AGRUSTIC
SOMNACUNI || ROMANY
|| CRADLE || LET US PRAISE
THE ROM || CHUPPA || MEDIATHECA 'FIORETTA
MAZZEI' || 'ENGLISH'
CEMETERY || AUREO
ANELLO || HOME
|| Daniel-Claudiu
Dumitrescu/ Julia Bolton Holloway
© 2012-2020
PAIDIEA/
EDUCATION
I went to an Anglican convent school in Sussex, of great
learning and beauty, of John Newman's Oxford Movement, of William
Morris' Arts and Crafts Movement, of Cecil Sharpe's collecting of
English folk songs in the Appalachians, and where we were taught
socialist beliefs, as being in accord with Christ's Gospel of
equality and of peace, Jeremy Bentham's 'The greatest good for the
greatest number', and participated in the birth of the NHS. But as
a child I was also drawn to reading the school books of our
servant's child who attended the local government school, books
filled with patriotic stories and pictures of Lords Nelson and
Wellington, of Trafalgar and Waterloo, books that made one want to
die for one's country. I came to realize the unfairness of the
servant's daughter's school books. They were preparation for
cannon fodder, for war. I came to question the validity of
education. What purpose does it serve? To free? To enslave?
There are two kinds of education, one which liberates, the
other which enslaves. There has been a tragic mistake where
'Liberal Education' has been for those who are independently
wealthy off the labour and poverty of others and who therefore can
afford - at others' cost - to enjoy the benefits of Greek,
Latin and French. 'Liberal Education' has created a
double-edged sword, a two-sided coin, the liberty that
paradoxically enslaves. The wealthy white settler in Kenya or
Rhodesia or South Africa could not understand why his wealth or
his freedom was at the cost of the indigenous population - and why
he - and his family - courted violence. Today's world has
internalized that colonialism, where the wealthy no longer pay
taxes, storing their ill gotten gains, their loot, in off shore
tax havens, while the middle class and the poor are impoverished
and taxed. A similar situation existed in Roman Palestine, where
the Jewish priestly caste was privileged with neither paying taxes
to Caesar or to the Tmple, in exchange for their controlling the
Jewish laity into being bled white paying taxes to both Caesar and
Temple. These situations create generational trauma. In such
unjust models, as Sparta-loving Socrates and Plato taught, it is
important to keep the helots down, to deny them education. That is
why Athens gave Socrates hemlock to drink. They knew
that the model he advocated courted the loss of culture not only
for the enslaved but also the masters, that it courted violence,
it courted disaster. Somoza, similarly, enforced illiteracy
amongst his Nicaraguan subjects. He was countered with the
Sandinistas' literacy campaign amongst the peasants and their
slogan 'Forgiveness is our Revenge'. The revenge of those in power
was to claim the partial censorship of the newspapers was ground
for destroying the new freedom. What greater and more total
censorship had there been than illiteracy?
The Greeks with their word 'paideia' understood that education
was the formation of the child. A musician has been
murdered, his song cut short. Guatamalan Facundo Cabral in 2008
had said: "I love life so much because it cost me so much to enjoy
it. From the cradle to the grave is a school, so if what we call
problems are lessons, we see life differently."
AGRUSTIC SOMNACUNI || ROMANY || CRADLE || LET US PRAISE THE ROM || CHUPPA || MEDIATHECA
'FIORETTA MAZZEI' || 'ENGLISH' CEMETERY || AUREO ANELLO || HOME
|| Daniel-Claudiu
Dumitrescu/ Julia Bolton Holloway
© 2012-2020