Chessy prout cross examination7/2/2023 ![]() ![]() I’m also grateful to my friends and family who stood by me and who are also passionate about creating a culture of consent to replace and eradicate rape culture. I am so grateful for the community of survivors and activists I have been able to meet and become friends with who have helped me on my healing journey. Many of these resources are available on our website, under the “Resources” tab! What are you grateful for today? Support can mean listening to the survivor, offering non-prescriptive words of affirmation and information about local and national resources, and educating yourself on trauma responses. Sexual assault is a crime of power and control and is so often swept under the rug, so it’s really important for family, friends, and trusted adults to acknowledge and validate the survivor’s experience and to support them in their journey to regaining power and control and towards healing. What do you think is the most important thing for family members to do when a survivor comes forward with their story? Where else can survivors find support? You had that support with your own family. Having a strong community is essential to helping survivors speak up, but you’ve mentioned that many victims lack such a support system, especially within families. We are grateful for being able to reach young people through platforms like TFW. ![]() I Have The Right To encourages communities and loved ones to listen, learn, and act: hear survivors’ accounts without prejudice and fault-finding, understand how sexual assault devastates and affects people, and provide a loving community for victims of sexual violence, one that is growing every minute around the world, and learn how to help children achieve an education free from sexual assault. How does I Have the Right To seek to support survivors of domestic violence, and what can people do to approach this issue (especially now when everyone is so isolated)? The pandemic has seen a startling rise in domestic violence, at least a 25% increase in 2020 alone. Now, we get to hear from Chessy and her family again and learn about allyship and how I Have a Right To and its values function in the midst of a global pandemic. Then, in 2020, The Fem Word’s Monika Samtani interviewed Chessy and her father, Alex, about the role of allies, particularly among the male population, in creating change and supporting survivors The Fem Word first spoke to Chessy in 2018, where she talked about her journey as a survivor, the struggles of speaking up, the online hate she received, and the importance of education to teach about mutual respect. Alongside her family, Chessy transformed this community into an organization that provides a safe place for survivors and allies to share their stories and support one another. Her advocacy trended under the hashtag #IHaveTheRightTo, encouraging a change to the victim-blaming narrative surrounding sexual violence. She testified against him, and her school turned against her. Her memoir, I Have the Right To: A High School Survivor’s Story of Sexual Assault, Justice, and Hope, recounts her experiences. Chessy Prout is no stranger to stories of sexual violence-she wrote one herself. ![]()
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