[Indoctrination of the Young:  Richard Wade Advises Mother of a Six
year old Convent Girl]



Dear Richard,

I send my six-year-old daughter to the only private school in our
small town. Naturally, it is a Catholic school. I love the people and
the education she is getting; however, she goes to Mass every day and
comes home with religion homework and wants me to read the Bible to
her. I am very tolerant (obviously, since she goes to a Catholic
school), but I am struggling with how to explain my own beliefs
without pushing them on her. I will not read the Bible to her, but I
will let her read it if she wants to. In addition, I don't chastise
her for her beliefs, and when she asks me a question about heaven I
usually answer, "That's what most people believe." How do I maintain
my beliefs without forcing them on her?

--Jessica

Dear Jessica,

Your daughter does not have religious beliefs of her own. She is six years old.

Acquiring beliefs about religion and the Bible is not just happening
spontaneously within her. She is being trained very carefully and
intensely to have Catholic beliefs by the Catholic school to which you
are sending her. If your concern is to not force your beliefs on her,
you are still allowing the school to force their beliefs on her. So
you are a willing participant in forcing a belief system onto her.

Six-year-olds are generally not yet adept at sifting through complex
ideas and disagreeing with adults. They are extremely efficient at
observing, imitating and deeply imprinting whatever ideas and
attitudes that are presented to them. That is why you are hesitant to
explain to her what your beliefs are, but that is also why you must
tell her.

There is a difference between tolerance and abdicating all
responsibility. If you don't mind her growing up with Catholic
beliefs, then it is within your legal right to have her educated that
way. But don't think that she is freely choosing her beliefs and that
you are merely an uninvolved and tolerant bystander. No, you are the
one who can make free choices, and you have freely chosen to send her
to that private Catholic school because you like the people and the
education she's getting. That is an understandable motive, but you
have also freely decided to accept the religious indoctrination that
she, without any choice of her own, is absorbing like a sponge.

If you continue in this manner, it seems inevitable that there will
eventually be a conflict between what you believe and what you have
allowed others to teach her to believe. This is because she is not
being taught your kind of tolerance. She is being taught Catholicism.

She is also being taught that people who think like you are bad people.

Some freethinking parents try to respect the beliefs of their
children, however they may develop. This may be admirable in
principle, but there are some serious pragmatic problems with it.
Young children look to their parents for guidance. They are naturally
inclined to imitate their parents' attitudes and values. If the
freethinking parents are too passive in how their children form their
beliefs, the children will look for guidance from other adults who
will not hesitate to indoctrinate. It is like a football game where
one team has sworn to never cross the 50-yard line, while the other
team is free to go anywhere on the field.

I think you need to stop being passive and start getting clear about
where you stand with your daughter's upbringing, and then assertively
take that stand. First, if you are going to keep her in that school,
then take full responsibility for the fact that she is learning to
believe what they believe. Then start being honest and frank with her
(in an age-appropriate manner) that you don't share those beliefs. If
you want her to become a person who makes thoughtful choices, then
first you have to show her what those choices are. Saying only evasive
things like "that's what most people believe" without explaining your
own view and how you came to it is not giving her any guidance in how
to make wise choices and it is not modeling honesty.

As she grows older, she will probably be able to make more thoughtful
decisions about these things, but the outcome is not a certainty. Even
if you show her that it is acceptable to think freely, she may be
attracted to the unambiguous certainty offered by Catholicism. If that
happens, how she feels toward you may become a source of conflict and
confusion.

If you don't want to take a chance with all that, then perhaps you
should reconsider the benefits versus the detriments of keeping her in
that Catholic school. Either way, begin to actively instill in her
your own values, such as respectful treatment of others who are
different, questioning of assumptions, critical thinking, honesty and
compassion.

Jessica, I have been a little tough on you, but I fully understand and
sincerely empathize with your difficulties. I've been a parent and I
have the scars to prove it. Parenting is a series of very thorny
challenges and no one meets those challenges perfectly. How our kids
turn out is owed to genetic factors, to environmental factors beyond
our control, and to our own direct input.

That last part is where we must meet challenges with our most eager
effort to be as responsible and conscientious as we can. Even with our
limits, we must take ownership of our role as parents. It can be
bewildering and exhausting and it can be very tempting to take
shortcuts or to leave things to be decided by others.

We all need help with parenting, and you haven't mentioned her father.
If you are raising your daughter on your own, find some friends who
have similar challenges with whom you can consult and commiserate. If
they are not available in your small town, find some online.

Don't be afraid to take a stand about your own beliefs and don't be
afraid to discuss such things candidly with your daughter. With candor
you will build a loving bond of mutual trust and respect.

--Richard



Richard Wade identifies as both a humanist and an atheist. He has
worked as an artist and as a marriage and family therapist with many
years in the specialization of addiction. Now retired, he has
counseled more than ten thousand patients. Questions to this advice
column are welcome from any perspective or belief, not just that of
humanism or atheism. Richard Wade's column can also be read on a
regular basis at The Friendly Atheist blog.

http://americanhumanist.org/HNN/details/2010-07-ask-richard-how-do-i-handle-my-six-year-olds-beliefs







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You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot
build up a nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you
will build on the foundations of caste will crack and will never be a
whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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