I won’t give into threats and I won’t be silenced.
I held the walkout anyways, and it became our county’s largest protest. They said they would send school security if I did not listen. When administration discovered that I was organizing a Say Gay walkout, they had all our posters ripped from the walls and told me to shut down the protest. This threat is not the first that I have received from administration about my queer rights. I am the first openly-gay Class President in my school’s history–this censorship seems to show that they want me to be the last. ?Ī few days ago, my principal called me into his office and informed me that if my graduation speech referenced my activism or role as a plaintiff in the lawsuit, school administration had a signal to cut off my microphone, end my speech, and halt the ceremony. I am being silenced, and I need your help. I am my Florida high school’s first openly-gay Class President. I am the youngest public plaintiff in the “Don’t Say Gay” lawsuit. “I'm going to be concentrating in government,” he explains, “so I can try and fix the same problems I'm trying to fix now.” Senior class president Zander Moricz was given explicit instructions as he planned his graduation address to the student body.Ī post shared by zander moricz he was going to criticize Florida’s new “Don’t Say Gay” law, the school administration would cut his mic mid-speech. Morciz finished his speech to a standing ovation, and he called it a “great finale for four years of high school.” As he goes on to study at Harvard, he will continue advocating for the LGBTQ+ community as he studies government.
Instead, they’ll try to fix themselves so that they can exist in Florida’s humid climate.” But he lamented, “There are going to be so many kids with curly hair who need a community like Pine View and they will not have one. “So, while having curly hair in the state of Florida can be difficult, due to the humidity, I decided to be proud of who I was, and started coming to school as my authentic self,” he expressed. The class president went on to praise a teacher who answered his questions when he didn’t have “other curly-haired people to talk to.” In recognizing the educator, he showed the important role that teachers have in a student’s formative years.
But the daily damage of trying to fix myself became too much to do,” he continued. I spend mornings and nights embarrassed of them trying desperately to straighten this part of who I am. “As you know, I have curly hair.” Moricz removed his mortarboard cap and the audience began to clap. “This characteristic has probably become the first thing you think of when you think of me as a human being.” He paused. “I must discuss the very public part of my identity,” Moricz told the audience. To get around the school’s directive while still being true to himself, Moricz employed a clever metaphor in his speech: he talked about his curly hair as a euphemism for being gay. “I am the first openly-gay Class President in my school’s history–this censorship seems to show that they want me to be the last,” he tweeted. So, how did Moricz navigate this thorny situation? As someone passionate about social justice, it was important to him that he spoke about identity. Morciz is the youngest public plaintiff in Florida who is suing the state over the law. It bans classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity for students from kindergarten through the third grade. He organized student walkouts at his Pine View School in Osprey, Florida, to protest the law, formally called Parental Rights in Education. Moricz, an openly gay student, had been involved in LGBTQ+ activism prior to the ceremony. If he was going to criticize Florida’s new “Don’t Say Gay” law, the school administration would cut his mic mid-speech. Senior class president Zander Moricz was given explicit instructions as he planned his graduation address to the student body.