A High Schooler's Graduation Speech Was Cut Off After She Mentioned Trayvon Martin and Tamir Rice
By Lauren Rearick
A high school valedictorian’s microphone was silenced in the middle of a tribute she made to
Trayvon Martin and
Tamir Rice at her graduation in Dallas, Texas. She believes it was an intentional action by her school.
Rooha Haghar, a graduate of Emmett J. Conrad High School, intended to dedicate a portion of her valedictorian speech to unarmed Black children affected by violence, Buzzfeed
reports. As she explained in a
tweet, her comments included a send-up to “students who were robbed” of their possibility to graduate. She appeared to get through most of these said on her list, nevertheless while she got to Trayvon and Tamir’s names, her microphone went silent.
“My valedictorian speech was cut short because I mentioned the names of Black children who'd become victims of police brutality,” Haghar
wrote on Twitter. “Our principal signaled for my mic to be turned off If I mentioned ‘Trayvon Martin and Tamir Rice’ and played it off as a technical difficulty. Pathetic.”
In 2012,
17-year-old Trayvon was shot and killed in Sanford, Florida; his killer was later acquitted on expenditures of second-degree murder and manslaughter. In 2014, a Cleveland, Ohio policeman
shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir; a grand jury noticed the officer not guilty. Both murders became focal points of the
Black Lives Matter Movement, a business founded to “
intervene in violence inflicted on Black communities by the state and vigilantes.”
Haghar told KXAS that the deaths of Trayvon and Tamir personally impacted her: “It made me feel sick, honestly, because I was close to their age and knowing this is a reality that Black families have to deal with.”
Dallas Independent School District confirmed to MTV News that it’s investigating Haghar’s claims. “In Dallas ISD, we educate leaders of tomorrow and encourage student voices, and we are looking into this matter,” a spokesperson mentioned by way of the email.
According to a Haghar’s
tweeted statement, she shared the speech with a teacher one week before the ceremony. She alleges that she was instructed not to say Trayvon or Tamir, because the teacher imagined “mentioning those names will incite anger towards white people, an audience which according to him experience high levels of discrimination in America.” As
CNN reports, a study from the
Annals of Internal Medicine noticed Black males are 14 times more likely to perish by firearm homicide than white men.
In a subsequent meeting with her principal, Temesghen Asmerom, Haghar was again reportedly told not to say Trayvon or Tamir. According to her account of the meeting, Asmerom told Haghar the speech “did not fall inside the DISD valedictorian speech guidelines.” The principal reportedly advised the student to change her wording, suggesting that Trayvon and Tamir’s names be replaced with a line that read, “all children who become victims of injustice.” Haghar felt it was key to say them by name; “We forget names and move on within several weeks,” she pointed out to KXAS-TV.
Ultimately, Haghar determined to move forward with her version of the speech. “I never expected to be silenced,” she told
KXAS. “The repercussions I was expecting to face was them holding my diploma or having a conversation with my principal. I never expected them to not let me to finish, because at the end of the day, schools hope to raise socially conscious students, students who are able to think for themselves. That's what I was doing.”
Since posting the video on Twitter, Haghar’s tweet went viral, and several have responded with support for her decision. “They turned off your mic nevertheless gave you a whole new audience,” one individual
wrote. “I read the excerpt from your speech and I’m deeply moved. You’ll do wonderful things! I’m sure of it.”
Even with the unexpected silencing, Haghar stands by her decision. "I don't have any regrets," she told KXAS. “And if it took me not being able to finish my speech, then so be it."
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