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Title: Modern School
Author: Carl Zigrosser
Language: en
Topics: Modern School, education, Francisco Ferrer
Source: Retrieved on 15th August 2020 from https://waste.org/~roadrunner/ScarletLetterArchives/ModernSchool/ModernSchoolByZigrosser.htm
Notes: Printed by the Children of the Ferrer Modern School, Stelton, New Jersey

Carl Zigrosser

Modern School

The past century has witnessed many struggles on the part of the workers

to emancipate themselves from the evils of poverty and slavery which are

the common lot of their class. It also has witnessed many failures, and

with each failure has come a little clearer vision as to the wrongs from

which they suffer, and the methods of relief. With this enlarged vision

has come the recognition that if a race of really free people is to

inhabit the earth it is necessary to practice freedom with children in

order that they may grow up to be the free men and women of tomorrow.

Habit and custom are among the strongest factors in the life of man, and

as most men and women are trained from childhood to respect authority

and all its privileges, it is inevitable that the accepted standards and

privileges of one generation are passed on to the next with almost

imperceptible modifications. It was with these ideas that Francisco

Ferrer, the famous Spanish educator, started his Modern School at

Barcelona, and it was with a clear recognition of the fact that those in

control of the education of children control the mind of a nation and

are able to keep intact the system of industrial and political slavery

of modern society that the ruling class of Spain, acting through the

government put Fetter to death on October 13, 1909, outside the fortress

of Montjuich at Barcelona.

The legal murder of Ferrer, for such it is now almost universally

admitted, was followed by a recrystalization of the question of

libertarian education and its transcendent importance to the working

classes in their struggle for emancipation. Granted that there is a

desire on the part of certain individuals or groups to change the

relations of men and establish a new society through the agency of

libertarian education, there are, as Ferrer put it, two methods open to

work for the desired end. “To work for the transformation of the school

by studying the child, so as to prove scientifically that the present

organization of education is defective, and to bring about progressive

modification, or to found new schools in which shall be directly applied

those principles corresponding directly to the ideal of society and of

its units as held by those who eschew the conventionalities, prejudices,

cruelties, trickeries and falsehoods upon which modern society is

based.” Ferrer chose the latter method upon the ground that “Governments

have ever been careful to hold a high hand over the education of the

people. They know better than anyone else, that their power is based

almost entirely on the school. Hence they monopolize it more and more.

The time is past when they opposed the diffusion of instruction and when

they sought to restrain the education of the masses. These tactics were

formerly possible, because the economic life of the nations allowed the

prevalence of popular ignorance which rendered mastery easy. But

circumstances have changed. The progress of sciences, discoveries of all

kinds, have revolutionized the conditions of labor and production. It is

no longer possible for a people to remain ignorant; it must be educated

in order that the economic situation of one country may hold its own and

make headway against the universal competition. In consequence,

governments want education, they want a complete organization of the

school, not because they hope for a renovation of society through

education, but because they need individuals, workmen, perfected

instruments of labor, to make their industrial enterprises and the

capital employed in them profitable.”

It was not an accident that in this country where, excepting

pre-revolutionary Germany, whose system of education we copied,

intellectual docility has reached a point where to be a college student

is to be a potential scab against striking workingmen, that the death of

Ferrer should be followed by a movement to establish Modern Schools

along the lines of those at Barcelona; extremes ever and always meet.

Passing from a series of protest meetings against the killing of Ferrer,

an organization was formed in New York called the Francisco Ferrer

Association, on June 10, 1910, as a memorial to Ferrer and to carry on

his ideas of education. On January 1^(st) of the following year, a

permanent headquarters were opened at No. 6 St. Marks Place, which

became at once classroom, committee-room, clubroom, lecture hall and

library all in one. These activities were for adults only, but the

Association moved to 104 E. 12^(th) Street, on October 1^(st), and on

the 13^(th), second anniversary of the death 0f Ferrer, a school for

children was opened with one pupil; the number was soon increased to

eight, at which point it remained more or less for a year.

The high rent downtown and a desire to be near central Park where the

children might find a more stimulating and creative atmosphere than is

possible in the backyard of a slum dwelling such as the school was

compelled to occupy caused the Association to move to 63 E. 107^(th)

Street in October, 1912. With the slightly improved physical conditions

the school grew until it had twenty-five pupils in daily attendance and,

assisted by the adult classes in art, literature, sociology, languages,

and its activities in classes in the general revolutionary movement, the

Ferrer Association became known to an ever-increasing number of people.

As time went on a feeling grew among some of the members that necessary

as adult education was and is — and never a moment have the men and

women who have struggled to build up the school felt that the economic

struggle should be slackened, on the contrary it should be stimulated —

the two activities should be conducted separately and distinctly. So

when a proposal was made in August, 1914, to found a colony and move the

school to the country, it found many members receptive and ready for a

change.

It was felt to be unfair to the children and harmful to their

development as free spirits to grow up in an atmosphere of violent

partisanship and fierce revolutionary ardor inevitable with men and

women engaged in a daily struggle with the powers of darkness. We were

not then and are not now neutral where liberty is violated and economic

injustice prevails, but where children are concerned, less passion and

calmer judgment should prevail, if we would have them grow into rational

and liberty loving men and women.

