The Signal

Students take part in World Speech Day

Organizers say the event aims to teach youth importance of free speech

- By Caleb Lunetta Signal Staff Writer clunetta@signalscv.com 661-287-5561

In a room filled with at least 75 young speechmake­rs, Santa Clarita students celebrated the community’s first-ever World Speech Day on Saturday.

Largely organized by Valencia sophomore Cassidy Bensko, with the help of the event’s hosts, Global Prep Academy, the Santa Clarita World Speech Day celebratio­n worked to teach students about the importance of free speech here and around the world, according to event organizers.

“It is the first-ever World Speech Day event in Santa Clarita, but it is one of many branches of this same event in over 100 countries on the same day,” said Bensko. “We’ve all gotten together to talk about whatever topic they’ve chosen to speak about, except to be respectful.”

Over the course of two hours, speakers who were both junior high school and high school age walked to the front of the room and chose to either stand behind the podium or walk in front of it while holding a microphone. The speeches given ranged from personal experience­s that manifested into life lessons or oratory performanc­es typically seen during a competitiv­e, academic tournament.

“I am a competitiv­e speaker and a very opinionate­d person,” said Bensko. “So I wanted to bring public speaking, which has played a major role in my own life, to the younger kids.”

One such speaker, Jean Paik, is a junior at Valencia High School and a competitiv­e debater herself. However, she used her time front and center to criticize the culture surroundin­g the academic community she has grown to love over the years.

“My speech was about something I saw fundamenta­lly wrong with the speech community, which is weaponizin­g the suffering of others for the purpose of our own self gains to win a ballot,” said Paik. “I would just finish a speech at a debate tournament, and say, ‘I can’t believe I just said that.’ I realized there were a lot of bigger things going on in the world than a debate tournament, and I had to educate myself about that.”

Paik said during her speech that she understand­s the need to discuss atrocities around the world so humanity can learn from those things, but that selfish intent should never be a factor in those conversati­ons — something she sees as a major theme running through her competitiv­e debates.

There were a number of other speakers during the event who either spoke extemporan­eously or used cue cards, all with the mutual goal of joining with tens of thousands of other people their age or older in celebratin­g and supporting free speech across the globe.

During an intermissi­on, the students, family members and friendly supporters of the audience adjourned to eat tacos provided during the free event, dining with one another while they recounted their favorite speakers from the first half and discussing who they would be looking forward to hearing from in the second portion.

 ?? Caleb Lunetta/The Signal ?? (Above) Jean Paik stands with the certificat­e she received after speaking at the first Santa Clarita World Speech Day event on Friday. (Below) Students participat­e in an activity for the event.
Caleb Lunetta/The Signal (Above) Jean Paik stands with the certificat­e she received after speaking at the first Santa Clarita World Speech Day event on Friday. (Below) Students participat­e in an activity for the event.
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