Today was March for our lives. I was in
Fayetteville, North Carolina, and got to witness firsthand the magic that
happens when young people get organized, and get motivated about something they
care about. I also was fortunate to have been asked to help with the
running of the event. As an advisor of a student group on the campus of
the Community College where I teach, the Association of Students for Social
Justice stepped up to the plate and lent their hearts, bodies and words to the
event. One of our students read a beautiful poem, and another's daughter
spoke words of power about her desire to grow beyond her eleven years. I
was honored to speak as well as read the names of the seventeen victims of the
Parkland massacre, and the text of my speech follows:
"As an educator, I am so proud of the young
people who are standing up and saying ‘enough’. When I was in High School, the
thought that someone might enter our school to cause us harm was unheard of. We
had an innocence that the youth of today have had stripped away. They aren’t
allowed the freedom of learning without fear. I’ve heard that some elected
representatives have said that they needn’t listen to children and those
children need to let the adults handle things. They didn’t handle things
after Jonesboro. They didn’t handle things after Columbine. They didn’t handle
things after Virginia Tech. They didn’t handle things after Sandy Hook, They
haven’t handled things after Roseburg, or Rockford, or Rancho Tehama
Reserve. They didn’t handle it after Marshall County, but they are
listening now. They forgot that the victims of these senseless acts of
violence have parents who loved them, they have teachers who care, and those
supporters and survivors will be voting in the next election. The victims of
the Parkland shooting inspired this movement. Their friends, family, neighbors,
classmates and teachers are keeping their memories alive by not allowing their
voices to be silenced. Whenever change is needed, voices of dissent are
silenced. A conversation about gun violence is what is needed, but that
conversation cannot occur when we are told ‘now is not the time.’ Now is
the time. And these seventeen victims’ memories will continue to inspire us to
not allow our voices…to not allow their voices to be silenced.
Alyssa
Miriam Alldeff, age 14
Scott
Beigel (Beagle), age 35
Martin
Duque Anguiano, age 14
Nicholas
Dworet, age 17
Luke
Hoyer, age 15
Aaron
Feis, age 37
Jaime
Guttenberg, age 14
Christopher
Hixon, age 49
Cara
Loughran, age 14
Gina
Montalto, age 14
Joaquin
Oliver, age 17
Alaina
Petty, age 14
Meadow
Pollack, age 18
Helena
Ramsay, age 17
Alexander
Schachter, age 14
Carmen
Schentrup, age 16
Peter Wang, age 15
Thank you!
Love you!
ReplyDeleteLove you too! Thank you
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