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Vegetarian Values Kits for Young Peopleby Maynard S. ClarkI have an idea that I'm currently floating around the vegetarian world. Have you ever wondered why so many vegetarian families are "unaffiliated" with any local organization; or why so many vegetarian young people feel "alienated" and "dispossessed" and disconnected, even from other vegetarians, especially if those vegetarians are older than they; or why, if our ideas are so valuable and true, there aren't more vegetarian "revolutions"?Perhaps there are few real resources for the much younger members of local vegetarian societies - the young people growing up from infancy, toddlers, youngsters, preteens, teens/adolescent, etc.. Also, the vegetarian movement is presently framed, perhaps inadvertently, as an "anti-family" movement, although that was hardly the intention of the various founders, many of whom have successfully married and built bright, energetic, compassionate families who share their vegetarian values at home and in their communities beyond. There are many resources for pregnant vegetarians, and nursing moms, and that's what Veg-Parent (note 1) does well; but most of the discussion on the list is about issues related to infants and toddlers. There is a real need for informational resources to help guide older young vegetarians and vegans through difficult areas of image, diet, self awareness, getting along, and vocation or career. My idea is to develop educational resources for both the local vegetarian societies and homeschooling families, since we need to find a large enough base for selling these resource kits. These kits will cover the key topics that are more specific to vegetarians, as "curriculum kits" for young people, focusing on each of the major areas of vegetarian values. For example:
I think that we all benefit from any kind of constructive interpersonal commitments that one local vegetarian society member makes towards other vegetarian society members. I think that the kind of interest we see among vegetarian young people at the annual NAVS Summerfest in helping to teach younger vegetarians could be easily tapped in the local vegetarian societies, and good "teaching" (educational) opportunities for our more gifted young people could be developed - to the advantage of everyone involved. I think that NAVS would be an ideal venue for developing the idea, and, while the NAVS Board has more than enough work to do with the annual NAVS Summerfest, I can envision the NAVS Board allowing me or someone else - such as educators and vegans Antonia Demas (note 2) or Dr. James Oswald (note 3) - to develop this kind of idea under the auspices of NAVS, as an NAVS-approved project. I could also envision NAVS and VUNA cooperating in North America to develop such a project for the IVU - but with particularly North American perspectives. A scenario for the future might be the IVU taking on this kind of material for all continents of the world - but my goals right now are to see this as an "English language project." The idea of "curriculum kits" has a long history in religious denominations in North America. Groups as diverse as the Southern Baptists and the Unitarian Universalist Association use curriculum kits, and most religious denominations have publishing houses for their educational materials. I don't want to compete with the religious communities, but I do believe that we have unique content areas that we ought to develop, and that much of the content has already been developed - and needs merely to be reorganized into "boxes" or packages - with materials such as
The cost of producing such a series of kits could vary greatly, and we could begin by developing those for which we have the greatest amount of materials - perhaps "Our World"; but I believe that the kits most useful to our collective needs of perhaps 400-600 local vegetarian societies in North America might be the ones on the vegetarian home; vegetarians and business; nutrition; beyond nutrition - other health issues; living among others; vegetarian philosophy - big questions for vegetarians; our food - our world (i.e. what food is, and what its origin). I believe that curriculum kits like "The Vegetarian Home" would help vegetarians sort out the rather unusual experience of being a living, thriving, questioning human being in "a vegetarian home". Instruction, yes: but built upon wholesome, loving principles drawn from the highest and noblest sources we can find. Anyway, that's just the outline of some of my concerns. Perhaps you can share your thoughts with me, either directly or by posting a message to VEGAN Mailing List . Maynard S. Clark Notes
AbbreviationsNAVS: North American Vegetarian SocietyVUNA: Vegetarian Union of North America IVU: International Vegetarian Union |
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