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Dear Kang Families,
On Friday, January 12th, LWHS held a Martin Luther King Jr. Assembly. This assembly was planned by our Black Student Union (BSU) and several of our student clubs were involved. I write to you today to highlight this program and share some of the messages presented by students.
This year, the Martin Luther King Jr. Assembly involved affinity groups. These student-led clubs focused on the roles of different cultural groups in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and the movements currently building on that work. The focus was on our Black Student Union, our Jewish Student Union, our East Asian Culture Club, our Straight and Gay Alliance and importantly, the intersectionality of these groups.
I want to highlight Tyler, our BSU president, and Mr. Green, our BSU advisor. Tyler wrote and shared a poem displayed on the scoreboard as it was read. The poem included a strong message about the ongoing work to achieve equitable outcomes and the need to learn directly from people affected by racism how to create meaningful change. Here is a quote from Tyler’s poem about the messages Martin Luther King shared, and the way they have been misused:
“Because over time new messages were misinterpreted within it.
These lines are not meant to make us blind to color, or to faith, or to gender and sexuality, or to any distinctive part of individual American identities in a society that routinely isn’t.
And equality is an ongoing revolution but without understanding and recognition, we are nothing
And unless we can see society through an individual or a community’s eyes,
Our assessment of who they are and what they need will forever be a lie.”
By celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. each year, we risk losing students in the repetition of facts. This year, and for the three years I have been a principal at Lake Washington High School, I saw a new light shining on the message. Our student body listened and engaged in this assembly and learned from the diverse perspectives of our affinity group leaders.
Thank you to our students, and to the advisors who helped them prepare.
Go Kangs!
Christine Bell
Principal, Lake Washington High School
Connect with Mrs. Bell at cbell@lwsd.org
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