BYRON DE ARAKAL -- Between the Lines
Josh Ludmir has an appreciation for the nuances of tolerance. And if
his experiences over the past year are any indication, he just might be
one of the few folks in Newport Beach who do.
Ludmir is an 18-year-old Corona del Mar High School senior, and the
brains behind Tolerance Day, an all-day symposium scheduled for May 30 on
the high school’s campus. The confab -- which Ludmir hatched to fulfill
his senior-project requirements for graduation -- will expose Corona del
Mar students to six separate seminars on hate crime, internal and
external prejudice, interfaith relations and faith diversity.
“Corona del Mar is not a very diverse environment,” Ludmir told me.
“We live in a very homogenous community, and I wanted to get my peers to
think about their own prejudice and how they interact with people.”
That this handsome lad with jet-black hair -- Harvard-bound this fall
-- would be the flint behind a tolerance movement among his high school
brethren wasn’t readily apparent to me a week ago when I met him. That’s
because he was standing before the trustees of the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District, dishing up a reasoned and articulate affirmation of the
board’s controversial action to put the clamps on campus bullies under
the district’s zero-tolerance policy. In so doing, he displayed his own
conviction that the shenanigans of schoolyard thugs are not something he
tolerates.
Now shallow thinking will grind gears trying to decipher why a
proponent of tolerance would be advocating such a policy of absolute
intolerance. After all, adolescent ruffians have been prowling our
playgrounds for generations, which is our lame rationalization for
tolerating them. But Ludmir is smarter than that. For in his sharp
testimony before the trustees, he was drawing a subtle distinction
between intolerance of what people do and tolerance of who people are.
That’s pretty deft and insightful discernment from one so young. Yet
it is all the more remarkable in my book because the adults wielding the
approval power over Ludmir’s Tolerance Day event apparently don’t possess
the same wisdom.
Ludmir says he was inspired to produce his Tolerance Day project after
attending the “Walk In My Shoes” tolerance symposium sponsored by the
Orange County Human Relations Commission and UC Irvine.
“I found it inspiring,” he recalls, “that they were able to get people
of different cultural, ethnic, religious and sexual orientations to come
together at one time and in one place. I wanted to re-create that on our
campus.”
To fulfill his senior project requirement, Ludmir decided to
orchestrate his own tolerance symposium. His vision was to assemble small
groups of 50 students who would attend six rotating seminars featuring
various guest speakers. After the series of lectures, the students would
all assemble for a keynote address by a distinguished authority on
tolerance and interpersonal relations.
Ludmir says his original Tolerance Day lineup was to include a seminar
on homophobia led by a representative of People for Lesbians and Gays.
But the real headline-grabber was his original choice to deliver the
keynote address. Ludmir wanted T.J. Leyden, a former neo-Nazi skinhead
who is now a member of the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Task Force Against
Hate.
While Ludmir says Corona del Mar High School administrators -- and
presumably the powers that be at district headquarters -- had long since
given him the go-ahead to produce his Tolerance Day symposium, he says
they would not OK Leyden’s proposed appearance or that of a gay and
lesbian representative.
Apparently, Ludmir was asking for too much tolerance.
Or perhaps not. Maybe Josh Ludmir’s Tolerance Day might have actually
promoted tolerance for who people are, even though we might be less
tolerant -- and even intolerant -- of what they do.
At least Ludmir knows the difference.
* BYRON DE ARAKAL is a writer and communications consultant. He lives
in Costa Mesa. Readers may reach him with news tips and comments via
e-mail at byronwriter@msn.com.
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