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knowing better

genkakugenkaku Northampton, Mass. U.S.A. Veteran
edited February 2012 in General Banter
I was 'blogging' this morning and thought I would 'share' this:

Someone -- as often as not I -- always knows better and is willing to perpetrate all sorts of horror in order to prove it.

As Australia separated Aborigine children from their parents, so it was written in Canada in 1883:

"In order to educate the children properly, we must separate them from their families. Some people may say that this is hard, but if we want to civilise them we must do that.''

In Canada it was likewise the indigenous children who were separated from their parents and sent to church-run boarding schools where physical and sexual abuse and a loss of identity were a staple of knowing better. They were the poor and the uneducated and the powerless. They needed to be 'assimilated' into a wider society run by those who knew better. Today they are described as "lost souls" ... another echo of the 1968 quote by an unnamed American army officer in Vietnam after the decimation of Bien Tre: "It became necessary to destroy the town in order to save it."

What a fearsome and potentially horrific capacity ... knowing better.

For individuals to exercise such a capacity in their own lives is probably instructive enough. To exercise it on behalf of others ... I think not.

Comments

  • RichardHRichardH Veteran
    edited February 2012
    The "residential school" chapter of Canadian history is still an open wound. Canada has only recently begun to come to terms with it, along with an enthusiasm for eugenics before ww2. There is currently a dysfunctional and under-reported "Truth and Reconciliation Commission" making its way around the country. There are many horror stories.
  • I also see that, the great codependant state. Creating more codependancy instead of accepting a different but sustainable culture.

    In my generation there are people who are still wounded as they were put into Catholic schools from Native American tribes (but lived at home). My friend has a family divided over language because they were beaten for speaking Navajo at school. One sibling only speaks Navajo and another only speaks English, the rest all speak both. This was in the 70's and 80's. Not very long ago at all.
  • genkakugenkaku Northampton, Mass. U.S.A. Veteran
    Social policy, spiritual endeavor, peace, war, justice, love ... I know better.
  • The National Film Board of Canada made a very powerful film about that. "Where the Spirit Lives", I think it's called. Considered a breakthrough by Canadian First Nations people. Anyway, this practice was common around the world back in that era: US, Canada, Australia, probably New Zealand, Russia. Thank heaven it's over.
  • And in Tibet, the Chinese government is forcibly removing children from their parents to be sent to government schools to this day.
  • It's important that those stories be told, accurately, over and over. It's a shameful part of our history (I'm Canadian) that must never be forgotten. Residentials may be over but the damage has continued. We must never take away their voices again.
  • Buddha teaching emphasizes non grasping and not separating them away from parent or knowing better in the knowledge of parents :D
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