May 20, 2013 02:23 UTC

learningenglish

Teens Get a History Lesson From History Makers

High school student Manal Saleh introduces Mikhail Gorbachev at the 12th World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates, in Chicago
High school student Manal Saleh introduces Mikhail Gorbachev at the 12th World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates, in Chicago
TEXT SIZE - +


Download this story as a PDF

This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

Students at some high schools in Chicago, Illinois, recently had some famous visitors. Among them were Jimmy Carter, the former American president, and Mikhail Gorbachev, the last president of the Soviet Union. Other speakers included former South African president F.W. de Klerk and Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian human rights activist.

They were all in Chicago for an event in late April, the 12th World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates.

The students prepared for the visits by working on a human rights curriculum called "Speak Truth to Power." The materials come from the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights.

Manal Saleh got to introduce Mikhail Gorbachev at her school, the Frederick Von Steuben Metropolitan Science Center in Chicago. Manal is one of the top students graduating this year. She will be attending Northwestern University in Illinois on a scholarship for low-income students.

Manal had not yet been born when Mr. Gorbachev became a Nobel laureate. He won the Peace Prize in nineteen ninety for helping to end the Cold War and working for nuclear disarmament.

Manal also got to introduce Mr. Gorbachev at the World Summit, where he joined the other laureates.

MANAL SALEH: "We hear about them and we see them in documentaries. But to have them in front of us in the flesh makes it seem so much more real. President Gorbachev, who came from nothing and changed the world, and he's standing in front of me in the flesh. And it makes me appreciate the value of that all the more."

Mr. Gorbachev, through a translator, said that he hopes more young people will work against global problems like poverty and unemployment.

MIKHAIL GORBACHEV: "Of course, there are things that are happening among the youth that concern us. But young people have to be given a chance to take a stand, to take a position in this world. [Applause]"

At Von Steuben, he talked about his nuclear arms negotiations with President Ronald Reagan in the late nineteen eighties. He also talked about growing up in a small Russian village and studying law at Moscow University. And he talked about the need for international cooperation, a theme of the World Summit.

Students at Lincoln Park High School in Chicago heard from Muhammad Yunus. He won the two thousand six Peace Prize for his work with microcredit for social and economic development. Mr. Yunus said he used his own money to make the first loan, about twenty-seven dollars to women selling baskets in a market in Bangladesh.

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report. You can watch a video of high school student Manal Saleh and the Nobel laureates in Chicago at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Jim Tedder.

___

Contributing: Kane Farabaugh and Jerilyn Watson

This forum has been closed.
Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: Mr.Raafat
05/08/2012 11:58 PM
Meeting great figures is , no doubt ,a big win for teens . so I think that this experience should be applied on a wide - scale , especially in Egypt . There should be direct co-ordination between embassies and cultural centers to achieve such meetings for the good of the new generations of the world .


by: pooh
05/06/2012 10:56 PM
What a wonderful event !! It's important to meet and to talk to genuine article.


by: SkyTurk
05/04/2012 1:14 PM
I think that this study prepared partially. Because Mihail Gorbaçov caused the death of people of Azerbaijan in SSCB when he was president of Soviet Union. Even then he was award the Nobel Peace Prize. This event is very woeful.


by: German Alvarado
05/03/2012 9:59 PM
Mikhail Gorbachev was a leader of the revolution; but, revolution without arms and was someone that did too many for the world.
I'll always be grateful to her


by: Jean
05/03/2012 6:36 PM
It must be very exciting to stand beside people who made or decided our history. They have changed our lives directly or indirectly. I thought their influence is still working.


by: CHEN
05/03/2012 8:07 AM
Teens learning history from books ,videos and lecture. History is important for teens . Teens learning history and understood what happened in the past. This is a good experience for teens.


by: Yoshi
05/03/2012 3:51 AM
I am sure it was a great stimulus for high school students to meet such a ausome persons. I also eager to see Mr. Gorvachev. He is very famous and popular in Japan. There is a territorial struggle between Russia and Japan after the World War II. The four ilands located in the northern part of Japan, near-coat of Hokkaido, have been occupied by Russhia after Wprld War II. If Mr. Gorvachev had stayed in president more longer, this territorial issue would have been already solved.


by: Pikaq
05/02/2012 11:36 PM
I want to tell everyone the truth. The nuclear disarmament will not be successful in the world. If people didn't desire more advantage and controlled their ambition, the world would be more peaceful.