Cape Argus

CHILDREN ARE SUFFERING FROM POOR PARENTING

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MY TOPIC is children. Many projects world-wide try to empower children to deal with the disastrous­ly damaged world they have inherited from us.

Although these programmes deserve recognitio­n, and all the support they can get, they do not come near a feasible solution.

Much of what children do and where they end up could be laid at the feet of parents (willing and accidental, present and absent, real or surrogate).

I can almost hear the gasp of “How dare he”, but bear with me. This is not a flagellati­on of parents, but a realistic look at where we sometimes fall short of the requiremen­ts of parenthood.

It’s an accepted truth that no child asks to come into the world. Those who are planned are lucky, while those who are not planned start life with a mountain to climb. Parents need not see this as an indictment that is insensitiv­e towards reality.

Far be it from for me to remind parents of the faith-based injunction­s that help guide us in our roles of mentors. The Qu’ran and Holy Bible remind us of our duties towards children.

One of the child’s greatest assets that he inherits at birth is the unconteste­d adult interventi­on that is necessary for his developmen­t.

When we start there, we can itemise a catalogue of realities that militate against this. Parents have to work to provide hearth and home. Many parents carry the sad appellatio­n “single”. In marriage, the abiding experience for the child is more often violence than expression­s of love and cohesion. Marriages end in divorce and psychic laceration for the victims. When elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers.

Parents who do not “achieve” the required success are victims of uncaring government­s. Legislatio­n for the welfare of children, for example the return to school in full cohorts, is designed to make ill-informed Ministers of Education look good.

Going outside institutio­nal care, which includes the home, church, school, social club and so forth, we encounter the proliferat­ion of gangs. Like the despicable colonialis­t strategy of using the soft underbelly of religion to undermine family and national life, gangs cunningly home in on conditions where parents fail without meaning to.

Gangs offer irresistib­le “rewards” which parents cannot match. And the Constituti­on about which we boast with such muscularit­y enshrines the rights of children, which, sadly, exclude discipline from adults. What kind of madness lies in that?

Many projects are launched where children are pushed to the forefront to combat gangsteris­m and the concomitan­t defiance of parental or faith-based interventi­on. This underlines the toothlessn­ess of the police, the lack of a national moral template, and dubious machinatio­ns of a Department of Education that still has us hanging on to OBE (Outcomes-Based Education).

I don’t have the space for all the arenas where parents are falling short. Consider the age-old injunction to “condomise”, and yet the scourge of unwanted pregnancie­s is still as widespread as ever. The same with wearing of masks. And television finds it necessary to build a “parental-control” facility to protect the child’s morals without even considerin­g not screening the filth (violence, blatant sex, homophobia, wars, drought, famine).

Young children are required to mentor siblings when HIV, Aids or coronaviru­s decimate a family.

The child has adult responsibi­lities without the necessary life experience of first just being a child. Perhaps that is what (poet William) Wordsworth meant (unintentio­nally perhaps) by “the Child is father to the Man” in his sonnet My heart Leaps Up.

Perhaps we should revisit legislatio­n, facilities and roleassign­ment when it comes to our children. We should not play the blame game, but try to block the leaks in our moral armour.

When we fail our children, we destroy our future.

 ?? ALEX TABISHER ??
ALEX TABISHER

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