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Natick students at demonstration demand an end to racism and bias in the schools

June 4, 2020 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Natick High School students and recent graduates gathered on the Natick Common today for a peaceful demonstration in support of their classmates of color in wake of the death of George Floyd at the hands of police. A Minneapolis Police Department officer on May 25 knelt on Floyd’s neck for over eight minutes—assisted by three other police—after pinning the handcuffed black man to the ground during an arrest. The Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s office on Monday released an autopsy report, which listed the cause of Floyd’s death as “cardiopulmonary arrest.”

Charges of second-degree murder have been brought against Derek Chauvin, who has been fired and is now in police custody. Also in custody are three former police officers who were on the scene and now charged with aiding and abetting second-degree murder and aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter. The incident has sparked protests throughout the US and around the world.

Natick students, demonstration

Against this backdrop, Natick youth say they organized the demonstration as an act of solidarity to show their personal determination to demand and enact change. The two white students who put the event together didn’t want to be named or called out for special attention through a picture of themselves that would appear in the news.

In an exclusive interview with Natick Report, one of the organizers explained the big picture: “Several student activists of color in Natick have really had to do all the heavy lifting on activism when it comes to changing things in the schools. Whether it’s changes in the curriculum or in fighting racism in the schools. It always lands on the students of color to fight. What we are trying to do here is trying to take at least some of the burden off the students of color and demonstrate that we are standing with them. That we want to change things with them and take real responsibility to enact that change. They shouldn’t have to do it.”

Another student organizer noted that the intent of the demonstration is to enact change at the most local of levels — their own hometown of Natick. “With the letter, we want to demonstrate that we haven’t had school leadership of color, and we are the poorer for it.”

Natick students, demonstration

The letter she referenced was a major part of the demonstration, a way for students to put their names, their very identities, on paper as tangible evidence that they are not just all talk.

At a table on the Natick Common, in front of the Civil War Monument, young people lined up to sign individual copies of the letter, which was addressed to Superintendent Nolin and the Natick School Committee.

Dear white people:

The first paragraph of the letter read: “My name is _______________ and I graduated/will graduate from the Natick Public Schools in ________. In response to the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and countless other black Americans at the hands of the police, and to the many protests that have followed, I have been considering the role of racial inequities in shaping my own life.

“In reflection on my time spent in the Natick Public Schools, I have realized that I was _______ years old when I had my first non-white teacher in NPS. During my entire career leading up to graduation, I had a total of _______ educators of color. Particularly relevant to this moment in time, I realized I had a total of _________ black educators.”

Natick students, demonstration
Natick, student demonstration

Read the rest of the letter:

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Embracing diversity, Schools

Natick Public Schools staff salutes students with car parade

May 29, 2020 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

More than 80 members of the Natick Public Schools staff, escorted by Natick police and fire department crews, divided and conquered the town’s streets via 3 parade routes on Friday afternoon as a tribute to the Natick High School Class of 2020 and all students in the system.

This Friday would have been the commencement ceremony for Natick High, which now has other plans.

We caught the action near Lilja Elementary School.

Natick school parade

Natick school parade

Filed Under: Schools

Natick school parades will have you surrounded on Friday

May 29, 2020 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Natick High School, coronavirus

Get ready to celebrate the Natick High School Class of 2020 and the rest of the students on Friday from 2-3pm, as a series of 3 police-escorted car parades descend on town.

Dozens of Natick Public School staff will be driving the vehicles as a way to honor students, who will be among the onlookers. High school grads hope to have an in-person commencement ceremony on Aug. 6 if the health crisis allows.

Students, originally scheduled to have their graduation ceremony today,  this week were gifted with yard signs, caps & gowns.

Here’s the parade routes plan, which will no doubt go exactly as scheduled. The routes start at the high school, Wilson Middle School and the Cole Center.

Download (XLSX, 7KB)

Filed Under: Schools

Natick Public Schools virtual transfer of flag ceremony

May 25, 2020 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

We recommend skipping straight to the veterans and kids at about the 13:30 mark.

Filed Under: Schools

Taps all around Natick for Memorial Day

May 23, 2020 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

flags yard east school neighborhood

At 11am on Monday, band members are being asked to step outside to the front of their homes,  face toward a cemetery if possible, and play “Taps” in the key of Concert G Major. Percussionists may use a bell kit or keyboard, according to Wilson Middle School’s Scott Morrill.

 

Filed Under: History, Holidays, Schools

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Events calendar

  1. Wonderful Wellesley event: Free Family Fun & Games

    June 4 @ 12:00 pm - 3:00 pm
  2. Lilja Elementary School Carnival

    June 5 @ 12:00 pm - 4:00 pm
  3. Natick Art Association, Art in the Park

    June 12 @ 10:00 am - 3:00 pm
  4. Public reading of Frederick Douglass’ 1852 speech, “What to a Slave is the Fourth of July?”

    June 26 @ 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm

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