No matter the weather, no
matter what is happening, June is the best month.
It is a time of hope. A time
to believe that the world can overcome its problems and become a better place.
That’s because June is
graduation month. Tens of thousands of young people in Canada and the U.S. are
graduating from various levels of education, many moving on to even higher
levels. These are the graduates who will shape the future.
I am at a grad ceremony at
Miramonte High School in the Oakland Hills outside San Francisco, and not far
from where the Toronto Raptors have been embarrassing the Golden State Warriors.
Here 300 students are
graduating from Grade 12 and entering a new, important stage of their lives. The
grad class is so large that the ceremonies are being held on the school
football field.
When I look into these
bright and smiling 18-year-old faces I see hope for the future. These are kids
who will not stand by and watch the breakdown of society as we - their parents
and grandparents - have.
These are not teenagers
typical of those of the past. Sure, they are teenagers who act like typical
teenagers, but beneath their typicalness is a socially aware generation.
They are acutely aware of
America’s gun insanity that has taken the lives of so many school students like
themselves. (As of the start of this week there have been 23,543 shooting
incidents in the U.S. in which 6,215 people were killed and 11,959 wounded,
according to gunviolencearchive.org).
They see the homeless living
in cardboard shacks in underpass villages, and the thousands of people dying on
the streets from drugs,.
They see the growing
devastation of climate change: Communities inundated by flood waters. Communities
ripped apart by unprecedented wind storms. Over the last month or so more than
500 tornadoes have ripped apart areas in the U.S., a record number. Canada also
is seeing an increasing number of extreme weather events.
Climate change has made
wildfire outbreaks a serious threat to some Canadian and American communities.
These California kids live with the knowledge that the neighbourhoods they grew
up in could be destroyed by wildfires at any time. It is only early June but
temperatures in the 100s are forecast here for this week.
This is a generation of kids
who have paid attention to these increasing threats to our world. And, although
they don’t talk openly (at least to adults) about them, they do take them
seriously and do not see existing political systems fixing them.
Like many of us, they see growing
political tribalism blocking solutions. Politicians bark party lines and slap
down anyone who does not agree with them. Political parties have become more
important and powerful than the people.
But most importantly,
whether their high school years were lived in the Oakland Hills, Haliburton or
Mississauga, today’s graduates are among a new generation of people who place
inclusion ahead of exclusion.
They understand diversity
and live it daily. They are well read
(even if not on paper), are familiar and comfortable with new technology
and have a globalized view of life. They are driven more by values than status
and material things.
They also understand and
accept change, and unlike many of us, have no yearning for the way things used
to be. They yearn for open societies, not walls.
Education has been a key in
shaping who these young people are. Thankfully, increasing numbers of them are
getting more education as high school graduation rates are increasing in many
countries.
Canada’s high school
graduation rate stands at 85 per cent, still far behind Korea, Japan and the
Netherlands, but better than the U.S., Sweden and Italy. The U.S. high school
graduation rate is roughly 84 per cent, up four per cent since 2011, a rise attributed
to the Obama presidency’s focus on education.
So congratulations graduates
of 2019! Go out now and change a world burdened with problems that can be
overcome with open minds and positive attitudes. You owe it to all those
teachers, parents and others whose financial and moral support got you this
far.
The world needs you.
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