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March for Our Lives: #NaomiWadler. I am proud to help you tell the stories that aren't told to e


"I urge everyone here and everyone who hears my voice to join me in telling the stories that aren't told. To honor the girls, the women of color who are murdered at disproportionate rates in this nation. I urge each of you to help me write the narrative for this world and understand, so that these girls and women are never forgotten."


#NaomiWadler. I am proud to join you in telling the stories that aren't told. I would be honored to help you write that narrative for this world.


Far too often, the stories of young black girls are left out of the narrative on almost all issues that generate local or national news. The intensity of our girls' stories of harassment, oppression, inequality and being victimized by violence on multiple fronts. However, on Saturday March 24, 2018, CNN reported about Naomi Wadler who took the stage at Saturday's March for Our Lives in Washington with one message: Black girls have been left out of the gun violence conversation for too long.


"I am here today to acknowledge and represent the African American girls whose stories don't make the front page of every national newspaper, whose stories don't lead the evening news," Naomi said to cheers.


The 11-year-old shared her voice and spoke and then added a minute, she said, for Courtlin Arrington, a black girl who was killed in a school shooting in Alabama after the massacre in Parkland. Coutlin's story did not make the national news. There were no special announcements about a school shooting. No one marched and no one known politicians issued the standard 'thoughts and prayers are with you.'


"I represent the African American women who are victims of gun violence, who are simply statistics instead of vibrant, beautiful girls that fill a potential," she said.


Naomi noted the privilege she said, in that she was being heard, while many black women are not. She was at the march for them.


"For far too long these names, these black girls and women have been just numbers," Naomi told the crowd. "I'm here to say 'never again' for those girls, too."

"People have said that I am too young to have these thoughts on my own," she continued. "People have said that I am a tool of some nameless adult. It's not true."


"My friends and I might still be 11 and we might still be in elementary school, but we know. We know life isn't equal for everyone and we know what is right and wrong."

Naomi and her peers also know, that in 7 years, they will also be able to vote, she said.


Naomi repeated the words of author Toni Morrison: "If there's a book that you want to read but it hasn't been written yet, you must be the one to write it."


"I urge everyone here and everyone who hears my voice to join me in telling the stories that aren't told. To honor the girls, the women of color who are murdered at disproportionate rates in this nation. I urge each of you to help me write the narrative for this world and understand, so that these girls and women are never forgotten."

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