Sometimes a few words can cause great pain.
Just ask the students at Tamalpais High School in California. On a warm summer day, three words of graffiti were found on a school building. In black paint, someone had written the n-word. Next to it was the name of the school’s African American principal, J.C. Farr.
The following day, students, parents, and teachers protested. They carried signs that read, “Hate Has No Place at Tam.” But the racist graffiti had made its mark. “I never expected anything like this to happen,” said Noah Haynesworth. He’s an African American student at Tam High. “It made many of us feel unsafe.”
Hateful words can hurt people.
It recently happened at Tamalpais High School in California. It was a warm summer day. Graffiti was found on a school building. The graffiti was made up of three words. The words were written in black paint. The first word was the n-word. The next words were “J.C. Farr.” He is the school’s African American principal.
The next day, students, parents, and teachers got together. They protested. They carried signs. The signs said, “Hate Has No Place at Tam.” But the racist graffiti had already hurt people. “I never expected anything like this to happen,” said Noah Haynesworth. He is African American. He is a student at Tam High. “It made many of us feel unsafe.”
Sometimes a few words can cause great pain.
The students at Tamalpais High School in California recently experienced this. On a warm summer day, three words written in black paint were found on a school building. The graffiti included the n-word followed by the name of the school’s African American principal, J.C. Farr.
The following day, students, parents, and teachers protested the hateful action by carrying signs that read, “Hate Has No Place at Tam.” But the racist graffiti had made its mark. “I never expected anything like this to happen,” said Noah Haynesworth, an African American student at Tam High. “It made many of us feel unsafe.”