(CNN) -- A 15-year-old British schoolboy has struck a chord with his eloquent response to actress Emma Watson's United Nations speech encouraging men to join in the fight for gender equality.
Ed Holtom's letter, published in the Sunday Telegraph, was praised on social media for demonstrating an understanding of gender issues that many adults today don't fully comprehend.
"If we want equality, it 
will take more effort than paying women the same as men, or giving women
 equal opportunities," he wrote in his letter supporting Watson. "We 
must stop
 pressuring each other to fit stereotypes which more often than not 
leaves us feeling repressed and unable to express ourselves. We must not
 let gender define us."
A student at St. Albans, 
an all-boy's school in Hertfordshire outside London, Holtom said that 
boys and girls are unwittingly steered into confining gender roles.
"By using words such as 
'girly' or 'manly' we inadvertently buy into gender stereotyping," he 
wrote in the letter. "We play with toys designed for our gender, we play
 different sports based on gender, we often go to segregated schools."
Holtom's letter was 
republished by a handful of news sites and quickly gained traction on 
social media, where many commenters praised his views as unusually 
thoughtful for someone his age.
Nicholas Pegg, a British actor and writer, called the letter "magnificent" and posted a link to it on Twitter.
Actor-director Samuel West wrote on Twitter that Holtom "writes the sort of letter you want to read from today's schoolboys, and tomorrow's men."
Watson's impassioned 
speech, delivered September 20 as part of her role as a goodwill 
ambassador for UN Women, drew attention for her remarks about the need 
for equality and for men to embrace feminism.
It also prompted a minor backlash, including a threat to leak alleged nude photos of the star. The threat was later revealed to be a hoax.
In his letter to the Telegraph, Holtom said he was "disappointed" by how ignorant some of his classmates were about gender issues Watson raised in her speech.
"Both men and women 
should feel free to be sensitive. Both men and women should feel free to
 be strong," Watson told the UN. "It is time that we all perceive gender
 on a spectrum not as two opposing sets of ideals."
Holtom said he agreed with everything Watson said and supports equal rights for women.
"We're lucky to live in a
 Western world where women can speak out against stereotypes. It's a 
privilege. Gender equality and feminism is not about 'man-hating' or the
 idea of 'female supremacy.' It is, by definition, the opposite," he 
wrote.
"The definition of 
feminism is, 'a person who believes in the social, political and 
economic equality of the sexes.' It's pretty simple really, and if you 
believe in those things, then you're a feminist."

 
 
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