I know it’s a cliche to say that “children are the future” but they are. And if these kids are in any way representative of the future in Greece, then there is some hope. They are able to see the reality of racism in Greece (something that is often vigorously denied) and are expressing concern and compassion for the victims of it. I am also impressed by the young woman who calls on the Greek government to act with that same compassion towards political refugees.
It’s wonderful to read this ray of sunshine in what can sometimes feel like a hopeless struggle.
A large segment of Greek society is mistrustful and condescending toward immigrants but also hypocritical as they make use of their services, according to schoolchildren who participated in an essay-writing competition organized by the Athens office of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR).
“With my essay I wanted to respond to fellow pupils whose behavior toward foreign children is racist,” 16-year-old Maria-Anastassia Louka from Lamia told Kathimerini. According to Louka, who won the prize for the best essay, Greek schoolboys harass female immigrants in the classroom and in the schoolyard “because they see them as easy targets and do not respect them.”
Older Greeks are also mistrustful of foreigners, Louka says. “Immigrants want to create relationships with us but Greeks keep their distance,” Louka said, adding that there is widespread hypocrisy. “Everyone secretly buys from the Chinese because their goods are cheap,” she said.
Other pupils used their essays to stress the value of the different outlook and experience of immigrants. “We have a lot to learn from immigrants,” said Iliana Kyriazidou from Kavala. “When they tell us stories about their homeland we all sit and listen, even those who bully them.”
Eleftheria Tsaknaki drew the inspiration for her piece from the story of her schoolfriend Adina who set off for Greece from Kurdistan but whose father died during the exhausting trip. “I want to appeal to the government to listen to political refugees and not abandon them to an uncertain fate,” Tsaknaki said.
Perhaps the most poignant observation was by 12-year-old Yiannis Petkanis. “I saw migratory birds flying south for the winter and thought that refugees are like this but unfortunately they don’t have the same freedom to return to their native country however homesick they may feel.”
The UNHCR is pleased with the response to its competition. “We are pleasantly surprised as we see that the children are increasingly informed every year,” UNHCR’s information officer Stella Nanou told Kathimerini, adding that many of the entrants expressed an interest in working as volunteers at refugee support centers.
Technorati Tags: greece, immigation, refugees, racism,
Anti-Racist Demonstrations on June 1st, 2009
No Racism in Greece on October 1st, 2008
Anti-Racist Festival on July 3rd, 2008
Mosque Attacked on May 23rd, 2008
Greek Prosecutor's Racist Statement on March 5th, 2008
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Hey, it is nice to read something on a more positive note for a change. Of course the congrats really need to go to the teachers, who usually are the unsung heroes of such phenomena.
Διαγόρας (Diagoras)s last blog post..Happy 6012th anniversary of the creation of the universe!
I wish i did saw these attitudes in the schools i attended in Britain. My classroom and playground memories consist of racist and sexist teachers and a curriculum which reflected their views.
I remember a Sikh kid having his turban pulled off and thrown down the stairs by a white kid. I remember the white teachers laughing as they watched the turban unravelling as it bounced down the stairs. When i told the teachers who did it, they told me to ’stop telling tales’. STOP TELLING TALES?
Although there is a ‘veneer’ of racial and religious tolerance in British schools today, things haven’t really changed much:
http://www.inthenews.co.uk/new.....027667.htm