A bill that proposes public school students observe "Victims of Communism Day" and learn about the suffering under communist rule is heading to a final committee hearing in the Senate after getting a committee nod Wednesday.

Republican Sen. Manny Diaz is sponsoring the legislation (SB 268) that would have students start observing the day on Nov. 7, 2023. Similar legislation (HB 395) is also headed to its third hearing in the House.

Starting in the 2023-24 school year, high school students in American government class would receive at least 45 minutes of instruction on the movement that has killed more than100 million people, according to a bill the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Education approved Wednesday.

Cuba's Fidel Castro, Russia's Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin, Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro, Cambodia's Pol Pot and China's Mao Zedong are the figures mentioned in the legislation that aims to ensure students learn, "how victims suffered under these regimes through poverty, starvation, migration, systemic lethal violence, and suppression of speech."

The day falls on the anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, when Lenin began a revolt against the ruling Russian Parliament, leading his forces into the Russian capital.

An amendment to the original bill adds a date for the State Board of Education to adopt a revised social studies curriculum to comply with the legislation.

Anthony Verdugo, founder and executive director of the Christian Family Coalition, based in Miami, applauded the way the legislation is combatting the collective amnesia about communism that he argues is taking hold among younger generations.

"It should concern all of us that surveys show that 28 to 33 percent of millennials and Generation Z members actually have a favorable view of communism or Marxism," he said.

Sen. Audrey Gibson said she also hopes that a discussion of racial disparities and the horrors of slavery will make it into state statutes the same way as this proposes for communism.

We should "expose our students so that they learn the totality of what has happened in the United States," she said.