Promoting peace through understanding
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If we understood our differences, could we all get along? Were we
able to eliminate bias based on race, religion, gender, age and other
aspects of diversity, would the world be a more peaceful place?
With these aims, the Newport Beach Public Library will launch
“Making Change Through Tolerance” this fall. Funded by the Newport
Beach Public Library Foundation, the ongoing program will offer
numerous special presentations, as well as a collection of materials
that promote tolerance. As an introduction, and to encourage
expression about tolerance, an art and essay contest is now underway
for students in seventh through 12th grades.
For inspiration, students can turn to historical fiction that
portrays the ugliness of prejudice. The best of the genre includes
“The Land,” Mildred Taylor’s 2002 Coretta Scott King Author Award
winner. Narrated by the son of a white plantation-owner father and a
slave mother, the saga about life in 1880s Mississippi recalls a time
of rampant racism.
Other ideas for the contest may be gleaned from videos that
examine contemporary intolerance. How to fight ethnic bias is
explored in “Color-Blind,” a provocative documentary in which five
students of diverse backgrounds discuss racial harassment at their
high school.
As a role model for tolerance, people of all ages can turn to Elie
Wiesel, who discusses his reaction to the Holocaust on “Facing Hate,”
a Bill Moyers Collection video. Reflecting on his inability to hate
after witnessing his family’s demise in the Nazi death camps, the
Auschwitz survivor observes, “Hate is not only destructive, it is
self-destructive.”
Even before they start school, children can assimilate racist
attitudes, conclude Debra Van Ausdale and Joe Feagin in “The First
R.” From their study of preschoolers in multiethnic day care centers,
readers can learn how perceptions of ethnicity can become planted in
children’s psyches at an early age.
Early biases can grow into intolerance that surfaces on one of
society’s most insidious battlefields -- the school playground. In
this combat zone, peer abuse can leave deep scars, an effect examined
by a professional psychologist and a child abuse prevention advocate
in “Bullies and Victims.” In their exploration of schoolyard cruelty,
Suellen and Paula Fried present empowering strategies for challenging
physical, verbal and emotional abuse.
Think you have no preconceived notions that influence your
behavior? Test your perceptions by viewing “How Biased Are You?” From
subtle expressions of racism to extreme manifestations -- slavery,
the Holocaust, segregation and bias crimes -- this Discovery Channel
video looks at one of society’s most destructive forces.
For expressing their thoughts about tolerance in images or words,
four seventh through 12th graders will win a $100 savings bond.
Two-dimensional art and 250- to 300-word essays for “Peace through
Understanding” may be submitted to any Newport Beach Public Library
through Oct. 18.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach
Public Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams. All titles
may be reserved from home or office computers by accessing the
catalog at www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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