Kathy Durham phenomenal educator and advocate for Leonard Peltier

“Make sure that classroom teachers, know his story-Leonard Peltier especially history and government teachers. Students can engage in activism by writing their local and national representative. I’ve got lesson plans if someone needs them.” –Kathy Durham

Kathy Durham is someone I follow on Twitter and one cannot find a stronger advocate for Leonard Peltier than Kathy. Recently I had the wonderful opportunity to talk with Kathy about her life and her journey into activism. You can follow Kathy on Twitter @NanaTeacher22

Q.) Thank You for granting me this interview today. So tell me, what’s your ambition for 2023?

A.) To continue to bring passion and energy into the classroom in hopes of inspiring students to become the best version of themselves they can be. To help students find their own passions, discover their purpose and then give them the tools they need to pursue it.

Q.) When did you know you wanted to be an educator?

A.) I did college late in life, I was in my late 20’s early 30’s when I went back to college and only to get my dad off my back about getting an education. I took a couple of history classes because I knew that’s what my dad would take. I fell in love with the subject matter thanks to my professor- Dr. Harold Bauman he changed my life.

Q.) Do you remember the first time you read The Diary of a Young Girl–Anne Frank?

A.) The first time I read Anne Franks’s diary I was in the 4th or 5th grade-I was absolutely fascinated, and later obsessed with the Holocaust. Of course I was heartbroken with the end.

Q.) Where were you born?

A.) I’m an Army brat, so I was born in Dugway, Utah not far from where I live today. It’s a military base where many of America’s chemical weapons are created and tested. I like to joke that being born at a military base where chemical weapons are made is all you need to know why I’m a bit crazy and a bit off.

Q.) Who were your heroes in college?

A.) Tough question, my Nana, who is still alive at 102 and living on her own, has always been my hero, my biggest fan and supporter. I guess if I had to to pick someone famous I’d go with the resistance fighters from the Warsaw Ghetto. They fought to the end, they stood for what they believed in, they persevered though the odds were against them, they had died fighting for a righteous cause. I admire their courage in the face of such difficult and horrific times.

Q.) What is your favorite quote?

A.) “Educating the heart without educating the mind is no education at all.” -Aristotle

Q.) Who is your favorite poet?

A.) Don’t really read a lot of poetry-but I do love Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree. I think songwriters qualify as poets, I think Bruce Springsteen and Stevie Van Zandt would be at the top of my list.

Q.) What is the best investment you’ve ever made?

A.) My education was the best investment I ever made in my life. I’d never have met my husband had I not gone back to college, I’d never been able to take care of my kids and grandkids in the way that I have had if I had not gone back to college.

Q.) What is the thrust of your Twitter platform?

A.) Oh Twitterverse, I went to Twitter because I heard it was a great way to connect with other educators, to collaborate and share ideas. I started two accounts because I found myself worried about having “educator” in my bio and then getting drawn into all the political discussions. But then, I got to the point where I said, No, I am who I am and I shouldn’t have to seperate my political views from my “teacher views.” They are one and the same.

Q.) What’s the best novel ever written?

A.) I’m going to say everything and anything by Agatha Christie. As a kid I was a voracious reader. I’ll admit, I didn’t read as many of the classics that are considered to be the cannon of great literature, but as a young kid I read everything she wrote.

Q.) What is your greatest accomplishment?

A.) Greatest accomplishment, personally it is my family, we’re all a bit dysfunctional like any family but we’re good. My husband and I are both on our second marriage so we had a blended family and everyone survived it. Of course the kids all wrote different life stories or chapters of their lives their way, on their terms and they are good people who do great things that make us proud. Professionally, my greatest accomplishment has been my teaching career. It’s where I met my husband, it’s what provided me with the life I live and I’d like to think I’ve made my own parents proud of the chapters I’ve written. I think I planted a lot of good seeds along the way in the minds of young people and if nothing else I made a lot of kids laugh and smile during class. I would also throw in being elected to the city council as a big accomplishment. We were able to do some pretty good things for our community economically and I think any time you give up your own time to serve the interest of others in the capacity of “Public Service” well that’s a big deal.

Q.) If you could have a gigantic billboard anywhere in your hometown with anything on it, what would it say?

A.) Love one another.

Q.) What has inspired you to become such a strong advocate for Leonard Peltier?

A.) Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. I couldn’t do anything for Anne Frank, or the millions of other people persecuted under Nazi Germany, I wasn’t there. I couldn’t right the wrongs of my own country for the sins of slavery or genocide against Indigenous people who were here long before Western Europeans. I wasn’t here. I was too young to understand let alone participate in the Civil Rights Movement. Yet I teach about these historic times, I always wondered who I would be , and of course I answer myself with, I would be the one to hide a Jewish family. I would be part of the Underground Railroad. I would speak up on behalf of broken treaties. Well Leonard Peltier is still here. The events at Pine Ridge isn’t old history, it’s an example of yet another miscarriage of justice and this time I can do something!

Everyday I say the pledge in class with my students…”with liberty and justice for all.” Those words can’t be just words that we say and then go about our daily lives. To not fight for Leonard Peltier is to allow the sins of the past to be carried into the future, to perpetuate more injustice, and it means to shoulder the blame. Life is precious, everyone’s life has value. I deeply care about my fellow mankind, we are all in someway connected and not to act, not to care, not to speak up on Leonard’s behalf would be contrary to everything I feel in my soul about how we should treat each one another. What our country did to Mr. Peltier is unconscionable and as long as we’re both alive, I will continue to advocate for his release and educate others in hopes that they will as well.

