High school Tolerance Day dubbed a success
Danette Goulet
CORONA DEL MAR -- They didn’t tell students to be tolerant of others.
The Tolerance Day speakers know the more than 500 students at Corona
del Mar High School who took part in the student-run event Wednesday have
already heard that message.
Instead, presenters asked students to admit to and look at prejudices.
Tolerance “is a personal experience,” said Kathaleen Collins,
assistant director of the peace studies program at Chapman University.
“It’s not going to happen because a teacher tells you.”
Collins was one of eight dynamic speakers invited to Corona del Mar
High by senior Josh Ludmir.
The creation of Tolerance Day, which Ludmir hopes will become a
tradition at the school, was Ludmir’s senior project. But he did not
organize the diversity symposium to get a grade or fulfill a graduation
requirement.
Having gone to a Hebrew school, then a Hebrew all-boys school, before
coming to Corona del Mar High, Ludmir said he went from one homogeneous
atmosphere to another.
He was bothered by the fact that only Santa Claus appeared at Corona
del Mar High’s annual holiday rally and that no other religion was
represented, he said. And that had been the case for 32 years.
This year, his additions to the rally, which included a rendition of
Adam Sandler’s Hanukkah song, were the first changes to diversify that
program.
“There has always been the presence of Jews and Latinos [at Corona del
Mar High], but no one has ever been outspoken,” he said.
It was the first of two huge steps toward tolerance at the school this
year, thanks to Ludmir.
The second -- Wednesday’s tolerance workshops -- was the realization
of a three-year dream and many months of planning. Gary Levin, the
assistant director of the Anti-Defamation League in Orange County,
offered students hate crime statistics before presenting them a series of
exercises that first had students interact and then silently show where
they stood on such issues as interracial relationships and gender roles.
In another room, there was a panel of religious leaders, which
included the Rev. Kusala, a Buddhist monk, Rabbi Stephen Einstein of the
congregation B’nai Tzedek and Pastor Gary Collins from St. Mark
Presbyterian Church.
Although the administration “watered down” the cast of speakers, which
originally included a gay and lesbian rights group speaker and
ex-skinhead T.J. Lyden, Ludmir said he still felt it had an effect and
was a success.
Students agreed.
A group of eighth-grade girls said they were impressed with Collins’
workshop.
“It’s really positive -- the effect it has on us,” said Caitlin Fenno,
14.
“We go to CdM, which is pretty much white,” said her friend Courtney
Clark, 14. “We’re pretty ignorant.”
The girls said Collins’ stories hit home. It was the first time they
had someone other than their parents explain why some comments are wrong,
Fenno said.
“I think about things I said before, and it makes me kind of sick,”
Courtney said.
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