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    You are at:Home » How many Februarys will it take for America to believe Black children are the future, too?
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    How many Februarys will it take for America to believe Black children are the future, too?

    February 5, 20163 Mins Read5 Views
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    HOW-MANY-ikhlasHow many Februarys will it take for America to believe Black children are the future, too?

    By Ikhlas Saleem

    In 1986 Whitney Houston covered the George Benson hit, The Greatest Love of All, which he originally recorded for a film biography of Muhammad Ali. Stephen Holden of The New York Times wrote that Houston’s cover gave the ā€œmessage of self-worth an astounding resonance and conviction… a compelling assertion of Black pride, family loyalty and spiritual devotion, all at once.ā€

    Now that I work in education, this is a song I often reflect upon when feeling emotionally tasked, particularly the opening lines:

    I believe the children are our future; Teach them well and let them lead the way; Show them all the beauty they possess inside; Give them a sense of pride to make it easier; Let the children’s laughter remind us how we used to be.

    My grade-school friend, Yasmine Muhammad, who was blessed with the talent—and in this case burden—of a great singing voice, was requested to sing this song at every awards ceremony, academic gathering and sometimes basketball games because, why not?

    I didn’t know it then but what an incredible message to continuously impart upon children—particularly children that were and are descendants of slaves, carrying almost 400 years of baggage of a dignity lost and a future almost impossible to dream.

    So now in 2016, I can reflect and celebrate my ancestors that carried the burden of a back breakin’, cotton-pickin’ South, while spending their nights in hope of freedom trying to make sense of a language that was not their own, while being reminded that their futures lie in nothing but death or labor of the American South.

    Nate Bowling has said it before and I’ll say it again, while the fate of Black children lies outside of plantation fields, America isn’t quite ready to believe or concede that Black children are the future. Instead there’s the exception. There’s the, ā€œJahmal, despite his circumstances, who has managed to exceed expectations.ā€ There’s also, ā€œKeisha who displays incredible potential.ā€ And of course there a couple of kids from 90220 and 10027 that ā€œmade it.ā€

    You see, it’s much easier to find exceptions rather than tending to the whole lot.

    The fact is we’re not teaching children well and Black children are among the groups that suffer most.

    We’re not making it easy when we lower standards for students and teachers. We’re not making it easier when we lessen measures of accountability for our lowest-performing schools. And we’re not making it easier when we restrict school enrollment to a block-radius.

    What we are doing is limiting students’ ability to show us all the beauty they possess inside.

    Pride is lost when a high school student can be thrown from her desk and arrested in front of her classmates. Pride is lost when disciplinary action is met with a school-to-prison pipeline. Pride is lost when you graduate high school only to take remedial courses at your local community college because your diploma is worthless.

    I believe children are the future, but America has to believe that Black children are part of that future, too.

    Ikhlas Saleem is the Digital Content Manager for Education Post, a non-partisan communications organization dedicated to building support for student-focused improvements in public education from preschool to high school graduation. Saleem is an experienced researcher and content manager with an interest in simplifying complex topics to increase dialogue and understanding, while extending the boundaries of inclusion in public discourse.

    Black children are the future too
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    Carma Henry

    Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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