Thursday, January 13, 2011

A Call for Civility

In his eloquent speech following the Arizona shootings President Obama made a moving plea for civility. Civility is an absolute must, but we need to up the ante and add kindness and compassion to this plea. Our divisive culture with its hate-filled rhetoric and antipathy toward those considered to be “the other” provided a ripe setting for an off-balance person with an ax to grind. An atmosphere of hate can only fuel the fires of hatred, and can become the conduit that allows violent thought to become violent action.

A nine year-old child was killed in the Arizona shootings. We cannot afford to lose any more young lives, either to the violence of a madman with anti-government rage, or to suicide sparked by the cruelty of peers, as witnessed in the deaths of more than five students in the past year.

To prepare young people to function as responsible members of a democratic society, it’s essential that they learn to treat all people with decency and respect, including those who are different or have divergent points of view. Recent events and those of the past year show that we have little time to waste.

The language of hate has no place in our society, be it in the halls of government or in the schoolyard. Kids need positive role models, and right now, they have very few.
Our schools must become safe havens against the hatred that runs rife in our society, places that are antithetical to hatred, violence and bullying.

In order to build a culture of civility, kindness, and acceptance we must be proactive. It’s absolutely essential for kids to learn that cruelty and violence are abhorrent, and we’re not going to accomplish this by just paying lip service. Respect, kindness, and acceptance must be integrated into the very fabric of learning. Imagine teachers across the United States taking time each week to teach lessons that foster civility, compassion and respect, having kids role play being “upstanders” for those who are mistreated. Imagine kids becoming completely accustomed standing up for others in real life because they’ve not only had lots of practice through role play, but because it’s what their school climate and their society supports. Imagine violence and cruelty becoming anathema.

When I went to school it was cool to smoke. Then, after years of anti-smoking campaigns, kids finally got the message that smoking isn’t cool at all – in fact, it’s damaging. Imagine this happening with cruelty, violence, and bullying. Think about a future where kids see a classmate trying to humiliate a peer, and instead of joining in or looking the other way, they step in and help. And imagine all the social capital going to the upstanders rather than the kids who are mean.

Well, I’ve seen it happen. Schools I’ve consulted with and many others have created climates where kindness is “in”, “cruelty “out.” By expecting kindness, compassion, and respect and settling for no less, we give kids the message that this is what’s valued most, and research tells us that what adults value holds a lot of weight in the eyes of children.

In a national survey I ran, 80% of the kids surveyed wanted to learn how to deal with conflict, violence, anger, and bullying. Kids want our help. They want to live in an atmosphere of peace and respect. We can make this happen if we make it a priority, and kids are depending on us to make it a priority now. It’s high time to move toward greater civility, less violence, and less cruelty. We must listen to this need before the tide turns so far in the wrong direction that there’s no turning back.

2 comments:

  1. Naomi, your books are so welcome and healing in these times. Thank you for them.
    I just saw the most violent trailer on TV (during Katie Couric) for the movie "The Mechanic" which was full of violent in-your-face gunfire. It aired at the same time 7 schools in LA were in lockdown because of a gunman, our 3rd school shooting in 2 days. In December, LA had 41 gun homicides. 268 Americans are killed or wounded by guns every day in America, including 8 children.
    This film was made by a company owned by amazon.com, where your book is sold. Be careful of advertising with those companies that profit from violence.
    I fear for the inner peace and security of our children, and parents, and teachers. There is no public safety as long as there are guns in the hands of civilians. Why do we have deadly weapons so readily available to anyone? Then we saturate our children from the cradle to the grave with gun-violent images and games.
    The 2nd amendment was not written by God.
    How can we deal with 270 million gun owners in America? Tuscon could happen again any minute. I do not want to own a gun or be anywhere near one. Thanks for listening.

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  2. Thank you so much for your comment. I totally agree -- there is no place for guns in our society, except in the hands of law enforcement officials. And assault weapons are the most lethal, as we saw in Tuscon, having no other purpose than to kill rapidly. I hope against hope that things will change. Keep speaking out. Your voice is worth hearing.

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