The Fight for
Education is only Worth it When We also Fight for Social Justice
By: Dr. Denisha Jones, BAT Board of Directors
*This is the powerful and moving speech that Dr. Jones delivered at the People's March for Education and Social Justice*
By: Dr. Denisha Jones, BAT Board of Directors
*This is the powerful and moving speech that Dr. Jones delivered at the People's March for Education and Social Justice*
As we have been preparing for this march
and rally I have been asked countless times what the overall goal of this event
is. Some have questioned the value of marching and rallying to achieve our
goals. Personally I believe that there are many different reasons why we should
march and rally. First we must come together and celebrate the progress we have
made in the past five years. When hundreds of thousands of parents and students
and teachers have opted out of high stakes testing across the country we need to
celebrate. This does not mean we do not have much work to do but we should also
take time to celebrate. Another reason we march and rally is to make our voices
heard. We must remind society that education is not a privilege that only the
rich can afford. We must demand that public education be preserved as a human
right for all. When we march we elevate the voices of our students, their
families and ourselves.
I have also been asked what makes this march/rally
different than the one 5 years ago. And to that question I simply respond this
time we have woken up to the reality that our fight to save public education is
only worth it when we also fight for social justice. What good are high quality
schools if black boys and girls are being herded into the prison industrial
complex? What good are high test scores if our communities are ravaged by
poverty and violence? What good is a child centered curriculum if families lack
access to health care and jobs? We cannot fight for public education if we
don't fight for social justice.
Some of you might be wondering what it
means to fight for social justice. Well it means acknowledging that this
country has failed to serve all people well. We must acknowledge how
institutional and structural racism, xenophobia, patriarchy, heterosexism,
ableism, and classism have worked to oppress our non white non male brothers
and sisters around the globe. We must acknowledge that we cannot have equitable
public schools when we have income inequality. We are the 99% and we must work
together to not just restore the middle class but to eradicate poverty or at
the very minimum to lessen the effects poverty has on the ability of our
children to learn and grow. We must acknowledge that no human being is illegal
and we must support the struggles of our undocumented brothers and sisters to
live free of fear of deportation. We must acknowledge that mass incarceration
has replaced slavery and Jim Crow and is wreaking havoc in our black and brown
communities. We cannot have equitable schools when our students’ parents are
locked up for nonviolent crimes. We must acknowledge that climate change is a
very real challenge to our future and we must prepare our children to be
leaders in the green revolution. We must acknowledge that Black Lives Matter.
We must fight against police brutality and state sanctioned murder. We must put
an end to private prisons fueling the school to prison pipeline. We must
remember that any of our black and brown students can be the next Trayvon Martin,
Tamir Rice, or Michael Brown. We must put an end to preschool discipline that
unfairly targets black and brown boys and girls. We must protect our LGBT
students and teachers who continue to be oppressed and lack real protection
against discrimination. We must work to end the pay gap that treats women like
second class citizens. We must fight for a just world for all.
Some of you may ask why we should take
up the issues. You may argue that if we do not focus on education we will lose
the fight. Well let me be clear...we are losing. We are outnumbered by the big
money reformers have. We lack the ability to buy politicians to support us. We
are unable to get major media to take us seriously. But we have not lost. We
continue to fight but if that fight is to be worth anything at all we must
fight for social justice. Thank you!
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