T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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695.1 | | BMW320::BERNSTEIN | Now vee may perhaps to begin.Yes? | Thu May 11 1989 00:22 | 27 |
| Aside from the fact that I think the title is both too strong and
inaccurate...
Is there more to this, Mr. TSE::POLIKOFF? Your note seems to end
rather abruptly. Are you asking us our opinion here? Or our help?
How can we help you?
There was also something you said:
> When I got home I sent a letter to all the Christian clergy in
> town asking them if they knew if any of their young parishioners were
> anti-Semitic.
This seems rather damning and extraordinarily presumptuous. How old
of a boy are we discussing here?
> All the Assistant Scout Masters and Committee Persons are on my
> side and have said that if the grandmother can get a Jew out of the
> troop this time, who will be next.
"This time"?? Um, does this thing happen in your community on a regular
basis? That vocally? This better not be in my neighborhood...
Your condemnation of this incident is unpleasant to me since you appear
to be using what MAY be an isolated incident of, yes, ignorance, and
putting labels on it...
Just my opinion, .steve.
|
695.2 | Another possibility? | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Thu May 11 1989 04:13 | 50 |
| Let's focus a bit on the boy.
For your information, I am no 'headshrinker', but I dead read quite a
few books on education, to be a bit better prepared to raise my three
own youngsters. Some Freud is on my bookshelf, as well, although I
admit that part of it is too high for me (but it looks great, there
:-).
The symptoms:
- he fights with his fellow boy scouts
- he antagonizes with every single one of them
- he offends you with a remark that he KNOWS hurts you
- he lies
The context:
- his mother is divorced
- his grandmother covers him
- he loves both of them
Some of my comments:
Telling YOU that the Jews killed Jesus is the boy's way to punch you on
the nose, since he can't do that, physically. 'Punching' others is his
way to attract their ATTENTION. He wants to be 'remarked'. Since he is
unable to obtain this attention by love and kindliness, he tries it via
aggressiveness, and notices success. Hence, he continues in this
direction.
The only way to stop this behavior is to, simply, IGNORE him, and
freeze the contact with him. The second step is then to go back to
normal, and re-integrate him into the activities. In that sense, your
reaction was about the worst of all possibilities.
This child needs some psychiatrist's help. I may be totally wrong,
and I do not claim to be knowledgeable, but out of all your
descriptions, I would deduce that the boy suffers a classical �dipus
complex.
You're pressing the wrong buttons for solving the issue. I don't
believe anti-Semitism was the child's motive. Were you a Muslim,
he'd probably read you excerpts of the 'Satanic Verses'.
Talk to the mother, again, and try to convince her that she gives
her child some headshrinker's assistance. Cooperate with the doctor
and ask for advice.
As for the fuss that's going on, all it will do is aggravating the
boy's problems.
|
695.3 | I Don't Care About The Kid - He's Not an Orphan | FDCV01::ROSS | | Thu May 11 1989 09:47 | 21 |
| Re: .2
Chris, I think you're missing part (most) of the basenote author's
point.
It it were I, I wouldn't, at this stage, give a damn for the little
mumser making the anti-Semitic comments. Let *his* mother and grand-
mother worry if he's suffering from an Oedipal complex. (If the
kid wants to screw his mother, so be it!)
The issue is whether the grandmother, because of her anti-Semitism
and contacts in the town, is able to get Mr. Polikoff bounced as a
leader of the scout troop.
Please try to focus on the topic rather than going off on your own,
usually rambling, tangents.
Annoyed-ingly yours,
Alan
|
695.4 | "A scout is reverent" | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Thu May 11 1989 10:22 | 17 |
| Isofar as the boy, and indeed the Weblow den is concerned, I think
it might be useful to devote at least part of a meeting to
a discussion of Scout attributes, particularly, "A scout is
reverent". After all, these kids are ready to become boy scouts.
I think that they might be interested in what that means.