Leonard Peltier’s life matters.

Q.) When did you first learn of Leonard Peltier’s story?

A.) I learned about Leonard Peltier from a Stevie Van Zandt post. I have the most profound and deepest admiration for Mr. Van Zandt. He is one of the most brilliant people I have ever met. His activism inspires me because those are the kind of people I like to associate with. People who care about humanity and the dignity of others. People who want to stand up against injustice. So when he tweeted something about Leonard Peltier I had to go learn the story, woah, what can I say, my eyes were open and my heart on fire to do something to make this right.

Last question…

Q.) You’re at the bakery and the baker tells you he only has two cakes left; Lemon or Strawberry, which one do you purchase?

A.) Lemon, but then I ask him why’s always out of chocolate!

Thank You-Kathy, this was fun.

You can follow Kathy on Twitter

@NanaTeacher22

Charles Micheaux

Atlanta

How do school children view the new MLK sculpture in Boston?

“That’s a penis!”

A boy said to his parents during the unveiling.

“The best way to preserve a child’s vision is to let them see things their way rather than yours.”-Jacob Liberman Today there is conflict all across America over the new 20-foot tall, 40 foot wide MLK statute- The Embrace in Boston Commons. The artist, Hank Willis Thomas unveiled his long awaited sculpture on January 13, 2023 to mixed reviews. When I first saw the piece the word esoteric jumped into my head. Artist love to drive into that lane and then look at themselves in the mirror. What do children see when they view this sculpture?

A few have told us:

“It’s creepy! “

“It’s a penis!”

Now imagine being a elementary school teacher and this is the reaction you receive from your students. Not a good thought is it? If I were a teacher I would never take my students to review this disturbing statute. Did the artist take into consideration the developing minds of school children? I think not! All the madness concerning removing books that deal with slavery to protect the minds of children and here we have right in our face a work that can easily be viewed unhealthy for school children. I hasten to add, I am against removing books from schools and libraries. I have the highest regard for all serious artist especially those men and women who are driven by passion to educate and provide us solace during the most difficult times of life. On the other hand I have contempt for those artist who want to be cute and controversial just for the sake of attention. I read long ago that great art, whatever its style has qualities of hardness, firmness, realism, clarity, detachment, justice and truth.

What Mr. Hank Willis Thomas has given us is conflict and fodder for bad comics to disrespect Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife Coretta Scott King.

Someone suggested to me for me to really appreciate the piece I should see it in 3-D to really see it for what it is.

I say this to that idea:

Don’t pee on my shoes, and tell me its raining.

When children tell you something is creepy, believe them!

Charles Micheaux

Atlanta*

Why we fight for Leonard Peltier’s freedom?

” I’m dreading another year in here. Doksha.” –Leonard Peltier

We celebrate Leonard Peltier’s 79th birthday on September 12th 2023 there will be a rally in Washington, D.C. outside the White House from 12:00–2:oo P.M.

If you cannot make the rally, please call the White House at (202) 456-1111.

Year after year, decade after decade millions of people from all over the world have called for Leonard Peltier to be released from prison. The fact that he is an innocent man held for 48-years is one of the worst crimes against humanity of the 20th century. I want to show you a short list of the best of humanity that have advocated on behalf of Leonard Peltier.

Saint Mother Teresa,Pope Francis, Archbishop Desmund Tutu, Dalai Lama, Coretta Scott King, Harry Belafonte, Danny Glover, Congressman John Lewis, Ruth Anna Buffalo,Senator Elizabeth Warren, Senator Bernie Sanders, Senator Patrick Leahy, Senator Brian Schatz, Senator Mazie Hirono, Senator Markey, Ringo Star,Robert Redford, Dick Gregory, Willie Nelson, Peter Gabriel, Sting, Stevie Van Zandt, Pete Seagar, Silent Bear, Kimberly LaFrom, Amnesty International and the great Nelson Mandela.

The names above are the very best of humanity and even more important is the fact that Leonard Peltier is cut from the same noble cloth as Mahatama Gandi,

Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela; in fact, Leonard Peltier is the Nelson Mendela of this generation.

Today, President Biden can free Leonard Peltier with the simple stroke of his pen. Few are guilty of Leonard’s imprisonment, but all are responsible for his freedom. A noble challenge introduces a woman to herself.

I implore everyone to write a letter to President Biden today; they say one voice can move a rock, but a million voices can move a mountain. Hey family, let’s move this mountain and free Leonard Peltier.

To those who ask why we fight each day for Leonard Peltier I say to you, just imagine if YOU, YOU were convicted of a crime that you were innocent of, would you want someone to speak up for YOU?

That’s a question….that WE all know the answer to, and that’s why we fight!

“I don’t know how to save the world. I don’t have the answer. I hold no secret knowledge as to how to fix the mistakes of past generations. I only know that without compassion and respect for all Earth’s inhabitants none of us will survive-nor will we deserve to.”–Leonard Peltier

Please contact the senators of your state regarding the release of Leonard Peltier.

#FreeLeonardPeltier

Charles Micheaux

Atlanta*