A Dallas school district sent elementary students home with a Winnie the Pooh book teaching them what to do during an active shooting using the phrase, ‘HIDE like Pooh until the police appear.’
The books were sent home around the he one year anniversary of the Uvalde school shooting, where 19 students and two teachers died.
Parents, like Cindy Campos, discovered the book Stay Safe: Run, Hide, Fight with their child. Her son, Bowie, was excited to dig into the new book, but Campos was hesitant after seeing the subject matter.
‘There’s nothing inappropriate about the book itself, but the intent behind it,’ she told the Oak Cliff Advocate Magazine. After finding a second copy in her other son Mason’s backpack, she gave into Bowie’s requests and read the book.
She told the magazine her preschooler didn’t understand the book’s content and thought it was about protecting himself in a fun game against his brother.
DailyMail.com has reached out to Dallas ISD for comment.

A Dallas school district sent elementary students home with a Winnie the Pooh book teaching them what to do during an active shooting

It taught kids how to run, fight, and hide if ‘danger finds us’ and was sent home around the one year anniversary of the Uvalde school shooting
Some of the passages in the book, including Winnie the Pooh characters telling children: ‘If there is danger and it is safe to get away, we should RUN like Rabbit to get away. Help friends that need it, but we can’t quit until we are safe with a teacher or police.’
Other passages tell students: ‘If danger is near, do not fear. HIDE like Pooh until the police appear…We should all hide without making a sound in a place where we cannot be found.’
It also instructs students to ‘fight with all your might’ if ‘danger finds us.’
‘Like Kanga and Roo do, it is better to fight together,’ the book read.
As the book rolled across Dallas schools, Campos was reminded some parents in Uvalde don’t have the same luxury to go home and read the book to their children – despite how uncomfortable the topic might be.
‘All I want after [the last day of school] is to take my kids home and sit on our couch. But there are families in Uvalde that can’t do that,’ she told the magazine. ‘There are going to be more families that can’t do that and this book shows me that.’

Uvalde families have slammed Texas for not doing more to gun regulation a year after the massacre

Nineteen students and two teachers died on May 24, 2022, in the school while police stood nearby for more than an hour
She said Bowie asked ‘so many questions before going to bed’ and she found herself having to ‘figure out the correct but realistic way to say things.’
Despite the district attempting to educate young scholars through an accessible way, she fears school shootings have become ‘normalized’ in society.
A family of Uvalde elementary school massacre victims slam Texas lawmakers for not enacting harsher gun laws on the one year anniversary.
Texas, which is in its first legislative sessions since the horror, has failed to make any changes since 19 students and two teachers were killed a year ago today on May 24 2022 at Robb Elementary.
A bill was introduced to raise the age to buy semi-automatic rifles from 18 to 21, and was initially passed with the help of two Republican state representatives.
But the bill died after it missed the deadline for being scheduled for a floor vote, with Nicole Golden, the executive director of the gun policy reform group Texas Gun Sense blaming state leaders for not ‘prioritizing’ it.
The group argues that the bill was voted on too late in the year to have a realistic chance of moving through both chambers.
Jesse Rizo, the uncle of victim Jackie Cazares, 9, told the Uvalde school board in the weeks before the anniversary of the shooting: ‘Almost a year now, and honestly nothing has changed’.
Salvador Ramos was able to access the school at 11:33am, and wasn’t shot dead by bungling officers until 12:50pm.
He was inside for 77 minutes before cops breached the locked door with a key, as an investigation revealed that the school district police chief wrongly believed the situation was no longer an active shooter, and ordered tactical teams not to enter the classroom.
Parents, community members and politicians alike are outraged by the response to the shooting, with some alleging if authorities had acted sooner, children who had been shot might still be alive.
A special Texas House committee report on the shooting found that the failure was ‘systemic,’ adding: ‘It is plausible that some victims could have survived if they had not had to wait.’
The chief of the small school police force, Pete Arredondo, was blamed by the Texas Department of Public Safety for the delay.
They later dismantled its entire police force, which consisted of five officers, and is still in the process of revamping it with new hires.
In late April, the state house passed a bill that would install panic buttons in classrooms and hire armed security officers for every school.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Dailymail.co.uk