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The History of the Day of Silence®

Founded
in 1996, the Day of Silence has become the
largest single student-led action towards creating safer schools
for all, regardless of sexual orientation, gender identity or gender
expression. From the first-ever Day of Silence at the University
of Virginia in 1996, to the organizing efforts in over 8,000 middle
schools, high schools, colleges and universities across the country
in 2008, its textured history reflects its diversity in both numbers
and reach.
Here's a brief
history.
1996 - The Day of Silence is born. Students
organized the first Day of Silence, its original name, at the
University of Virginia. With over 150 students participating, those
involved felt it was a great success. The Day of Silence received
extensive local press coverage and a positive response from the
UVA community members, motivating Maria Pulzetti to take the Day
of Silence nationally.

1997 - From one, to one hundred, National Day of
Silence takes off With a web page and much dedication, Pulzetti
and then 19-year-old Jessie Gilliam, developed the project to be
used in schools across the country. It was renamed the National
Day of Silence, and that year nearly 100 colleges and universities
participated. Some schools in Australia heard about the project
and modeled a similar day for Australian schools.

1998 - The Day keeps growing, the Project begins
Pulzetti and Gilliam realized they could not expand the National
Day of Silence alone, so they organized a team of regional
coordinators who could assist schools better by working with and
understanding local networks. Expanding from a one-day vow of silence
to include additional actions and educational events, the Day of
Silence was officially inaugurated. That year, for the first
time in a recognized number, students in high schools joined the
organizing efforts, helping double the number of participating schools
to over 200.

1999-2001 - More people, more time, a message of
unity sets in Through the sponsorship of Advocates for Youth, Gilliam
worked part-time over the summer of 1999 to maintain and expand
the Day of Silence. A first in the project's history, a team
of volunteers met for a weekend in Boston to discuss strategy and
develop future plans towards assisting schools. The Day of Silence
continued to support high schools, colleges and universities around
the country with volunteers led by then 18-year-old Chloe Palenchar,
as the National Project Coordinator. Over 300 high schools participated
that year.

2001 - GLSEN developed a proposal to become the official
organizational sponsor of the Day of Silence and provide
new funding, staff and volunteers. GLSEN developed a first-ever
Leadership Team of high school students to support local high school
organizers around the country and a partnership with the United
States Student Association, to ensure colleges and universities
receive equal support.

2002 - Making noise, making history In what has
become the largest single student-led action towards creating safer
schools, the April 10th Day of Silence was organized by students
in more than 1,900 schools across the country, with estimated participation
of more than 100,000 students. Representative Eliot Engel introduces
the first ever resolution on the Day of Silence in Congress,
which received support of 29 co-signers; additionally, Governor
Gray Davis of California issued an official proclamation making
April 10, 2002 the National Day of Silence. Local Day of Silence®
organizing efforts appear in over fifty media stories across the
country, including USA Today, MSNBC, CNN, Voice of America and a
live broadcast on NPR. Breaking the Silence rallies are organized
with tremendous success in Albany, NY, Kalamazoo, MI, Missoula,
MT, Ft. Lauderdale & Sarasota, FL, Eugene, OR, Boulder, CO and
Washington DC, among other places.

2008 - The 2008 Day of Silence on April 25 was held
in memory of Lawrence King, a 15-year-old eighth-grade student in Oxnard,
California, was shot and killed by a 14-year-old classmate because of his
sexual orientation and gender expression. Hundreds of thousands of students
at more than 8,000 schools participated. Their efforts were
supported by hundreds of community-based "Breaking the Silence" events at
the end of the day. Together, concerned students created a powerful call
to action in order to prevent future tragedies.
There are simple steps that all schools can take to make schools safer for all
students, to end the endemic name-calling and harassment that LGBT students and
their allies face every day. We need to act now so that Lawrence King and the
countless others who endure anti-LGBT name-calling, bullying and harassment will
not be forgotten, and so that we can create an enduring legacy of safer schools
for all in their names.

Students handed out "Speaking Cards" which said:
"Please understand my reasons for not speaking today. I am participating
in the Day of Silence, a national youth movement bringing attention to the
silence faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people and their
allies in schools. My deliberate silence echoes that silence, which is caused
by name-callinmg, bullying and harassment. I believe that ending the silence
is the first step toward fighting these injustices. Think about the voices you
are not hearing today. What are you going to do to end the silence?"

What are you going to do to end the silence?
Register and BE COUNTED!.


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