RATTLE: A CHILD SPEAKS - and voices the hearts of our worlds children    
 A CHILD SPEAKS - and voices the hearts of our worlds children3 comments
picture3 Nov 2002 @ 20:54, by Jenese James

What the American Flag Stands For
by Charlotte Aldebron - aged 12

The American flag stands for the fact that cloth can be very important. It is against the law to let the flag touch the ground or to leave the flag flying when the weather is bad. The flag has to be treated with respect. You can tell just how important this cloth is because when you compare it to people, it gets much better treatment. Nobody cares if a homeless person touches the ground. A homeless person can lie all over the ground all night long without anyone picking him up, folding him neatly and sheltering him from the rain.
School children have to pledge loyalty to this piece of cloth every morning. No one has to pledge loyalty to justice and equality and human decency. No one has to promise that people will get a fair wage, or enough food to eat, or affordable medicine, or clean water, or air free of harmful chemicals. But we all have to promise to love a rectangle of red, white, and blue cloth.

Betsy Ross would be quite surprised to see how successful her creation has become. But Thomas Jefferson would be disappointed to see how little of the flag's real meaning remains.

Charlotte Aldebron, 12, wrote this essay for a competition in her 6th grade English class. She attends Cunningham Middle School in Presque Isle, Maine. Comments may be sent to her mom, Jillian Aldebron: [email protected]

Read her speech at the peace rally.....




Published on Friday, November 1, 2002 by CommonDreams.org
Peace Rally Speech
October 26, 2002 - Augusta, Maine

by Charlotte Aldebron, age 12

I’ve been speaking up a lot since September 11. On February 12, I wrote an essay for school saying that we care more about the American flag than about living up to what it stands for. On March 22, I told Senator Snowe’s staff in Presque Isle that you grown ups were hypocrites because you tell kids to solve problems with words, while you kill people in Afghanistan. On March 28, I said the same thing to Senator Collins in person. She told me that because we invaded Afghanistan, little girls can go to school and learn to read. Some choice: learn to read, or have a mom and a dad.

On April 3, the CommonDreams website posted my flag essay. It got lots of attention and was reprinted and read on the radio. I got 800 emails. I was surprised to get such a response because I’d started to believe that solving problems by talking was something only kids had to do, but that grownups could fight all they wanted—like they get to drink and swear, but kids can’t. On May 12, I spoke at the Peace Rally in Bath. On May 20, I talked to Chellie Pingree and Tom Daschle. I suspected that Tom Daschle was not paying attention because, with a glazed look in his eyes, he stuffed my flag essay in his pocket, unread. On June 22, I spoke at the Maine Green Independent Party Convention. Now here it is October 26, and I am giving another speech. That’s a really bad sign because it means we still don’t have peace—in fact, we’re about to go and kill even more people. Well, I’m getting a little sick of hearing my own voice! HELLO—is anyone out there listening?!

I guess my own voice is too small to make a difference. So this time, I’ll add the voices of other children, and maybe together we’ll be loud enough. Children like Ali, who was three when we killed his father in the Gulf War. Ali scraped at the dirt covering his father’s grave every day for three years calling out to him, “It’s all right Daddy, you can come out now, the men who put you here have gone away.” And Luay who was 11 at the time and was glad he didn’t have to go to school or do homework. He went to bed and got up whenever he felt like it. But today he has no education and still hears the explosions in his head.

And the children in Basra, southern Iraq, who today play in the dust while air raid sirens scream around them because we keep dropping bombs. And all the children in Iraq who will never grow up because they have leukemia and cancers from the depleted uranium in our missiles, and they can’t get any drugs or radiation treatment because we won’t let their country have them. I don’t know the names of all these children.

Can you hear our voices yet? I’ll add 10-year-old Mohibollah in Afghanistan, who was out collecting firewood for his family when he found one of those bright yellow soda-can-sized cluster bomblets with parachutes. What child could resist? He ended up with mangled flesh where his left hand used to be.

