The man behind the dream
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Suzie Harrison
Written on the whiteboard in front of Leslie Maus’ fifth-grade
class at El Morro were the words “I Have a Dream.” Words that no one
will ever forget -- and words of which her students were learning the
true meaning.
With Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday less than a week away, the
students studied his incomparable significance in history.
“His mother told him, ‘You are as good as anyone,’ and that
everyone can be great,” Maus said.
Maus said as she read from the book with the same title that King
believed everyone can be great and that hate can’t drive out hate,
only love can. The students learned about segregation, Rosa Parks and
the 381-day bus boycott that she provoked.
One of the students said he’d be outraged if he wasn’t allowed to
sit where he wanted to. He said that people can’t tell him where he
can or can’t be -- that he isn’t as good as anyone else.
“Everyone remembers him,” Brett Petersen, 10, said. “You shouldn’t
judge people by the color of their skin.”
They learned that he never tired of his cause to end segregation
and what it must have felt like to be black and see signs that read
“White Only.”
“You would feel left out because when you go to a restaurant you
can’t go in because of a different color of skin,” 10-year-old Sadie
Drucker said. “It really makes you feel sad because the people with
another color of skin aren’t letting you do things they do.”
Maus taught her students that “I Have a Dream” is the famous
speech delivered at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. on Aug.
28, 1963, during the march on Washington. They also learned about his
Nobel Peace Prize 1964.
The class talked about the meaning of prejudice, discrimination
and how to approach problems without violence, to use words and
perseverance to make things happen.
Maus asked the class if any of them had dreams. Everyone raised
their hand.
“Do you have dreams for what you want this world to be like?” Maus
said. “You all have the opportunity to be as powerful a person and
thinker as Martin Luther King Jr.”
The students were asked to state what their dream was and what
steps would they take to accomplish their dream.
“Anyone can do something if you set your mind for your dreams,”
Brett said. “It’s called endurance. Martin Luther King Jr. was a
great man. He said, ‘Come on, people can’t do this in this world.’”
* SUZIE HARRISON is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321 or [email protected].
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