教师能看到澳大利亚的新种姓主义吗?

S. Fyson
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It happened to me once in India. A friend took me to a village where he had set up a school which included visiting medical teams and social support teams (including micro-finance programs). This village was part of what are called the Dalits of India. The Dalits are the traditional lowest social group of India, below the slave caste. If I close my eyes, I can still see the aged and bent elder who came and took my hand, and with tears in his eyes, continued to thank me for what I had done. What was this marvellous thing? I had simply sat on a mat and played and interacted with some of the children of the village from that school. Earlier, I had been to their classroom and told them a story, via a translator. I and two young teachers had then walked through the classroom interacting with each student, including giving them a memento of our visit and shaking hands with each of them. Why might this elder be so moved by this simple act, which we hopefully would consider routine? It was because we were the first people of ‘importance’ (they had never seen a PhD type person before) to treat their children the same as everyone else. And no leader had ever sat on the dirt on a cane mat to play with their children. I felt completely inadequate, because I was simply doing what I had always done since my youth. My Christian parents taught me to respect all people. And they showed me what that looked like, even when they disagreed with others. However, when the chief elder (of an upper caste) in that village heard that I had been to the Dalit part of the village first, he refused to meet with me. I had transgressed the social order. I later heard a Brahman priest explain that such conduct – of ignoring the social behaviours linked to caste “destroyed the order of the universe”. Technically, any discrimination based on this structure is not legal in India – Gandhi worked to achieve this. Some Indian scholars believe that it was this part of his work that resulted in his assassination. Yet, I have seen such discrimination enacted in India. These experiences taught me afresh that perhaps I should not take for granted the principles of respect that my parents taught me. On what did they base their beliefs and subsequent behaviour? It was because they believed every person was made in the image of the Creator God (see Genesis 1:1617). Thus, despite any differences in capacity, rank, responsibility or authority, they believed all persons were of equal worth (see Galatians 3:26-28). This equality did not mean they assumed that everyone was the same, simply that they were to be regarded and treated with equal respect. My sister and I were taught that on this basis you treated people equally, without fear or favour. This equality of respect did not mean that you would always agree with their opinions or their actions. But you always respected them as a person. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们生活在一个社会变化的世界。在那个世界里,基督教教师习惯于认为所有的人都是按照上帝的形象造的。这一假设通常意味着对所有人都表现出深深的尊重。这种尊重同样延伸到基督徒如何理解课堂上的关系。然而,在我们的西方世界里,关于生活的设计和目的有不同的说法。这种思想竞争的一部分涉及到我们如何将人类视为人的含义。这篇文章提出,这些新的澳大利亚替代基督教看待生活的方式之一是在所谓的不同类型的人中创造一种未明说但真实的种姓制度。因为被认为违反了非暴力的公共行为而被公开拒绝招待,这是一种令人不安的经历。我在印度也遇到过这种事。一位朋友带我去了一个村庄,他在那里建立了一所学校,包括访问医疗队和社会支持小组(包括小额信贷项目)。这个村庄是印度贱民的一部分。达利特人是印度传统上最低等的社会群体,低于奴隶种姓。如果我闭上眼睛,我还能看到那位弯腰驼背的老人,他走过来牵着我的手,眼里含着泪水,继续感谢我所做的一切。这个神奇的东西是什么?我只是坐在一张垫子上,和村里那所学校的孩子们一起玩耍和互动。早些时候,我去了他们的教室,通过翻译给他们讲了一个故事。然后,我和两位年轻的老师走过教室,与每个学生互动,包括给他们一个我们访问的纪念品,并与他们每个人握手。为什么这位老人会被这个简单的举动如此感动,我们希望这是例行公事?这是因为我们是第一个“重要”的人(他们以前从未见过一个博士类型的人),对待他们的孩子和其他人一样。也没有哪个领导人曾经坐在藤条垫子上的泥土上和他们的孩子玩耍。我觉得自己完全不够格,因为我只是在做我从年轻时就一直在做的事情。我信奉基督教的父母教我要尊重所有人。他们向我展示了那是什么样子,即使他们不同意别人的观点。然而,当村里(高种姓的)长老听说我先去了村里的达利特区后,他拒绝见我。我违反了社会秩序。后来,我听到一位婆罗门祭司解释说,这种无视与种姓有关的社会行为的行为“破坏了宇宙秩序”。从技术上讲,基于这种结构的任何歧视在印度都是不合法的——甘地努力实现了这一点。一些印度学者认为,正是他的这部分工作导致了他被暗杀。然而,我在印度看到了这样的歧视。这些经历让我重新认识到,也许我不应该把父母教给我的尊重原则视为理所当然。他们的信仰和后来的行为是基于什么?因为他们相信每个人都是按照造物主的形象造的(见创世记1:1617)。因此,尽管在能力、等级、责任或权威上存在差异,但他们相信所有的人都是平等的(见加拉太书3:26-28)。这种平等并不意味着他们认为每个人都是一样的,只是他们应该受到平等的尊重和对待。我妹妹和我受到的教育是,在这个基础上,你要平等待人,没有恐惧和偏袒。这种平等的尊重并不意味着你总是同意他们的意见或行为。但你总是把他们当作一个人来尊重。很久以后,作为一名成瘾咨询心理学家,我了解到,这也意味着我可以尊重那些深陷痛苦的人,同时学会不成为他们混乱思维和行为的推动者。
