I鈥檝e had the privilege to talk story with young people across our community about their fears, their struggles, their hopes, and their visions regarding this pandemic. Their proms and graduations have been cancelled, their friendships have been put on hold, and their post-high school plans are now in jeopardy.
At the same time, I鈥檝e noticed that they possess such optimism about our community鈥檚 future and the drive to build it. Ethan Hoppe-Cruz, a freshman at Waianae High School writes, 鈥淎t this moment, we have the power to reshape Hawaii. Make it a more equal, resilient and sustainable community. One that works for all.鈥
This crisis hit our community so quickly and so forcefully that we didn鈥檛 get a chance to ask our youth for their input on how we鈥檙e going to handle it. So let鈥檚 start now by offering them seats at the table. Let鈥檚 welcome them as our decision-making partners, our creative consultants, and our navigators as we explore these uncharted waters.
This generation has taken a leadership role during crises before; remember, these are the kids who planned the Youth March for Our Lives, influencing gun-safety bills across the country and uplifting gun safety as a defining issue of the 2018 U.S. midterms. These are the kids who organized the Youth Climate Strike, mobilizing entire communities to protest climate inaction and demand urgent action from governments and corporations.
Youth Have The Most At Stake
Today we find ourselves in a new crisis 鈥 a pandemic 鈥 which will inevitably be followed by several more crises 鈥 economic crises, educational crises, emotional crises.
And for far too many adults, we think of these crises as simply blips in our personal histories. Another school shooting is just another breaking news story.
Climate change is just an inconvenience that our future generations will have to face. COVID-19 is just a short-term scare before life returns back to normal. This too shall pass.
Hoppe-Cruz responds, 鈥淭hese crises, these challenges 鈥 climate change and environmental racism, the effects of the pay gap, school shootings 鈥 these are our futures. We don鈥檛 have the luxury of thinking, this too shall pass.鈥 In my experience working with youth, I鈥檝e noticed that the more intimidating the crisis, the more courageous and action-oriented many of our youth seem to become. They spend less time complaining about barriers to peace and more time proactively building a beloved community.
They Also Have A Unique Skillset
At Ceeds of Peace, a local nonprofit, one of our focuses is to uplift youth’s voice and support the design and launch of their community action plans.
We鈥檝e seen a team of sixth graders at Malama Honua convene an entire community to restore a neighborhood stream. We鈥檝e seen a freshman at Punahou collect and distribute over 3,000 pieces of school supplies to Title I schools.
We鈥檝e seen youth from across Hawaii launch the Climate Congress 鈥 a series of climate change workshops for the community-at-large. Many adults think: Kids these days only care about social media. But these youth have demonstrated unique skills and imagination often more effective than that demonstrated by most adults.
Hoppe-Cruz writes, 鈥淭he youth of this country have already shown that we are not just going to be silenced.
Using modern tools and our proficiency in social media and tech to our advantage, we can affect change. Mobilize millions to fight for what is important to us.鈥
When I see our program鈥檚 youth design approaches to address the bullying epidemic through organizing networks of peer support through social media, or efforts to shift negative stereotypes of Waimanalo through oral histories, or campaigns to advocate for free bus fare for students who can鈥檛 afford it, my reaction is that these youth are wise beyond their years.
But Hoppe-Cruz doesn鈥檛 see age as the determining factor here: 鈥淲e matter, youth input and voice matters and we have the power to affect change. It is conscious, compassion, and logic that inform decisions of wrong and right 鈥 not age.鈥
So How Can We Support Youth?
Our favorite question to ask our youth: What do you want to be when you grow up?
Hoppe-Cruz prefers a different question; 鈥淚 know that I am motivated now. I would rather be asked: What can I help you to accomplish now?鈥
Let鈥檚 commit to offering our youth platforms and opportunities 鈥 at our dinner tables, in our classrooms, in our communities 鈥 to design, lead, and deliver the change they wish to see. Now is as good a time as any as we adults struggle mightily to tackle COVID-19-related repercussions and rebuild a post-COVID-19 future.
Youth can navigate these perilous waters with us.
We鈥檙e going to need their vision and their skill as we rebuild this beloved community.
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