As guest on radio show, Maine Commissioner Randall Liberty to talk about personal history in domestic violence household

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    The head of Maine’s Department of Corrections, Randall Liberty, is publicly breaking his silence about his father’s violence to his mother, on a Finding Our Voices radio show hosted by the nonprofit’s CEO/founder Patrisha McLean.
     
    The conversation between Liberty and McLean airs Friday, Nov. 10, at 4 p.m., on WERU-FM’s “Let’s Talk About It.” Listeners can tune in at 89.9 on the dial or by the live-stream on https://weru.org and the radio episode will be available for later listening on the Finding Our Voices website.

    Liberty’s episode will be the 31st of the monthly radio show, with past guests including two victims of the same abuser and a young man who felt guilty about going to college and leaving his mother alone with his violent father. McLean said in a news release that the show "is one more way" the grassroots nonprofit Finding Our Voices "is breaking the silence, stigma, and cycle of domestic abuse across Maine." 
     
    Commissioner Liberty, who serves on the Governor’s cabinet overseeing Maine’s jails and prisons plus all probationers, said until now he has talked publicly “only in passing” about the turmoil his father caused at home that included an arrest for domestic violence. He said he stepped up to be on McLean's radio show “because It's important that everyone understand that domestic abuse is far reaching, and [the perception that] people of influence are above it: Not true.”
     
    Liberty and the Finding Our Voices founder/CEO originally connected through the nonprofit’s programs with incarcerated women at the Windham Correctional Center. These include a “Love/not Love” art project and domestic violence-themed book discussion group.  McLean said that most of the women she has worked with at the medium-security prison have endured horrific abuse by an intimate partner and also by one or both parents when they were growing up. Jennifer Jaroszuk, who does intake at the women’s unit of the prison, estimates “at least 80 percent” of the residents are victims of domestic violence by an intimate partner. 
     
    The most visible Finding Our Voices project is its bold domestic abuse-awareness posters in business windows and bathrooms across Maine that feature McLean's photo portraits of 45 survivors, including Governor Janet T. Mills and two formerly incarcerated women, Milli and the author Melody Paul. 
     
    Commissioner Liberty’s November 10 radio conversation with McLean paves the way for something different for the women-focused nonprofit, according to the release. On November 28 at the Camden Public Library, Finding Our Voices is presenting a panel of men talking about growing up with violent fathers as well as breaking the cycle. This event caps a two-month Finding Our Voices “Let’s Talk About It” tour of public libraries from Millinocket to York. The group will be at Skidompha Public Library in Damariscotta on November 7. 

     
    Finding Our Voices is a statewide survivor-powered nonprofit mitigating the shame, isolation, and financial abuse that are the key factors trapping women and children in domestic abuse. Its programs include a Get Out Stay Out Fund, pro bono dental care, healing retreats, and support groups. For more information visit https://findingourvoices.net/ or contact McLean directly at hello@findingourvoices.net 

    Event Date: 

    Fri, 11/10/2023 - 4:00pm

    Event Location: 

    WERU-FM