President Bush asked each American child to give a dollar to help Afghani children. Here is my dollar’s worth: it is the voice of 6-year-old Paliko who was carried to the hospital still wearing her party dress from the wedding that we bombed for two hours, killing her whole family—by mistake. And 2-year-old Alia, who was dug out of the rubble where her family was crushed when we blew up their village—again, by mistake. Afterward, our soldiers said they were sorry. Among themselves, they called the Afghans "rag heads." Like I said in my flag essay, we are better at caring about symbols than real people.

Can you hear us yet? Our government is paying for educational theater in Afghanistan that teaches kids to fight with pen and paper, not guns, and tells them to “join the educated culture of the world.” They call it the Mobile Mini Circus for Children. The performers are orphans who live just north of Kabul, in an orphanage filled with 2,000 victims of our air strikes, our greed, our comfort. When are we going to join the educated cultures of the world?

Maybe you’ll hear the voices of Palestinian children: Sami, shot in the head by an Israeli soldier the day before his 12th birthday; 10-year-old Riham, killed in her schoolyard by an Israeli tank shell; and 14-year-old Faris, who told his 8-year-old brother Abdel to go home when he followed him out to buy groceries. Abdel refused, so he got to see the tank shoot his brother dead in the street. And the six Matar children, ages 2 months to 17 years—all killed when an Israeli pilot flying an American-made jet dropped a one-ton bomb on their home. The pilot was sent by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who our president calls a "man of peace."

Can you hear us yet? How about the voices of Israeli children? Like 14-year-old Raaya and 2-year-old Hemda, killed with their parents by a Palestinian suicide bomber when they went out to eat pizza; 9-month-old Avia, killed by Palestinians who shot and threw grenades at cars; and the 12 teenagers killed by a suicide bomber at a nightclub. Can you hear us now?

How many more children must suffer or die before you hear us? No offense, but I really don’t want to have to make another peace speech ever again!

Charlotte Aldebron, 12, attends Cunningham Middle School in Presque Isle, Maine. Comments may be sent to her mom, Jillian Aldebron: [email protected] another suggestion would be to email this speech to your Member of parliment or your congressperson or whoever suposedly represents you voice (jenese)




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3 comments

4 Nov 2002 @ 02:21 by istvan : Thank you for posting this Jenese,
While our network is is merrily humming away in vibes of beautiful statements, impressive quotes, poems and pictures of immense beauty and graceful expressions of exquisitely polished minds, i have found very little recognition’s of living and active members of an already existing, yet little known individual, the Homo novus(new man) who will and create and some ways already living in the framework of the consciousness that is required for new civilizations to emerge and flourish upon the planet.
I suggest and recognise Charlotte Aldebron as one of those beings, the ones that have a real chance to succeed in creating and living a new consciousness, the ones who have gone beyond merely phylosophising and dreaming and hoping, but is taking the first steps.  



4 Nov 2002 @ 04:28 by jstarrs : Beautiful....
...takes the children to put us in our place. What adult could come up with this : "No offense, but I really don’t want to have to make another peace speech ever again!"  


15 Nov 2002 @ 20:50 by spiritseek : Children
And the children shall lead us. Read on the Indigo and the Crystal children they are more intuned with spirit. I can barely see to write this,I'm crying for the people and for the shame I feel for not doing enough!  


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Other entries in
10 Aug 2003 @ 19:22: letter to America
19 Apr 2003 @ 01:45: what is peace part II
13 Apr 2003 @ 04:14: late night musings on life
12 Apr 2003 @ 16:25: staged media event beemd live to millions as big fat lie
20 Mar 2003 @ 22:55: message from the heart - PART IV
16 Mar 2003 @ 19:55: message from the heart PART III
15 Mar 2003 @ 23:11: message from the heart - PART II
13 Mar 2003 @ 01:55: message from the heart PART I
28 Feb 2003 @ 01:07: the coalition of the coerced
22 Feb 2003 @ 23:19: more on the euro vs the dollar



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