Freire -- Didactief |
In many of Grimm’s fairy tales, the way out of the forest,
always mysterious, dark and dangerous, is the way in – in reverse.
The brightest of heroes -- hopeful, dangerously
inexperienced, but gifted by God with cleverness and primed to learn -- leaves
a trail of markers on his or her way into the forest so that, when a danger
intrudes that threatens to overcome them, they may find their way home again.
Home, the familiar past, the good and Godly spirit sometimes
hidden in the warp and woof of the tale, is the great desideratum.
The hero – think of Odysseus -- can and should bring his past
with him into any future of his making. You can carry your past, as Aeneas
carries his father on his back out of burning Troy, to a new future in a new
country, to a new virgin wilderness. That is the hope and dream of every storm
tossed refugee from the terrors of the dark forest who, through his own wits,
has come into a new country bearing his father, his past, on his back.
The past, William Faulkner said in an interview, “is not
over. It is not even past.” One’s daily calculations are intimately bound up
with one’s recollections and, it is not often enough stressed, with history, in
addition to one’s own personal experience.
In education, the past unfamiliar to students used to
matter. It was taught to students, usually in civics classes, by teachers familiar
with the foundational history of the United States. But this was in bygone days,
long before the arrival of Marxian pedagogical geniuses such as Paulo Freire, author of Pedagogy
of the Oppressed, first published
in English in 1970.
Sol Stern, a contributing editor of City Journal,
senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and the author of Breaking
Free: Public School Lessons and the Imperative of School Choice, writes, “Since
the publication of the English edition in 1970, Pedagogy of the Oppressed has
achieved near-iconic status in America’s teacher-training programs."
In our own time,
oppression has expanded to fill every corner of the pedagogical and political
universe. Even the dust mites of history have become oppressively oppressive.
The operational
thesis of Freire’s book is that every form of teaching is a form of oppression.
Therefore, teaching, as such, should be abandoned in favor of learning.
And preachy teachers should become First Students, supplying their charges with
intellectual matter, but taking great care not to intrude on what should be a
private pedagogical process. Furthermore, the past – “never over” according to
Faulkner – is much in need of reform. Not only should the past be over, so that
the future may be built on a solid Marxian foundation, it should be transformed
so that the past may be a prelude to a future no longer out of the reach of
postmodern revolutionists.
The very first commandment of the new Marxian Decalogue was
etched in stone by Marx in a note to a later work, the Theses
on Feuerbach. “The philosophers,” Marx wrote,” have hitherto only
interpreted the world in various ways. The point, however, is to change it.”
These words are etched in stone as an epitaph on Marx’s tombstone in Highgate
Cemetery in North London.
Teaching – that is, the imparting of knowledge from those
who know to those who do not know – is not oppression, unless the imparted
knowledge is a porridge of Marxist/Leninist propaganda. Such was the case in
the re-education centers of Stalinist Russia and Maoist China, where opponents
of the regime were ruthlessly suppressed as deviants of the Marxist/Leninist credo.
The deviants -- usually teachers, journalists, writers, opponents all of
totalitarian regimes such as Soviet physicist
and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Andrei Sakharov or, most impressively,
Alexander Solzhenitsyn – simply disappeared.
Stalin was famous for altering photos in which the victims
of Stalinist oppression, many of whom were Old Bolsheviks, were deleted from pictures
before the falsely charged offenders were eliminated in fact, usually by
forcing them to testify to their deviations in rigged show-court trials. Arthur
Koestler’s Darkness at Noon is a
fictional account of the trial and persecution of one such Stalinist victim who
agrees with the “justice” of the false charges brought against him.
Koestler’s “fiction” – a testament to the effectiveness of
terror and political force -- very likely is not taught any longer in our
Freire-dominated institutions of higher learning. The message written on every
page of Darkness at Noon is -- Truth
is always the first victim of oppressive regimes, and crimes against
intelligence nearly always are followed by crimes against truth-sayers.
It was G. K. Chesterton who said that in an age of radical
reform, orthodoxy – fidelity to history and faith – appears to have all the
vigor and strength of a heresy.
Just so, in our own day, real history, real education, as
opposed to reformist claptrap, the principles of small “r” republican
governance, all appear to have the strength and vigor of heresies in times
past.
And the way out of this dark forest is the way in – in
reverse.
Comments