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"It got started last year when we were all learning from home and was a chance for those of us feeling lonely to build community online." "Our Rainbow Club is an amazing thing," said school social worker Kristine Keane, sporting a Pride bandana on her wrist, rainbow leggings and a black T-shirt with a rainbow design, as she helped to kick off the Pride event. With the students returning to the classroom this school year, the club has been meeting in person during lunch and has seen its membership grow to 20 students. Throughout the last academic year the eight original members of the Rainbow Club only met virtually after school because of the COVID pandemic leading to the closure of the city's public schools. "I think it has made us feel it is way more important what we are doing." They are still young and exploring who they are and want to take risks," he said. "Coming out is not quite the word for it. More are asking not to be referred to as he or she, Vroegh noted. the Rainbow Club has been particularly impactful for the students who are questioning their gender identity and what pronouns they want to be addressed by. they joined the club this school year "because LGBT rights are human rights" and that everyone "has the right to be who we are." "I want to learn more about the LGBT community and be in a place where everyone is welcome," said Sewell.įifth grader Zohara Luck, 11, also uses she and they pronouns. The group is helping them "to be as open as possible" about their preferred pronouns at school, Sewell told the B.A.R. One of the founding Rainbow Club members, fifth grader Eleanor Sewell, 11, uses she and they pronouns. that she signed up for the club this school year "because I thought it was important to learn about the LGBT community and hear other people's experiences being in the LGBTQ community." The club helps teach people "it's good being who you are," she added.įifth-grader Mila Lofti, 10, told the B.A.R. "I joined last year because I like learning about LGBTQ," said club member Ari Reifsteck, a 9-year-old third grader whose family is friends with their gay neighbors. Since its schools are closed in June when Pride Month celebrations normally take place, the San Francisco Unified School District marks the annual observance in April, with its nearly 100 schools holding their own events throughout the month. Members of the school's Rainbow Club, launched last school year, came up with the idea for the LGBTQ celebration. "During Pride Month we have talked about it in the classroom for many, many years, for as long as I could remember, but have never had something this big before." "This is our first official Pride parade," Vroegh, a straight ally who has overseen the school for 17 years, told the Bay Area Reporter. Greeting his pupils as they completed their loop back to the school was Principal Willem Vroegh wearing a rainbow sport coat and holding up a sign that read "Peabody Pride." He had decided to forgo the matching rainbow pants or else the entire ensemble would have been "too bright," he joked with a colleague.
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Arranged by class, one first-grade teacher spelled out "l-o-v-e" with her students chanting back "spread love, spread love." The 2018 song, sung partly in English and Spanish, includes the refrain, "We all need a / A little bit of love."įollowing the choreographed performance before the start of school Friday, the entire student body proceeded to march around the city block of its Inner Richmond neighborhood. Decked out in rainbow accessories roughly two-dozen George Peabody Elementary School students came together on the blacktop courtyard of their San Francisco public school for a flash mob performance to "LOVE" by Gianluca Vacchi and Sebastián Yatra.