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#WeWalkWithShawn Is A National Movement To End Racial Profiling

21-year-old Shawn Marcus Dromgoole says his walk is not a protest, but rather a way to connect with your neighbors.
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Shawn Marcus Dromgoole's family has lived in the same Nashville neighborhood for 56 years. One day he found himself afraid to go for a walk.

"I had a full-blown panic attack; there was a forcefield in front of this porch," Dromgoole said. "I couldn't get past this step."

Dromgoole says he didn't want to be the end of his family line.

"I was 21 when Trayvon Martin died. I had lived past Tamir Rice. I lived past all these news stories, and I became terrified that I was going to be a news story number," he said.

He felt frustrated that he didn't feel safe in the neighborhood he's lived his entire life.

"On Nextdoor, there were posts constantly about 'suspicious-looking Black man walking down the street,'" Dromgoole said. "There were incidents where the police would stop me and ask me to show ID."

So, he also went on Nextdoor posting that he couldn't go for a walk in his own neighborhood because he was scared for his life. The response from his community in Nashville was overwhelming. Hundreds of people gathered to go for a walk with Dromgoole.

"In the midst of ugly presidential elections and ugly racial issues, people still showed up to get to know their neighbors," Dromgoole said. "And it was so moving. And for the past two years, that's what we've done. We've walked we walked together nine states. We walked with two people or 200 people."

He's walked in states like New York, Pennsylvania, California, and Ohio. People like Bryard Huggins and Joyce Shulman have hosted Dromgoole for a community walk.

"What Shawn is doing that I believe is super important is he's raising awareness of that fear that nobody should have to worry about," Huggins said.

"Work around building community, the work around disrupting the loneliness epidemic, the work towards dismantling institutionalized and community racism, all of that work is going to take a long time," Shulman said. "You got to play the long game. And what Shawn is doing on this deeply personal. Grassroots community kind of basis, I believe, is one of the critical elements of making that happen."

Dromgoole says it's not a protest but rather a way to way to connect with your neighbors.

"He calls it the walk sound, which I love so much," Shulman said. "Those conversations that happen when people start walking together."

His goal is to do a walk in every state to help end racial profiling.

"We're in the process of forming it into a nonprofit that's called More Than a Walk," Dromgoole said.

He says this is God's calling for him, and he has so much hope in humanity that change can happen.

"If this is what I have to do to make sure that no one feels scared to walk in the neighborhood again, I'll do it for the rest of my life," Dromgoole said.

By Elizabeth Ruiz, Scripps National Desk.