VOLU ME 25
ISSUE 11
CHAFFEY
B R E E Z E MONDAY + MAR CH 9 , 2015
NEWS
Have Your Pi Day and Eat it Too
A&E
Revenge of the Film Festival
OPINION
Leonard Nimoy: Man, Myth, Logic
SPORTS
Profile: Brendan Hornung
AMAN/AWOMAN: campus March for Justice
Faculty advisor Donna Colondres (third from left) marches with members of the AMAN/AWOMAN club on Feb. 25.
Emotions stirred in the quad on Feb. 25 when the AMAN/AWOMAN club came marching in the name of justice. What began as a small lineup of 20 people in front of the library grew to nearly 50 as they reached the quad. Students and faculty linked arms and chanted, “Black Lives Matter-JUSTICE!” The group’s primary goal was to have a moment and evoke emotion for a cause, to encourage students to gain awareness of what’s happening around the world. “We are talking about sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, that were lost because of stupid things,” said club mem-
ber Summayah Freeman. “We have to actively participate in educating ourselves so that we can have a greater appreciation for human life.” As they marched, students would stop what they were doing and join. Although these are concerns not commonly discussed, students agreed and were inspired. “We need to keep marching forward because we are going to be the change for this country,” student Jose Camacho said. Club president Sara Wobil and four other members presented a demonstration in expression of large-scale occurrences around the world, repre-
senting Black lives, Paris lives, Nigerian lives and Muslim lives with facts and statistical research. “I had to take a lot of breaks to collect myself while doing research,” Wobil said. “It bothered me that my hand started cramping after a while, and I couldn’t write down any more information because there are so many lives that have been lost unjustly.” For each group of lives represented, one of the four members would fall to the ground in symbolism of death. The AMAN/AWOMAN club is a branch of a larger organization called Umoja and serves as a resource for under-resourced students.
MICHAEL RAVENELLE
According to club advisor Dona Colondres, the organized march motivated students to move toward something greater than themselves, inspiring students to express tolerance and create change. “You don’t have to wait to go to university to make a difference, you can make it right here, at Chaffey,” she said. “That’s where it starts.”
JULIETA VAZQUEZ @chaffeybreeze