Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson is leading a new effort to rehabilitate the NFL‘s image on domestic violence. On Thursday, he launched “Pass the Peace,” a new initiative to raise awareness and funds for victims, via baseball icon Derek Jeter’s new athlete-driven website, The Players Tribune.
Wilson, who led the Seahawks to the franchise’s first-ever Super Bowl victory in February, penned an essay for the site titled “Let’s Talk About It,” in which he encouraged readers to contribute to the National Domestic Violence Hotline and his own charity organization, The Why Not Foundation.
“I want us to Pass the Peace to support victims of domestic violence. The idea behind Pass the Peace is simple: It’s a promise. I’m sharing my love for you. I want to take care of you. I am here for you,” Wilson wrote.
In the same vein as the ALS “Ice Bucket Challenge,” Wilson’s Pass the Peace project encourages participants to join (by recording themselves flashing a peace sign), donate and persuade others to rally to the cause of combating domestic violence. In his own personal video, Wilson “passes the peace” to Jeter and pop star Justin Timberlake.
In his written piece, the 25-year-old superstar conceded that he was a “bully growing up” who used to “beat people up a lot.”
“In elementary and middle school, I threw kids against the wall. I rubbed their heads in the dirt at recess. I bit them. I even knocked teeth out,” he wrote. Wilson, who has donated $2 million to the National Domestic Violence Hotline, believes his fellow players are ‘reluctant to address such a sensitive issue.’”








