by Ernie McCray
Say what?
Students are facing
being suspended from school
for standing up|
against ICE’s
muggings and
cold-blooded killings
of citizens?
Based on what?
Doing the right thing?
I mean if I was still a principal
of a school
and my students
decided they wanted to make a statement
about some goons
who had never heard of
or cared about the Golden Rule,
I’d be out there with them,
looking out for their safety
and protecting their rights
to assemble and speak
to their concerns,
their anxieties,
like I’m supposed to –
as a general rule,
encouraging them to
keep their cool.
And when the protest is done,
I would invite anyone
of them who cared to
to meet with me
and talk about their experience.
How did it feel?
What good did it do?
And I’d tell them about my history
when it comes to dissenting,
going back to the 50’s,
speaking against Jim Crow Laws
before the Tucson City Council,
being gaveled down
because two people with me
were “commies,”
and the 60’s
during the great fights
to end the disenfranchisement of African Americans
and legalized racial discrimination
and segregation,
and the 90’s
standing steadfast,
with four other colleagues of mine,
against Prop 187
after it passed,
saying that we, in no way,
would take part in causing harm
to undocumented students
on our campuses
no matter what the law
had to say.
And the students and I would write poetry and prose
and songs
and choreograph dance pieces
and improvise and create sketches
to perform
at an assembly
on all that patriotism is…
And we would take time to appreciate
the collective power organizing
can generate
when we try to better our lives
and pledge
to continue
protesting peacefully,
the nation’s most valuable tool
for change,
until ICE
begins to act civilized.
Denying students’ access
to such tried and true
avenues for human progress
would be, to a shocking degree,
unwise
and Un-American,
as their generation
is next in line,
in our nation’s history,
to keep
the hope for liberty and justice for all
alive.
Instead of suspending them
educators should act as their guide.






Thank you ??
Well said! Close to Tucson (well, by Arizona standards) I remember organizing and participating in a Peace Demonstration in front of Ft. Huachuca. Lots of good trouble but they couldn’t stop us. Az was pretty conservative but we still got quite a few positive signs. We all need to do what we can to make things better–your words do wonders.
Ernie, so glad you’re part of our little community! Thanks for this