November 11, 2003

Children invent a folklore

Nighmares and Fairtails shared by homeless children

Folktales are usually an inheritance from family or homeland. But what if you are a child enduring a continual, grueling, dangerous journey? No adult can steel such a child against the outcast's fate: the endless slurs and snubs, the threats, the fear. What these determined children do is snatch dark and bright fragments of Halloween fables, TV news, and candy-colored Bible-story leaflets from street-corner preachers, and like birds building a nest from scraps, weave their own myths. The "secret stories" are carefully guarded knowledge, never shared with older siblings or parents for fear of being ridiculed -- or spanked for blasphemy. But their accounts of an exiled God who cannot or will not respond to human pleas as his angels wage war with Hell is, to shelter children, a plausible explanation for having no safe home, and one that engages them in an epic clash.
This is a really powerfull story. The children have created a hole mytholgy to explain their rotten deal in life. At the same time, it encourages them to be "good", while not promising them anything. Quite the contrary, the children seem to think good will lose but would rather be good and loose then bad and win.

Posted by pqbon at November 11, 2003 02:58 PM