Book Title: YJA Convention 1994 07 Chicago IL First Author(s): Young Jains of America (YJA) Publisher: Young Jains of America YJA USAPage 63
________________ Education in Jainism Not Enough for the Real World By Jugna Shah It is another Sunday and we are off to the Jain Society meeting. This week another guru is speaking to us about the importance of Namokar Mantra. How many times have kids asked us to stay home, or told you that the program was boring. They are telling you something. Please listen to them. television, magazines, friends, etc... The answer is not to shelter the children, because that will only make matters worse in the future. However, the best method of protection that a parent can give a child is that of knowledge. As in Jainism, the gurus teach us that we must acquire a certain amount of knowledge which we will use as our base to learn and understand more. In giving children Jainism, I think parents forget or just do not want to face the other issues that children face each day. You tell your eighteen year old daughter that her ideas are weird and different and that she is only going through a rebellious stage. Your daughter tells you that she is not trying to be rebellious, but that these are her ideas. Why don't you hear what she is trying to tell you. Please listen. Your mom tells you that you cannot wear a bikini to the beach. You do not understand why and you think that your mom is un-cool. Do you bother to understand that she has her reasons and that maybe the two of you could talk about them and make a compromise? Please listen to one another. You do not understand them and they do not understand you. This is the root to every problem that we face. This is the starting point and we must all first recognize the existence of this problem and then address it together. The answer, to why, effective communication is not occurring is simple. We are all too afraid to talk to one another openly. Parents fear talking about issues, such as dating, marriage, sex, homosexuals, abortion, racism, drugs, crime etc... for two main reasons. First, parents do not want to put these ideas into their kids' heads. The problem is that kids are exposed to these things from the time they wake up and go to school to the time they come home and go to sleep after watching TV. You may think that your silence is protecting your child from all of these evil things, but it is not. The second reason for parental fear is that everyone thinks that bad things don't happen to their kids, or that their kids are straight and have no problems or concerns. I can understand this mentality because I have a younger brother and I often think that these issues won't affect his life. I am wrong, as are parents who do not communicate with their children because by not talking about these things we are keeping these kids in the dark. Kids will be exposed to these things at school, but that should not be their first exposure. They should know that they can talk to their family without their parents getting angry or ignoring their children's questions. That is the fear that kids have. The above examples illustrate how we are not communicating, and how we do not stop, to listen to one another, and how close-minded we can be. The issues that parents and youths seem to be facing are not inherent to only Jain youths, they are issues that all first-generation cultures face, and they seem to be born out of fear. The fear of losing one's culture, religion, language, heritage etc... These are the parents' fears. The children's fears are a little harder to define. They have to do with wanting to retain the things that parents want them to retain, while struggling to balance that with the messages that they receive from school, radio, Parents are not the only ones that have a fear of communication, children, youths, and young adults also suffer from fear. However, their 61 Jain Education Intemational For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.orgPage Navigation
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