Who Am I?
By: Terri Michal Rector
Speech given at Moral Monday
on 9/22/14
Who am I? I
am a white girl that was born at the height of the Civil Rights Movement in a
little place in Indiana called Crawfordsville. I was raised by a single mom who
never told me who I could and couldn’t play with…she never tried to tell me
that other families were different. I
never went to segregated schools…we didn’t have segregated bathrooms or
drinking fountains. I was a kid who preferred
Soul Train over American Bandstand and I preferred the Jackson 5 over the
Osmonds. I thank God I was allowed to
make choices based on a vision that was free of the prejudices that only adults
bring into this world.
In 1987 I
moved to Huntsville Alabama. I brought
my color blind views with me. I didn’t
think about race at all when choosing housing and schools….so you can
understand my confusion and disgust when OTHERS kept bringing it up…..like real
estate agents and principals. I wondered
what kind of place I had just moved too.
After a while I gave up and moved to Madison where race was never
mentioned.
I provided
the same kind of guidance to my kids that was given to me….never making race a
factor when it came to friends, music, movies, food or anything else…..it
worked well for us, or so I thought. I
wasn’t a racist..and I lived a color blind life.
And then in
2012 a student was assaulted in the bathroom at a predominately black school in
Huntsville Alabama. She was assaulted, stripped from the waist up and had to
run down the hall that way to look for help. I knew this child’s mother and I also knew
teachers in the system. As I got insider information from the mother and from
the teachers about what happened I saw
the breakdown in the school’s communication before my very eyes and I became
incensed. I put all of the information I
had together and could see they were trying to sweep the issue under the carpet…they
were blaming the victim and refusing her a transfer away from her attackers…….but
WHY? Why would they NOT do everything
they could to protect this child?
One
question. One question is all it took
for me. That one little question has led
to another and another and another. Two
years later I am still asking questions and uncovering answers about No Child
Left Behind, Race to the Top, vouchers, charters, standardized testing,
segregation, racism, and classism.
That one
question has also led me on a personal path of self-discovery. I have had to face some ugly things about my
so called ‘color blind’ life. I realized
that through my blindness I failed to see the diversity…I failed to see the
uniqueness of the struggles….and because of that I was unable to even walk a
step in someone else’s shoes….and yet I felt I was able to do just that because
I wasn’t a racist after all. I was so
wrong. This journey has led me to begin
SOS Support Our Students and to become an administrator with the national
organization Badass Teacher Association, 52,000 teachers and advocates strong. I’ve stood against Michelle Rhee demanding
answers about Vouchers and charters and I’ve stood before our legislators
demanding that they do right by our teachers…for our teachers working
environment is truly the children’s learning environment. I have even protested with hundreds of others in
Washington DC demanding that a moratorium be put on charters before they do any
more damage to our high poverty communities.
Today I am
challenging you to ask your question…..to persist beyond the easy ‘comfortable’
answers and to make waves. Make someone uncomfortable. Talk about race. Talk about poverty. Don’t stop because someone asks ‘who are
you?’ Don’t stop because you are afraid.
So often today I hear teachers say they are afraid they will lose their
jobs if they speak out about their working conditions or parents will say they
are afraid about retaliation to their children if they opt them out of
testing. To that I will reply…..don’t
talk to me about fear until you have boarded a bus in Nashville, Tennessee
headed for Birmingham, Alabama not even sure if you will make it back alive.
Stop hiding behind your fear, allowing it to immobilize you, and to silence you, instead use it to propel you to create change.
Everyone
here knows that our high poverty students and our students of color are getting
cheated out of a quality public education and it is our duty, whether black or
white, brown or yellow, to speak for those that cannot…..that is the human
condition….to protect our young.
So, please
join me in demanding that our legislators stop using legislation like the
Accountability Act to line their pockets and those of their friends with the
monies that should be going towards education and instead find REAL solutions
to equally funding our schools so that every child can receive a quality public
education in in their zip code in Alabama. Parents and taxpaying citizens of Alabama….we
HAVE the power to create change through our voice and our vote…..WHO’S
SCHOOLS? OUR SCHOOLS!
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