lasallian
intention
The General Chapters of 1966
and 1976 asked the Brothers to work for the promotion of Justice and Peace
(Rule, §7, §14 which invites the Brothers to strive resolutely through
education for the promotion of justice and human dignity). This concern also
drives the activity of the Brothers when it addresses a more comfortable social
class. These two Chapters also made the Brothers more aware of the situations
of injustice in which the poor are often victims. So it is in §40 that we read
that “the Brothers prepare their pupils for creating more just relationships
and help them to commit themselves effectively to action for justice and peace”.
From the time of its last
General Chapter, in 2000, the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian
Schools has made the question of the rights of the child a central plank for
work and reflection. It is a priority and has been put to all the districts. A
document entitled “Associated to answer the challenges of the 21st
century” takes up these avenues of work and suggests directions. In the
paragraph entitled “Matters of educational urgency”, can be found a certain
number of proposals referring to the rights of the child:
1.
The Brothers and their Partners need to be more aware of the contents of
the UNO Convention on the rights of the child of 1989;
2.
Putting them into practice should be adapted to local conditions;
3.
The lasallian educational mission should be directed towards the
children whose rights are not protected;
4.
The answer of the Brothers and their Partners to the demands of the
Convention should be made with an evangelical perspective.
To give these directions a
specific content, the document suggests that “the rights of the child should be
considered as an urgent aspect of the lasallian educational mission for the
next seven years; that each District, sub-District, Delegation should include
this theme in its plan of action for which at least one Brother or partner
would be named who would help”
- to collaborate with local organisations who
are working for the promotion of the rights of the child;
- to identify violations of the rights of the
child in its immediate area;
- to alert the local authorities when the
rights of the child are infringed;
- to be vigilant about the awareness and
putting into practice of the rights of the child in its schools and
Universities;
- to keep in touch with the Secretariat for
the Educational Mission”.
The rights of the child
represent an excellent way of raising the awareness of the members of our
educational communities to the lasallian educational plan, and further, to our
evangelical plan. What do the rights of the child represent and what do they
speak of? On reading the first part of this text, we become aware with greater
or lesser definition potential situations of violation of the rights of the
child such as lack of a civil state, separation from parents against their
will, privation of family environment, trafficking in and selling of children,
lack of freedom of expression, ill treatment, all kinds of exploitation
including sexual abuse, slavery, torture, lack of medical care. So, the rights
of the child, as they have been formalised by the Convention of the United
Nations, represent the sum of the sufferings and lack of attention towards
children, all forms of culture and levels of economic and social development.
Beyond that, this Convention reveals the face of millions of children across
the world who are suffering in a thousand and one ways, and always find
themselves unable to act. Every member of our educational communities (teaching
and non-teaching staff, pupils and parents) should be brought back to the
Lasallian Educational Project by this attention to the poor re-echoed in the
demands of the promotion of the rights of the child. Experience has shown that
in our establishments, many teachers (to mention only them) are unaware of this
Lasallian Educational Project, and know very little of the life of the Founder
and his spirituality. How can this lasallian spirituality and commitment to the
educational service of the poor be lived in these conditions? The rights of the
child represent a sufficiently open dialogue to allow it to be heard by the
greatest number with excellent reception. By calling to mind humankind (the
child) and its anguish, and by laying out the outlines of a more just world and
more respectful of human dignity, by speaking of equality, protection,
well-being, health, safety, inviolability of the human person, solidarity,
co-operation, responsibility and whole development of the child, the rights of
the child will point the road which links up with the Lasallian Educational
Project. What common values there are between the rights of the child and
lasallian spirituality! : What team work for announcing the Word! To make our
educational communities more aware of the rights of the child comes back to
starting again on the path of values and sense, without in any way having to
impose on the members of our communities an act of Christian faith. From this
point of view, the campaign of raising awareness of the rights of the child
could prove to be a real opportunity for a renewed explanation of the lasallian
commitment to the service of the poorest.
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