Saturday, August 6, 2011

Personal Side of Bias, Prejudice and Oppression

One incident that I clearly remember was when I was a bit younger. I have always been very diverse and had friends of all race and colors. When I was living in North Carolina I was good friends with a group of Marines an hour away. We would spend nearly every weekend together. My best guy friend, Tony, is African American. One weekend he drove out to pick me up and bring me back to the Marine base for the day. As we were walking around in the nearby town African American women would shout obscene comments from their window about my being Caucasian and Tony being black. That scenario obviously game me no chance for rebuttal or education. That same weekend a bunch of us went dancing together and a few white guys saw me dancing with Tony and for a few minutes I thought there would be a riot. We quickly left in the name of safety. Both of these incidents made me extremely angry that people were so close minded and even cared that my friend and I were together. These two incidents did not afford an opportunity for greater equality at the time but I have always emphasized the importance of acceptance and a zero tolerance for prejudice to those around me. I am thankful that the military has come so far as to have a zero tolerance and equal opportunities offices to report any incidents to.

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Established Contact with My German Childhood Professional

My contact actually changed from Tonya Schmidt to Thomas Volz. He studied in New York and Turkey. He taught school in Turkey and in Boveria at the Abuture, which they call the place of higher learning durin ghte first years. He also taught Turkish students to speak English for 4 years. He has 3 boys of his own that are 11, 12 and 15 years old. Whe I asked him to tell me about povery in Germany that he might have experienced and how it affects children, this is what he wrote to me:
"In Germany the federal social security system is (still) so comprehensive that you hardly notice any differences between rich and poor students in class. As (still) most of our schools end at 1pm, lunch, nutrition and healthcare is predominantly considered a private matter. People are very touchy about the government interfering in these questions. So it is left to health care providers to inform and teach the public on a voluntary basis. Of Course schools support this, but not as an integral part of the basic curriculum. The stress is on academic subjects".
"However, times are changing. More and more schools exand their lessons into the afternoon and the schools provide lunch. This is generally a cheap alternative to private lunch served at home. Here the schools monitor ingediences and nutrition very closely because many parents are very aware of this topic"
"The gap between rich and poor is, however, quite obvious on a higher academic level. Children that are academically supported at home are more likely to proceed to higher education and achieve better results on the long run. This more a question of how educated the parents/families are. But as education and income are unextricably entwined the link between academic achievement and income is a sad (German) fact"