower s…
Senate Democratic Leader Lauren Book may soon be leaving office due to term limits, but she's still running — in a way.
Book just kicked off a 1,500-mile trek across Florida to teach residents about how to better protect their children and empower survivors of abuse.
The month-long campaign is called "Walk in My Shoes." Book is running it through her nonprofit foundation, Lauren's Kids, to coincide with National Sexual Assault Awareness Month and National Child Abuse Prevention Month.
"April is a time to raise awareness and educate communities so that we can keep kids safe — and that's what our 1,500-mile 'Walk in My Shoes' event is about," Book said in a statement Wednesday. "One in 3 girls and 1 in 5 boys will suffer sexual abuse before graduating high school – and 1 in 5 children who touch a digital device will be sexually solicited online. The statistics are staggering, but the solution is clear: 95% of child sexual abuse IS preventable with education and awareness. Together, we can absolutely create change and protect childhood, and it all starts with education."
The walk began Wednesday morning at the Southernmost Point Buoy in Key West. Participants will crisscross through the state for the next three weeks, from South Florida to west-central Florida, up Jacksonville and across the Peninsula through Tallahassee to Panama City. There are more than 20 stops.
Book, a former educator, will also visit classrooms to teach lessons from her foundation's Emmy Award-winning, nationally used Safer, Smarter Kids and Safer, Smart Teens abuse-prevention programs.
"Even if we do not realize it, statistically, each one of us knows someone who has experienced sexual violence — and each one of us likely knows a perpetrator, too," Florida Council Against Sexual Violence Executive Director Jennifer Dritt said in a statement. "It is up to us all to educate ourselves, and we are proud to work with Lauren's Kids to become a part of the solution."
Book began "Walk in My Shoes" in 2010 as a way to navigate through her own healing journey, walking from the home in which she was abused for years by a childhood nanny to the steps of the Historic Florida Capitol. The walk grew over the next eight years to include thousands of participants.
According to Lauren's Kids, there are more than 42 million survivors of child sexual abuse living in the United States today, including at least 1 million children in Florida. It remains among the most unreported crimes in the country.
Registration for "Walk in My Shoes" is open to the public. Click here for more information on each stop and to register to participate.
Schedule:
— April 3: "Walk in My Shoes" kickoff from the Southernmost Point Buoy in Key West.
— April 4: South Dade walk in Homestead with MUJER.
— April 5: Miami-Dade County school visits and walk from Goulds to Coral Gables.
— April 6: Miami-Dade County morning walk in Miami from Brickell to Wynwood with Kristi House Children's Advocacy Center; afternoon walk from Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens to North Miami.
— April 7: Broward County morning walk from Dania Beach to Fort Lauderdale; afternoon walk from Fort Lauderdale to Oakland Park with the Nancy J. Cotterman Center.
— April 8: Broward County morning walk in Weston; afternoon school visit in Davie.
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