The Danger of Silence
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in a 1968 speech where he reflects upon the
Civil Rights Movement, states, “In the end, we will remember not the
words of our enemies but the silence of our friends.”
As a teacher, I’ve internalized this message. Every day, all around us, we
see the consequences of silence manifest themselves in the form of dis-
crimination, violence, genocide and war. In the classroom, I challenge my
students to explore the silences in their own lives through poetry. We work
together to fill those spaces, to recognize them, to name them, to unders-
tand that they don’t have to be sources of shame. In an effort to create a
culture within my classroom where students feel safe sharing the intima-
cies of their own silences, I have four core principles posted on the board
that sits in the front of my class, which every student signs at the beginning
of the year: read critically, write consciously, speak clearly, tell your truth.
And I find myself thinking a lot about that last point, tell your truth. And
I realized that if I was going to ask my students to speak up, I was going
to have to tell my truth and be honest with them about the times where I
failed to do so. [...]
When Christian was beat up for being gay, I put my hands in my pocket
and walked with my head down as if I didn’t even notice. I couldn’t use
my locker for weeks because the bolt on the lock reminded me of the one
I had put on my lips when the homeless man on the corner looked at me
with eyes up merely searching for an affirmation that he was worth se-
eing. I was more concerned with touching the screen on my Apple than
actually feeding him one. [...] We spend so much time listening to the thin-
gs people are saying that we rarely pay attention to the things they don’t.
Silence is the residue of fear. [...] It is charring. It is chains. It is privilege.
It is pain. There is no time to pick your battles when your battles have
already picked you.
I will not let silence wrap itself around my indecision. [...] I will ask that ho-
meless man what his name is and how his day was, because sometimes all
people want to be is human. [...] So this year, instead of giving something
up, I will live every day as if there were a microphone tucked under my ton-
gue, a stage on the underside of my inhibition. Because who has to have a
soapbox when all you’ve ever needed is your voice? Thank you.
Assim, gostaria de que você utilizasse todas as suas habilidades de detetives e as discussões que tivemos até o momento para tentar descobrir qual a ideia central do texto: *
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Resposta:
O perigo do silêncio
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., em um discurso de 1968, onde ele reflete sobre o
Movimento dos Direitos Civis, afirma: “No final, não nos lembraremos do
palavras de nossos inimigos, mas o silêncio
Explicação:
amigos."
Como professor, internalizei esta mensagem. Todos os dias, ao nosso redor, nós
ver as consequências do silêncio se manifestarem na forma de dis-
criminação, violência, genocídio e guerra. eu
(me desculpe eu n consegui traduzir tudo: ()
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