As a follow-up to yesterday’s blog entry, I wanted to share with you something I read about on the DisciplesWorld website. It pertains to citizens taking action to bring about structural change.
Second-graders in Las Vegas were dissatisfied with the food on their school lunch plates, especially the green beans. Apparently, frozen green beans sometimes were re-heated and served a second time after the original thawing. One doesn’t have to tax the imagination to envision the distasteful experience of eating them.
School lunches have a reputation of sometimes being less-than-palatable. I can recall a few of the uncomplimentary descriptions my peers and I applied to some of the meals placed before us in school cafeterias, on a rotating, predictable basis. The school “pizza” was especially ridiculed.
The children in Las Vegas chose a constructive approach in lodging their protest. They wrote letters expressing their dissatisfaction, but were careful to be polite in how they stated their views. ``A little boy said, `Anything, anything, I'll even eat broccoli,''' said Connie Duits, the lunch lady. ``So that one touched my heart.'' Other letter-writers complimented the overall menu, but suggested that the green beans must go.
The class was inspired to undertake their campaign after reading a book in which the main character sought to arrange a boycott of the school cafeteria. Their teacher led them through a discussion of the approaches and attitudes portrayed in the story.
The county schools’ food service administration took seriously the protest by the second-graders and visited the school to meet with them and discuss alternatives to the green beans: “With a handful of reporters watching, two dozen students sat down Monday to a veritable salad bar of cooked, frozen and canned vegetables, from baby corn to cherry tomatoes, and filled out a survey.” Carrots and corn were popular choices among the students.
When asked about other menu suggestions for the school meals, various ideas were shared. One boy requested “chicken cordon blue” and “chocolate filled panda cookies.” My favorite was offered by a girl named Viviann, who asked for future menus to include “stake.”
Officials assured the children that the menu at their school would be “tweaked.”
Power to the people! Stake for everyone!
Updated: Thursday, 2 August 2007 1:48 PM EDT
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