Search bar brings up similar topics but without this pressing question that I'd like to see discussed, so I'ma go ahead and post this.
If my personal experience is any indicator, we are lied to from a young age. Important facts were omitted from every history lesson we received until the school system deemed us old enough to cope with the knowledge that maybe our respective countries weren't always the wonderful, 100% patriotic places they are today. I know for a fact that if I hadn't begun reading Jonathan Kozol, I would have thought Christopher Columbus was a pretty alright guy until I was 15. I never, despite many, many years spent learning about her, was told Helen Keller was a feminist activist, nor was the women's suffrage movement ever spoken of until I was a sophomore in high school, when I was old enough to know that the glorious US had, within the last 100 years, denied women the vote. While I learned that the Nazis were bad for putting the Jews in concentration camps, never were the Japanese-American interment camps spoken of.
And so, I pose the following questions to my fellow Escapists.
Are we right to hide these things from our children for so long? Is it right to shelter children in this way, or should we start telling them the truth earlier? And, if so, how early? How much of the truth?
or
If this was not the case for you, I'd like to hear about where you attended school and what and when your teachers taught you the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
If my personal experience is any indicator, we are lied to from a young age. Important facts were omitted from every history lesson we received until the school system deemed us old enough to cope with the knowledge that maybe our respective countries weren't always the wonderful, 100% patriotic places they are today. I know for a fact that if I hadn't begun reading Jonathan Kozol, I would have thought Christopher Columbus was a pretty alright guy until I was 15. I never, despite many, many years spent learning about her, was told Helen Keller was a feminist activist, nor was the women's suffrage movement ever spoken of until I was a sophomore in high school, when I was old enough to know that the glorious US had, within the last 100 years, denied women the vote. While I learned that the Nazis were bad for putting the Jews in concentration camps, never were the Japanese-American interment camps spoken of.
And so, I pose the following questions to my fellow Escapists.
Are we right to hide these things from our children for so long? Is it right to shelter children in this way, or should we start telling them the truth earlier? And, if so, how early? How much of the truth?
or
If this was not the case for you, I'd like to hear about where you attended school and what and when your teachers taught you the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.