Peggy Moss ’88
says her fiction draws on her experiences helping victims
of violence.
Speaking
out on hate crimes Former prosecutor Peggy
Moss ’88 pens children’s book on bullying
By Gladys Um *03
A former hate-crime prosecutor in Maine, Peggy Moss ’88
had spent years working with children and adults who were harassed,
threatened, or assaulted on the basis of race, ethnicity, religion,
gender, sexual orientation, disability, or class. Drawing on her
experience defending and protecting victims of violence, Moss wrote
a children’s book, Say Something, published by Tilbury
House last May, about a girl who sees her classmates getting bullied
and teased on a daily basis at her elementary school. The girl doesn’t
say or do anything until, one day, she’s also taunted while
sitting alone in the cafeteria. While her peers watch in silence,
secretly feeling sorry for her but afraid to speak out on her behalf,
it occurs to the protagonist that these bystanders could discourage
the bullies if they summoned up the courage to “say something.”
The book is based on a story shared by a participant at a workshop
Moss gave on preventing hate crimes in schools.
Moss says she hopes Say Something will “start a
dialogue between parents and kids about what’s really going
on,” and will “encourage kids to bear in mind that they
are in the best position to make bullying stop in their schools.”
Several schools and a teachers’ college have invited Moss
to speak to their students. After reading her short picture book
to a group of children, Moss leads them in a series of exercises
to help them think about harassment in their schools and what they
can do to stop it. Say Something includes a list of resources
and practical tips on how to deal with bullying, for both victims
and bystanders. Among her suggestions are: report it to a teacher;
assert yourself instead of keeping quiet; and “make teasing
UN-cool” by not laughing at your peers’ mean jokes.
As assistant attorney general in the civil rights unit in Maine,
Moss saw first hand the deep emotional and often physical trauma
that bullying inflicts on children. She talked with students who
could not concentrate in class because their thoughts were entirely
occupied with getting to the next class without encountering their
tormentors. She met children who had gotten sick from avoiding trips
to the bathroom, where bullies would target them. She saw victims
drop out of school or resort to self-mutilation as a cry for help.
Eventually, Moss decided to develop more proactive solutions to
hate crime. “By the time a case came to my desk,” she
says, “the damage had already been done. A kid had been beaten.
Someone was terrified in his or her own community.” So in
2000, she resigned from her position as prosecutor to work as associate
director at the Center for the Prevention of Hate Violence in Portland,
Maine, for which she conducts workshops and gives speeches on how
to prevent hate crime in schools.
In 2002 she enrolled in an M.F.A. fiction program and started
to develop fiction out of her experiences. Moss, who has been writing
since her youth and took her first writing class at Princeton with
John McPhee ’53, earned her degree at the University of Southern
Maine last July. McPhee had given her advice on pursuing a writer
career: “don’t write until doing anything else feels
intolerable.” She pretty much followed McPhee’s advice,
practicing law until that become intolerable. She credits the TigerNet
Writers List, an online community of literary-minded Princeton alumni,
with giving her the moral support she needed to pursue her dream
of becoming a writer.
Moss continues to consult to the Center for the Prevention of
Hate Violence and says, “hate violence informs everything
I write.”
Gladys Um is a freelance writer in Plainsboro, New Jersey.