I am an Oklahoma teacher. This past
year many of us went on strike for better pay and working conditions.
The strike showed students, families and the whole community that
teachers in Oklahoma are strong and that we will work together for
what is right. We went on strike not only for our wages but also to
improve our students’ learning conditions.
That’s why it’s important for
Oklahoma teachers to speak up against transphobia.
As school started in the rural
school district of Achille, Okla., anti-transgender
bullying erupted on social media after a 12-year-old student
named Maddie used the girls’ restroom.
On a private Facebook group for
parents of Achilles’ students, parents called the student “it,”
a “maggot” and other anti-trans slurs. One parent suggested that
castrating Maddie would be an appropriate way to assure the child
used the boys’ restroom. Another said, “If he wants to be a
female make him a female. A good sharp knife will do the job really
quick.”
The parents’ violent threats led
the school district to cancel class, and the police are now
investigating them as a hate crime. Maddie’s family is considering
leaving the state because they are fearful in a town so unfriendly to
transwomen.
An online supporter reached out to
Maddie’s mom and offered to start a GoFundMe
campaign for their family. The money raised from the
campaign will help Maddie and her family move to Houston, where there
is a larger LGBT community that can offer their support. The goal of
$15,000 has been met and has exceeded $50,000. Maddie responded
online saying, “My mom showed me all the messages you have sent to
me and I love all of you for what you said to me! It has made my
heart feel so good I want to cry. My mom is so happy that we can
finally move and so am I.”
There was also a rally held by a
few dozen students to express support for Maddie and to condemn
transphobia.
As teachers, we must stand up and
be a voice for those who are threatened for being who they are,
especially the kids in our classrooms.
That is why I am calling on
Oklahoma teachers to disavow the actions of these parents and stand
up to protect trans students. When we went on strike, teachers spoke
about how we were mobilizing for the rights of our students—they
deserve a quality education, with textbooks and well-maintained
school buildings. But they also deserve to be safe at school—all of
them, regardless of their gender identity.
We need to protect trans students
and other oppressed students in such a cruel and unwelcoming
political climate. Students like Maddie shouldn’t feel like they
have to move to receive the protections that all students are
entitled to.
>> The article above was written by Eliza Church, and is reprinted from Left Voice.
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