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Can Teachers See Australia's New Caste-ism?
We live in a world of social change. Within that world, Christian teachers are used to thinking of all people as made in the Image of God. That assumption has often meant practising a deep respect for all people. This respect has similarly extended to how Christians understand relationships in the classroom. Yet there are competing narratives about the design and purpose of life within our Western world. Part of this competition of ideas is caught up in implications that come from how we view human beings as persons. This article proposes that one of these new Australian alternatives to Christian ways of viewing life is creating an unstated but real caste system amongst socalled different kinds of persons. Caste-ism as exclusion It is a disturbing experience to be openly refused hospitality because of a perceived breach of nonviolent public conduct. It happened to me once in India. A friend took me to a village where he had set up a school which included visiting medical teams and social support teams (including micro-finance programs). This village was part of what are called the Dalits of India. The Dalits are the traditional lowest social group of India, below the slave caste. If I close my eyes, I can still see the aged and bent elder who came and took my hand, and with tears in his eyes, continued to thank me for what I had done. What was this marvellous thing? I had simply sat on a mat and played and interacted with some of the children of the village from that school. Earlier, I had been to their classroom and told them a story, via a translator. I and two young teachers had then walked through the classroom interacting with each student, including giving them a memento of our visit and shaking hands with each of them. Why might this elder be so moved by this simple act, which we hopefully would consider routine? It was because we were the first people of ‘importance’ (they had never seen a PhD type person before) to treat their children the same as everyone else. And no leader had ever sat on the dirt on a cane mat to play with their children. I felt completely inadequate, because I was simply doing what I had always done since my youth. My Christian parents taught me to respect all people. And they showed me what that looked like, even when they disagreed with others. However, when the chief elder (of an upper caste) in that village heard that I had been to the Dalit part of the village first, he refused to meet with me. I had transgressed the social order. I later heard a Brahman priest explain that such conduct – of ignoring the social behaviours linked to caste “destroyed the order of the universe”. Technically, any discrimination based on this structure is not legal in India – Gandhi worked to achieve this. Some Indian scholars believe that it was this part of his work that resulted in his assassination. Yet, I have seen such discrimination enacted in India. These experiences taught me afresh that perhaps I should not take for granted the principles of respect that my parents taught me. On what did they base their beliefs and subsequent behaviour? It was because they believed every person was made in the image of the Creator God (see Genesis 1:1617). Thus, despite any differences in capacity, rank, responsibility or authority, they believed all persons were of equal worth (see Galatians 3:26-28). This equality did not mean they assumed that everyone was the same, simply that they were to be regarded and treated with equal respect. My sister and I were taught that on this basis you treated people equally, without fear or favour. This equality of respect did not mean that you would always agree with their opinions or their actions. But you always respected them as a person. I learnt much later, as an addictions counselling psychologist, that this also meant that I could respect people in deep pain, and yet learn not to be an enabler of their disordered thinking and conduct.
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