By Emarie Wakefield
(with help from Mom)
When I was interviewed by the local news station about my objection to prayers (as well as bible passages and misauthored prayers being passed off as āpoemsā) in my public virtual schoolās curriculum, many people had a lot to say against me. Many people said I wasnāt old enough to have a voice, an opinion or freedom. Iām little, so Iām just learning about history, but so far I havenāt found an age limit on freedoms.
Lincoln didnāt say āconceived in liberty for those who are over school-aged.ā I know this. I had to recite the opening to the Gettysburg Address. The First Amendment isnāt only for grown-ups.
I live and grow in a humanist home. Iām taught every day that my little voice makes a big difference. I know that some people are told they are too little to speak up, but in my home Iām taught that when I see something wrong, itās my job to speak out loud to change that.
Iām proud of my freedom as an American. Since I do not believe that there is some being in control of everything, I know that itās going to be me that has to do the work to get things done. Itās the job of all of us. We have to work together as a big team to make this planet a better, kinder and happier place to live. No one is going to magically fix it for us.
If I had just stayed quiet and ādid the homework I was told to do,ā then what about the children that came after me that werenāt told that freedom belongs to them, too? Others can do as they are told when their freedoms are being taken from them, but as for me and my little voice, weāre off to big places.
When a lot of those little voices come together, it gets too loud to ignore. Humanity, come with me. Letās do big, wonderful things, because even a little voice is equal under our laws. Thatās a self-evident truth.
I have so much gratitude to the Freedom From Religion Foundation for this scholarship, because education makes little voices louder.