Try to find out what the boys understand that to mean. It may give
you an opportunity to let the kids know that there are many religions
and scout requirements for reverence apply to all. There are scouts
in Moslem lands, in Jewish lands, and in Christian lands and that
here, we have a mixture. But respect for the religion of each is
a requirement that scouting insists upon.
As for the adult side of things, I'd fight it at the commission
level and in every public forum (including the press) as is available.
I think that such a fight, if properly conducted, would present
the kids with a model that they could admire.
|
695.5 | .4 has it | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Thu May 11 1989 11:19 | 6 |
| The suggestions in .4 are perfect.
re .3: There were so many issues and problems mentioned in .0 that the
firing of a Jewish Scout Leader didn't, upfront, appear as the major
one. It was not clearly stated what the purpose was, I'm afraid.
As for yourself, I admire your distinguished style.
|
695.6 | One more opinion | CHOVAX::FINKELSTEIN | Waiting for the Electrician | Thu May 11 1989 12:26 | 25 |
| I have to both agree and disagree with the previous replies (can
you tell I went to yeshiva?).
The purpose of boy scouts is to help boys like the one mentioned
in .0. Being a scout leader is not easy, and sometime it requires
the skills of a psychiatrist to a football coach.
It seems that the problem really started in the car incident. You
are right, that was not the place for a lession in christianity
but a little more tact could have been exercised. Making the child
leave the car only reinforced his opinion of jews, and let him know
that your goat could be gotten.
The boy and his family need counseling and quickly before the problem
escalates more than it already has. If you want to fight the forced
resignation you simply have to call the ACLU who will be able to
give more information about contesting it, though hopefully it will
never reach that point.
The most important thing is for you to calm down, and focus on the
important things. Find a way to get the family help, and all the
other problems will resolve themself.
/jeff
|
695.7 | Any and All Compliments Gratefully Accepted | FDCV01::ROSS | | Thu May 11 1989 14:13 | 12 |
| re .3: There were so many issues and problems mentioned in .0 that the
firing of a Jewish Scout Leader didn't, upfront, appear as the major
one. It was not clearly stated what the purpose was, I'm afraid.
As for yourself, I admire your distinguished style.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Thank you. :-)
Grinningly and Modestly,
Alan
|
695.8 | There might always be this little boy ... | ERLANG::ARTSY | | Mon May 15 1989 11:44 | 20 |
| Isn't it sad that with all the equality of rights and religious freedom,
and no matter how kind and supportive you are, there always might be
that little boy or that old lady who will point at you and accuse you
of killing Jesus or just name you "dirty jew." And all the Law and
Education can do is only mitigate the problemn, not solve it.
... And that's the price of living in the Galut ...
Shaike
Ps: As to this particular incident, I think that you (Polikoff) went too
far. I can understand how bad you felt because of the boy's remark,
but considering his background or behaviour you should have separate
his religious beliefs from his desire to insult or punch others. It's
unfair to say "If I were you," but let me try nonetheless: I would try
in another occasion to calm down the boy, proove him wrong, and help
him to overcome his personal problems and his bad attitudes towards
everybody. I wouldn't try to ignore or quiet the problem, but not
exacerbate it either.
|
695.9 | Regarding the boy | RAVEN1::MKENNEDY | Eschew sesquipedalianism! | Tue May 16 1989 19:06 | 20 |
| Probably the boy is insecure. He is testing each authority in his life
in hopes of finding someone who cares enough to discipline him, having found
none in his mother or grandmother. He wants to know there is someone in
the world who can guide him instead of his having to depend on himself.
Polikoff, you may be the only masculine influence in his life capable of
enforcing some authority. It would have been better to have said, "Johnny,
you are not allowed to be disrespectful of anyone, not your
peers, nor your leaders. Please apologize now." If no apology, then
followe with the prescribed troup discipline, in the presence of another
leader. If you are unable to follow through, for the boy's sake, emphasize
to his pastor his need to discipline the boy with love. Otherwise, the
state may get the opportunity later.
You might consult Dr. James Dobson's "Dare to Discipline," and "Love Must
Be Tough."
Best Wishes,
Moffatt
|