Annapolis Valley Register

Mutual ethos and historic connection

- BY LAWRENCE POWELL THE SPECTATOR

When Warden Timothy Habinski described Annapolis County to the folks at Gordonstou­n School in Duffus, Elgin, Morayshire in northern Scotland, they seemed impressed.

But so too was Habinski impressed with Gordonstou­n, the famous internatio­nal school founded by Dr. Kurt Hahn, the man who also started the Outward Bound program and the Duke of Edinburgh Awards. He was also the man jailed by Adolph Hitler in 1933 and rescued by British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald.

When Gordonstou­n offered a franchise of the school to developer Edward Farren, who wanted to build an internatio­nal school in Annapolis County, Habinski was elated. Not just for the economic boon it would mean, but because the ethos of the school and the ethos of Annapolis County are so similar.

“If there’s a point I really want people to know about the school, and about why this project, it’s this: when we went to Gordonstou­n I presented specifical­ly on the values and culture of Annapolis County. I wanted them to know what kind of a county it was,” said Habinski.

Gordonstou­n had been approached for franchises on a number of occasions in the past and had always turned the opportunit­y down, he said.

“This time they approached Ed. They approached the developer and asked if he would consider it,” Habinski said. “It was after that conversati­on, and they saw an absolute sympathy between their values and priorities as an organizati­on – their ethical values – and what we were talking about as being absolutely the character of Annapolis County. That it’s predicated on this idea of compassion, on a notion of volunteeri­sm, that that’s really what informs so many of the decisions that are made here. They found that intensely attractive. Gordonstou­n reflects our values.”

Gordonstou­n Nova Scotia, a $62-million not-for-profit internatio­nal school will educate youth aged 16 to 19 using the Gordonstou­n brand and ethos. Dr. Hahn’s educationa­l philosophy is detailed in Farren’s business plan.

“Kurt Hahn’s views on world affairs and the necessity of peace and new approaches to interactio­ns between nations through education were shaped by his experience­s in the German Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs and his work as Private Secretary to Prince Max von Baden, last Imperial Chancellor of Germany,” the business plan reads.

“Kurt Hahn believed the principal task of education is to ensure the survival of five fundamenta­l qualities needed to meet generation­al challenges in respect to personal growth and internatio­nal cooperatio­n leading to peace and developmen­t among nations,” the plan said.

Specifical­ly, those qualities are: an enterprisi­ng curiosity within individual­s, an undefeatab­le spirit in meeting challenges, tenacity in the pursuit of goals, readiness for sensible self-denial, and above all, understand­ing and compassion for others.

“Their focus right now is on whole-person education,” said Habinski. “They’re bringing in students from around the world. They’re teaching them to be humble, to care about their communitie­s, and to value their own achievemen­t in terms of what they’re able to give.”

Historic Connection

Gordonstou­n Scotland and Gordonstou­n Nova Scotia’s home in New Scotland have something else in common.

Gordonstou­n Scotland was the home of Sir Robert Gordon who was made Scotland’s Premier Baronet of Nova Scotia on May 28, 1625 and granted 16,000 acres on the coast of Nova Scotia which were erected into a barony.

“Sir Robert had arranged the Awards of this Honour in order to finance the developmen­t of the Colony that is now the Province of Nova Scotia,” Farren’s plan notes. “The coat of arms of the Baronetcy of Nova Scotia is situated on the west gable of Gordonstou­n House, now the administra­tive building of Gordonstou­n and will be replicated in the administra­tion building of Gordonstou­n Nova Scotia that is to be named Sir Robert Gordon Hall.”

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