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Marcel Neergaard, Gay 11-Year-Old, Speaks Out On MoveOn.org Petition Victory
On Wednesday, after months of pressure from LGBT activists, it was Marcelâs Moveon.org petition, accompanied by a video and an essay, that moved StudentsFirst to announce it âStands with Marcel,â rescinding the âReformer of the Year Awardâ award to GOP Rep. John Ragan and backing federal anti-bullying legislation.
âI was homeschooled because of the bullying in fifth grade,â Marcel said in an interview on my SiriusXM program, accompanied by his father, Mike Neergaard, recounting the bullying he experienced. âIt came to a point where I gave two reasons for not committing suicide. Those two reasons were, âWhat would it do to my family?â I had two parents and a brother. If I did that to them it would be terrible, and I had a whole future ahead of me. I could be something. â
âWhen I started school, I loved school,â Marcel continued. âI loved learning. I thought it was amazing. But once the bullies realized I was different they started picking on me. One of my friends turned on me. I was called -- I wore boots, and I got the nickname 'girl boots' because they were from the girlâs section. It was really, really terrible for me.â
âI think the most horrifying thing is that often we didnât hear the stories,â Mike Neergaard said of his sonâs struggles. âEvery day Marcel would say, âEverything is fine. Everything is fine.â And we didnât know why things were slipping. It wasnât until well into the year that we heard what was happening.â
Marcel is now celebrating a victory for him and for students across the country.
âI went from this nobody almost, to having so many things,â he said. âTo having a head of a national organization say, âI stand with you. I agree with you. Weâre going to change our ways.â In five days. I felt so happy. I felt I had done something. I always dreamed that one day I would do something, that I would stop sitting around saying, âI want to do something but I donât know how to do it.â And I realized I did that, I changed something. And that made me feel so good.â
Of course we can do better. We first need to teach an entire generation of children that there are people who are different than us, and that those differences are ok. I was just like Marcel, and so were a million other of my gay and lesbian friends growing up. It hurts, we had to grow up fast. We had no childhoods because we became adults overnight, experiencing adult language at rapid fire paces, and grownup terms in an adult world overnight without any choices but to fight or run. Right now, we cannot do much better. But kids like Marcel are making a huge difference and it is working because he has tools and support systems that we did not have.
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