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LGBT Youth Violence Shows Slight Decline
By Daryl Hannah

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Today marks the 12th observance of the national Day of Silence, a project by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) to bring national attention to the harassment experienced by LGBT students.

 

On the Day of Silence, LGBT students and their supporters refrain from speaking in protest of anti-gay harassment. This year, more than 500,000 students at nearly 4,000 K--12 schools, colleges and universities are expected to participate.

 

 

Despite efforts such as this to boost awareness, experts say many LGBT youth still find themselves the target of harassment and bullying. In the United States, four out of five LGBT students report verbal, sexual or physical harassment at school, and more than 30 percent report missing a day of school in the past month out of fear for their personal safety, according to GLSEN's 2005 National School Climate Survey, the latest year for which this information is available.

 

"The 2005 National School Climate Survey reveals that anti-LGBT bullying and harassment remain commonplace in America's schools," says Kevin Jennings, founder and executive director of GLSEN.

 

According to the study, more than 75 percent of students said they experienced verbal abuse and were often called "faggot" or "dyke." Nearly 40 percent of students participating in the 2005 survey said they have experienced physical harassment.

 

This year's Day of Silence will commemorate the recent death of Lawrence King, a 15-year-old student from California, who prosecutors say was shot and killed because of his orientation by a classmate on Feb. 12.

 

"Young people from across the country have heard about this horrible tragedy and are coming together on the Day of Silence to show their support for safe schools for all students," Jennings, told 365Gay. "The Day of Silence brings hope to hundreds of thousands of students that their schools and their world can be safer and more tolerant places."

 

Celebrities Lance Bass, former member of rock group N'SYNC, and Larry King have both issued public-service announcements condemning violence against LGBT youth.

 

 

 

 

Officials at a Chicago-area high school made headlines when they tried to ban a student from wearing an anti-gay T-shirt in protest of the school's honoring the Day of Silence.  But this week, a federal appeals court ruled that the student had a First Amendment right to wear the T-shirt, which read: "Be Happy, Not Gay."

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