Excuse the nonsense, here's my post.
It wasn't the first time this happened to me, but no one had ever gone this far.
The thing is, in 1997, I moved to a new province and, as you might expect, I had to look for work. I did it in the field I had graduated from and had been working in for several years: as a teacher.
When I arrived at the school in question, I felt as if several eyes were piercing my soul, and that feeling wasn't for nothing. Later, I learned what it was all about.
It so happened that, for the teaching position, three teachers had applied for one position, and I was number four. Therefore, they had to decide who would get the position through a competitive examination, which consisted of teaching a class before a panel, and whoever had the best results would get the position.
The head of the subject didn't agree with me applying for the competition. The reason she publicly gave was that I was too young to prove I had sufficient knowledge to apply for the position, and the hidden reason, the one she had spoken about when they stared into my soul, was that, as a young, Black, and poor person, I didn't have the skills or knowledge to be able to perform such a job. According to her, the fact that I didn't have a suit to wear to the exam diminished my chances.
I have never been ashamed of my black skin or of my condition as a person without financial means. On the contrary, what I have achieved has been achieved under these conditions and with great effort and sacrifice.
Let's go back to that moment.
How did I deal with that situation?
In the exercise I completed, I achieved the best results, the highest score, and a place.
In my words of gratitude, I made it clear that my mother had always taught us to fight with knowledge, that the fundamental weapons of human beings are their knowledge, their values, and their feelings. I also said other things like that a person's color is in their soul, not their skin, and that the greatest wealth is being a good person.
If that person thought I would fall apart, they were wrong because what you are is nothing to be ashamed of—quite the opposite.
Two years later, I became the school's principal, and many thought I would retaliate against that person. They were wrong. I even asked her to continue teaching the class, something she accepted, although she decided to leave the school the following year.
Important: I used DeepL Translate.
The photos are mine, taken with my Samsung J2 phone.