Driving through small-town Sebastopol on March 14 toward the Senior Center, this 73-year-old noticed groups of young students with signs gathering on downtown street corners and waving to motorists. These active participants in direct democracy joined thousands who walked out of schools across the U.S. and the world, organized by the Womenās March Youth branch.
As I got closer to the students, a variety of feelings, thoughts, and memories emerged. Tears of appreciation began to drip from my eyes, as I learned why they were protesting.
Then I smiled at them and flashed the peace sign, as I used to during the active 1960s. I eventually resigned my U.S. Army officerās commission to join the marches that finally helped ended the American wars on the people of Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. Spending a short time in jail, before being released–since I was merely expressing my First Amendment freedom of speech–was worth it.
Iām proud of our middle and high school students, as well as others, for non-violently standing up to defend their generation against those who continue to shoot innocent youth and others in Florida and elsewhere. āLives matter more than guns. Enough is enough!ā wereĀ among the signs.
Many teachers and administrators supported students wanting to join the brief marches. California Rep. Mike Thompson created a video, which schools are showing, where he encourages students to āstand up and speak outā against gun violence.
Each event had its own character. The Sebastopol rallies were relatively dignified and many protestors had taped their mouths. All corners of Santa Rosa High, in contrast, were full of students waving signs, chanting, and expressing a call to action and a show of force.
An estimated 500 students, about a quarter of Santa Rosa Highās student body, joined the walkout. In nearby Petaluma around 2000 students from a dozen schools walked out. Some wore bright orange #Never Again shirts, a prominent hash-tag, according to the daily Press Democrat.
Nearly all of the 1300 students at Sonoma Valley High School gathered with signs such as āI should be writing my term paper instead of my willā and āNever Again!ā Some waved the American flag and shouted things such as āItās time for the next generation to take over!ā
My feelings eventually ranged from a mixture of sadnessābecause these students needed to protestāto appreciation for their bravery against those who threaten the Earthās future.
āToo Young to Protest?, 10-Year-Olds Beg to Differā headlined a March 14 New York Times article. āIt started last month as a writing exercise on the 1963 Birmingham Childrenās Crusade, when more than 1000 students skipped school and marched to demand civil rights,ā the article began. So the current marches have also been a history classroom.
āThe classroom assignment mushroomed into a planāhatched by 10-and-11-year-oldsāto stage a little civil disobedience of their own,āthe article notes.
āWe Wonāt Let the N.R.A. Winā headlines another Times article, written by three New Jersey high school students. āThe killings of 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida may be the massacre that finally gets federal and state governments to enact common-sense gun control laws,ā the students commence their article.
They remind us, āThat should have happened after Columbine. It should have happened after Virginia Tech. It should have happened after Sandy Hook. But it didnāt. The Stoneman Douglas School is where our generation draws a line.ā So they imagined and then created what some organizers describe as the National School Walkout.
17 is the number of students and staff killed at the Florida school. Many of the events were scheduled for 17 minutes.
āMarch for Our Lives is not just one day,ā the students conclude. āWe must all stand with Stoneman Douglas students and say, āNever again.ā This isnāt about being aligned with one political party or another. This is about protecting this nationās children.ā
The American Civil Liberties Union helped train some students in their direct actions. The creation of a sense of community was among the marchesā goals.
Meanwhile, a series of violent threats have been scrawled on campuses, including at Santa Rosa High in Northern California.
āWe are the future of this country, yet we can no longer assume we are safe from mass shootings in our schools. Nor can we assume our elders will protect us,ā the students write.
When I arrived at the Sebastopol Area Senior Center, I spoke with other elders about the issues these youth raise. We agreed that we should support their leadership and join these brave āfirst responders.ā
āEloquent young voices, equipped with symbolism and social media savvy, riding a resolve as yet untouched by cynicism,ā is how the New York Times described the rallies.
In Lower Manhattan, Gov. Andrew Cuomo joined a die-in at Zucotti Park, the former home of the Occupy Wall Street protests.
āHey-hey, ho-ho, the N.R.A. has to go,ā students chanted as they marched to the D. C. Capital steps. They were met by members of Congress, the most popular of whom seemed to be Sen. Bernie Sanders.
Stay tuned for at least two more nationwide protests on March 24 and April 20, the anniversary of the Columbine murders, as students continue to gather steam and define their movement.
Dr. Shepherd Bliss {[email protected]) is a retired college teacher and farmer who has contributed to 24 books.
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