Community Corner

Woodinville High School Students Attend We Day Seattle

The day-long event featured celebrities like Jennifer Hudson, Martin Sheen and Magic Johnson, including a surprise performance by Seattle natives, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis.

Deafening roars electrified KeyArena on Wednesday as Seattle hosted its first-ever We Day in the United States.

Nearly 15,000 students from 400 middle and high schools across the state, including Woodinville High School, attended the giant educational pep rally that focused on giving back and inspiring students to make a difference in the community and the world.

The day-long event featured celebrities like Jennifer Hudson, Martin Sheen and Magic Johnson, including a surprise performance by Seattle natives, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis.

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“Why we created the We Day is so that no one ever doubts that youths can change the world,” said Craig Kielburger, who co-founded Free The Children with his brother Marc.

“Over the past five years alone, we’ve seen youth involved raise $26 million for more than 900 local and global causes and log 5.1 million volunteer hours,” he added. “We can’t wait to see what youth across Washington State will achieve.”

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Woodinville High School senior Samantha Pell said she thought the event was amazing.

"We Day was ... definitely very inspirational and I think it will really benefit Woodinville High School (WHS) in a lot of ways," she said. "It has so many programs that the administration can look into and try to apply to WHS, as well as get some more motivational speakers into WHS, which I personally think would help in a lot of ways. The underclassmen who went (the majority) seemed to really enjoy it and realized the power of community service as well as what our generation can do for the future to help improve our world."

We Day is the signature event of Free the Children, started by Kielburger in 1995 after he read about a Southeast Asian boy named Iqbal Masih, who was sold into slavery at the age of 4 and spent six years chained to a carpet-weaving loom. He escaped and spoke out against slavery and then was killed.

Local students must earn their way to We Day through community service by making a commitment to take one local and one global action throughout the year.

“There is an opportunity to create change that we’ve never seen before and that’s why it’s a historic moment in Seattle and the United States,” said Seattle Seahawks Head Coach Pete Carroll, who also served as co-chair of We Day Seattle.

Kielburger said Carroll’s love and passion for Seattle was one of the reasons that brought We Day to the Pacific Northwest.

He said seven We Days events is planned to take place this year with nearly 160,000 students and teachers attending from 4,000 schools in the U.S. and Canada.

We Day Seattle will be captured in an hour-long special broadcast called “The Road to We Day” on Q13 FOX and JOEtv. The program will air April 12 at 8 p.m. on JOEtv and April 14 at 5 p.m. on Q13 FOX

Editor Lisa Baumann contributed to this story.


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