Obama says that diversity is a result of the students having taken 'many different paths.' Michelle Obama: Talk about race

Marking the 60th anniversary of the historic Brown vs. Board of Education ruling, First Lady Michelle Obama said on Friday that racial and other prejudices still plague the nation and she called on young people to lead the way forward.

“This issue is so sensitive, it’s so complicated, so bound up with a painful history,” Obama told soon-to-be graduating high school seniors in Topeka, Kansas—the city that was at the center of the Supreme Court’s decision. “No matter what you do, the point is to never be afraid to talk about these issues, particularly the issue of race, because even today, we still struggle to do that.”


She added, “We know that today in America, too many folks are still stopped on the street because of the color of their skin, or they’re made to feel unwelcome because of where they come from, or they’re bullied because of who they love.”

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Saturday officially marks six decades since the 1954 landmark high court decision outlawing “separate but equal” and establishing that racially segregated schools were unconstitutional. Obama was originally slated to speak Saturday at the Topeka school’s graduation ceremony, but after the plan was met with protests from families and students, the White House rescheduled her speech for Friday’s “Senior Appreciation Day,” where she was welcomed by a resounding applause along with former Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius, who was also in attendance and had served as governor of Kansas. There were no protests or booing at the event on Friday.

Commending the students for their achievements, Obama said they would be “unimaginable back in 1954,” when schools, restaurants and movie theaters were segregated.

Obama recalled how she saw firsthand the integration of schools in Chicago. Despite the court’s decision in 1954, Obama, born in 1964, grew up in a time in which integration was resisted in her hometown and she attended predominantly black schools. However, by 1975, an integrated high school for high achievers opened and Obama attended.

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The first lady stressed the diversity the students have been able to experience because of the court’s ruling, saying “that was the hope and dream of Brown.”

“You all are the living, breathing legacy of this case,” Obama said.

The first lady said that diversity is a result of the students having taken “many different paths”—whether they hail from centuries of Kansan ancestors or otherwise.

“Maybe, like mine, they came to this country in chains,” the first lady said. “Or maybe your family just arrived here in search of a better life.”

Nevertheless, the first lady said that Brown is still being “decided every single day,” adding there are schools that aren’t equal because of their “crumbling classrooms and less experienced teachers.”

Obama called on the graduates to “drag” older generations to change their viewpoints on diversity, pointing to two recent examples, including a 2013 Cheerio’s commercial that featured a biracial couple and their child.

“When some folks got all worked up about a cereal commercial with an interracial family, you all were probably thinking, ‘Really, what’s the problem with that?’” Obama said to applause.

“When folks made a big deal about Jason Collins and Michael Sam coming out as gay a lot of kids in your generation thought, ‘What’s the issue here?’” she said and was also met with applause.

Obama added that the stakes —including job creation and education—are high.

“We need all of you to ask the hard questions and have the honest conversations because that is the only way we will heal the wounds of the past and move forward to a better future,” Obama said, who prior to her speech visited the Brown vs. Board of Ed National Historic Site.

Earlier Friday, President Barack Obama met with families of the plaintiffs of Brown vs. Board of Ed at the White House.