Back when I attended high school, there were tons of clubs to join, but had I known then what I know now, I would definitely have started a club that would have changed the environment of the high school. Thankfully, nowadays, there are high school students out there making a difference, like Mickeala Bland. Mickeala is a senior at Union High School in Union, N.J., and sheâs making sure that she leaves behind a lasting legacy at the school with the creation of the Feminist Club.
Mickeala says that she discovered feminism at the age of 14, while watching Beyoncé perform on the MTV Video Music Awards.
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âAt the time, I didnât know what a feminist was. I took my phone and googled âfeminist.â For a week, I picked up every book that I could find. I donât think I would be a feminist without BeyoncĂ©,â a now 17-year-old Mickeala told The Root.
The BeyoncĂ© performance that Mickeala is referring to is from 2014, when the singer proudly stood in front of the f-word. No, not that f-wordâthe word âfeminist.â
âWhat Bey just did for feminism, on national television, look, for better or worse, that reach is WAY more than anything weâve seen,â Roxane Gay, author of Bad Feminist, stated on Twitter.
And reach it did. It reached the mind of a 14-year-old, who was hell-bent on learning what the word meant. And learn she did.
âAfter I became a feminist, I realized  there was a lot of things I didnât know about in the world around me. It was really shocking to see how the world was,â Mickeala says.
When Mickeala told her family and friends that she was declaring herself a feminist, she was met with mixed reactions. And a lot of that had to do with negative connotations of the word. You see, in some peopleâs eyes, you canât be a feminist and not be a lesbian or a man-hater.
âI was afraid about what my family would think. I told my friends first, and their reactions were like, âOh, youâre a man-hater now?â and âYouâre a lesbian now?â My mom was proud that I was declaring myself a feminist. And my dad jokingly called me âman-hater’, but said he was proud of me. After I told people, they supported me,â Mickeala explains.
Itâs one thing when you want to learn for your own enrichment, but itâs another thing when you want to take what you learn and share it with others. Mickeala wanted to make sure that others knew what feminism was about, and the one way to make that happen within a high school landscape was to start a feminist club. But she learned that this wasnât going to be easy to do.
Youâd think that a high school would encourage a club that would provide a safe place for open conversation, but when it came to Mickealaâs Feminist Club, she received a lot of pushback from people like a former principal, and even teachers she held in high regard and looked up to.
Some thought that feminism was too much âbra burningâ and would give the school a negative reputation. But Mickeala was determined to make it happen anyway.
âI spent my whole sophomore year creating the club. Writing down proposals. My old principal didnât want it to happen. But our new principal approved the idea,â Mickeala says.
After Mickeala got more than 100 signatures on her club petition, her next step was to find an adviser for her club. And there was one teacher she had in mind because of his reputation. Yes, his.
Meet Nicholas Ferroni, a teacher and activist and someone who was voted People magazineâs Sexiest Teacher in 2014. Heâs also a feminist. But he wasnât always one. In his own words, Ferroni used to be a misogynist.
âIâm a recovering misogynist,â Ferroni says. âAs boys, weâre cultured and conditioned to be sexist. I didnât realize how much weâre conditioned and manipulated until I got to college. When I was in school, I did stuff that I tell boys not to do now. I try to tell students what I wish someone would have told me at their age,â Ferroni says.
Once Mickealaâs petition reached Ferroniâs hands, he signed it, and then she asked him to come on as an adviserâbut now heâs the one learning from his students.
âI get inspired at every meeting of the club, by hearing their beliefs and thoughts, and what they witness and experience,â Ferroni says. âI see things, but I donât see everything, and every week it reinforces why we need a feminism club. Whenever a man says they’re not a feminist, Iâm like, âDo you hate your mother or your sister?ââ
Mickealaâs Feminist Club discusses everything from social issues to racism. From Black Lives Matter to mental illness. From hypermasculinity to rape culture.
“Race is a big topic in our club. And as a black woman, I see how black girls are treated in society and we discuss that as well as colorism and cultural appropriation,â Mickeala says.
Feminism isnât that difficult a concept, but as Mickeala said, the negative connotations that follow the f-word are hard to get people to unlearn. Sheâs determined, however, to change peopleâs ideas about the word. Sure, some of the boys in the high school still think itâs a man-haters club or filled with lesbians, but there are boys who do attend. And itâs not just the boys who hold on to the connotation; Mickeala says that sheâs heard girls say they wonât join the club because they âlove boys.â
Feminism does not mean anti-men. And with a male teacher as an adviser to the Feminist Club, youâd think folks would realize that. Ferroniâs definition of feminism is quite similar to Mickealaâs own definition, which includes the belief in equality between all people,
âWhen people ask my definition of feminism, itâs not where women act or get treated like men; itâs when women receive the same rights as men,â Ferroni says.
And itâs just that simple.
As Mickeala prepares to graduate in the spring, her goals for the Feminist Club after she leaves high school are also simple. She wants the club to carry on the legacy of being a safe space for students to come and share and talk about issues plaguing society, and where teens know they have a voice and can make a difference in the world.
âI just want more people to come and see feminism in a positive light, and for the club to remain a safe space so people can learn about issues affecting society. At our upcoming meeting, weâre talking about mental illness and how Kid Cudi spoke about his issues. Itâs an outlet for people to talk and learn, and thatâs what I want the club to be in years to come,â Mickeala says.
She doesnât know what she wants to major in at college yet, but she does plan on taking Africana and womenâs-studies courses. If she follows the legacy of her family members and Ferroni, sheâll be taking those at Rutgers University. But there is one thing Mickeala knows she definitely wants to do in the future: âI want to use my voice to help others.â
Something tells me sheâs already on the right path toward accomplishing that.
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