Tuesday, March 15, 2011

SSA Assembly

Cross the line
by Vianney Casas


“You can’t hate someone when you know their story”.

Makes you think right? SOH’s Safe School Ambassadors motto definitely made sophomores think on Wednesday, February 16th's assembly. SOH sophomores were scheduled to go to L.A’s Museum of Tolerance on that Thursday, so an assembly organized by Mr. Rodriguez and his SSA crew took place during sixth period to give us sophomores some background information and let us know what the rules where going to be for the trip. By looking at sophomores' reaction during that assembly I can tell the assembly turned out to be nothing like we had expected.

The assembly started off with some basic information of the Holocaust. Anyone who’s had Mr. Rodriguez know how serious, important, and professional his lectures are, so you can imagine how that went. The majority of the sophomores were paying attention to each and every word, when suddenly a poem popped up on the screen. Seconds later students were standing up and reading each of the poem’s lines with pride. After that the assembly gave an emotional turn, when Mr. Rodriguez started comparing the Holocaust to life today at school., which caused it to be, in the end, one of the most emotional events in Southwest High School.

For the next minutes, Mr. Rodriguez showed us a video of a group of students, who were not accepted, shooting the school. The video contained the phone call a teacher had actually made to the 911, which I’m sure gave every sophomore goosebumps. You could tell by the silence in the Gym that the video was really getting to the sophomores. That wasn’t the worst part though, after the video was shown, SSA members stood up and shared with the sophomores their experiences and their hardships they had or were going through. Some of the SSA members got a little emotional which made sophomores feel even worse .

Last but not least, an emotional activity took place. The activity consisted of crossing the line if a statement said by Mr. Rodriguez applied to you. At first the activity started off with easy and fun statements such as “Cross the line if you like hip-hop” or “Cross the line if you consider yourself a good dancer”. Students happily crossed the line until the statements started getting a little hard and heart-breaking such as “Cross the line if someone you loved died violently”, “Cross the line if you were raised by one parent”, “Cross the line if you’ve been to economic problems you were embarrassed of”,”Cross the line if you’ve been humiliated or talked about”, “Cross the line if you’ve ever started a rumor”, or “Cross the line if drugs and alcohol have ever affected your family”. Then there was the worst statement: “Cross the line if someone who’s told you they love you has hurt you”. That killed people. If you looked around you would most likely see is sophomores crying or with their faces as sad as they could get. This were serious statements, statements that broke our hearts into pieces, statements that were bringing memories we thought we had forgotten to our minds once again. The atmosphere was sad, you could feel it in the air. Then when the statement “Cross the line if you need a hug right now” got to sophomore’s ears you would see everyone hugging each other.

It was amazing to see how many sophomores crossed the line after each statement. Unbelievably, more than half crossed it; there wasn’t any time when you wouldn’t see sophomores walking towards that line. The message here: You are not alone, Raiders. We’re in our teenage years; it is easy to feel like our whole world is falling down and that no one else is going through the same thing. Believe it or not, you are not the only one. All those sophomores crossing that line are enough to believe you aren’t.

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