The work of organizing the colony proceeded through the fall and winter

of 1914 and 1915, and in May, 1915, the children’s school was formally

moved to its present location near the village of Stelton in the state

of New Jersey about thirty miles from New York City. At first the colony

land consisted of sixty-eight acres, an old farm house without modern

conveniences, a barn and some old cow-sheds; the latter were soon torn

down to make way for a dormitory to house the thirty children brought

from the city. Nine acres of land and the buildings were set aside as a

permanent home for the school; later more land was acquired and sold in

one and two acre plots, as the first parcel had been, until the colony

has in all 143 acres, twelve of which now belong to the school, besides

the buildings heretofore mentioned, a new school house and small farming

equipment, consisting of several hundred chickens, cow and calf, and two

acres of land under cultivation as a garden to raise vegetables for the

children in the Living House of the school.

The Dormitory was built entirely on credit, as, when the children were

taken to Stelton, there was hardy enough money to pay their railway

fares, and the five and a half years at Stelton have been one long and

continuous struggle against poverty. John Stuart Mill pointed out long

ago that truth has no inherent quality that makes it superior to error,

for men have died as valiantly for the one as for the ether, and the

success achieved at Stelton has been due solely to the zeal of those who

have worked for the school. This zeal on the part of the members of the

Modem School Association and the fast growing recognition on the part of

lovers of liberty that it is idle to expect free men and women to come

out of institutions of learning saturated with the spirit of authority

and an anti-social attitude which is destructive of all the finer

instincts of the individual, has brought the school to its present

position.

The child has as much right to itself as has the adult, and the

personality of the child, during the sensitive and hazardous years of

early youth, must be kept free from the intrusive hands of those who

would mould and fashion it according to preconceived models, who would

thwart this quality and divert that, in order to fit the child into the

ideals of the teacher, that is, assuming the teacher has an ideal, which

far too often he has not. Ambition he may have, but ideals are for the

most part an obstacle in the path of material gain, and that is the aim

and object of modern society.

To instill in the minds of children a slave morality which insists that

there is but one way to achieve emancipation from the hardships of life,

and that is to have someone else perform them, to practice a ruthless

individualism and preach altruism, is the cynical attitude of most men

and women of to-day. Mutual Aid and Solidarity have been practiced for

ages by men and women, and none know their value more than the workers

in the shop, the union or the radical club, yet every public school in

the land ruthlessly suppresses these things in the individual pupil and

punishes him if he tries to assist a comrade.

Education should be the great experiment of life, for nothing can

surpass the joy of discovery through experience or personal observation.

This is well-nigh impossible in schools conducted under religious or

governmental auspices with their cut and dried rules and regulations

that make teaching a drudgery and destroy all joy and initiative in the

pupil. Over them hangs the pall of capitalist ethics; to maintain the

status quo in social relations and hold out to the child the hope of

material reward as a basis for its future action. All children are

sensitive and impressionable, quick to observe and understand the

relativity of theory and action, and the more sensitive the child the

more quickly it sees that the ethics taught in the classroom bear no

relation to the lives of those who advocate them. Children are not wood

or stone where a piece of poor workmanship can be thrown aside without

serious loss to the community; they are an agglomeration of nerves and

sensations capable of good or evil according to the manner in which they

are handled. The ruling classes know this, and, the time having passed

when it pays to keep the masses in ignorance, they now use education as

an instrument to mislead the masses and keep them in subjection. The

fact that helpless children are used to further this aim is of no

consequence, for every method and every tactic is legitimate with them

if it helps to preserve and maintain their privileges. Once it was

possible for the ruling class to disregard or ignore the people in

making war; now they distort the issues and mislead the people while

pretending to consult them. So with the school; here, while pretending

to uplift the children, history is misrepresented and every child

inspired with the spirit of the gambler by making it believe that

equality of opportunity is the figment of a disordered brain, and life a

tooth and claw fight where struggle is the order of the day. These are

capitalist ethics, and it is this theory that dominates every public

school in the land, either consciously or unconsciously. As this essay

is being written, the great question of the day is a social theory

commonly designated as Bolshevism. If education is, as we believe it to

be, the great experiment, it follows that a fair and important

presentation of this theory should be given to every school child

seeking information on the subject. Not only has this not been done but

the very nature of the public school makes it impossible; Bolshevism is

a road theory diametrically opposed to the existing order, and as

schools are the reflection of the ruling classes, not only is this

theory not presented impartially; it is misrepresented or forbidden, and

the teacher who attempts to present it in the light of his or her

understanding and not as he or she is told, is dismissed from the

service and branded as “un-American” and an enemy of the social order.

The trustees and teachers at Stelton make no attempt to instill the

principles of Bolshevism into the minds of children entrusted to their

care any more than they seek to instill the principles of patriotism,

for two very distinct and logical reasons. First of all, the ages of the

children vary from five to thirteen, and to dogmatize with them as to

the best social system would be a violation of the freedom of the child

as well as of common sense; and, second, the trustees and teachers

realize that social systems are dynamic and fluid, not static, and to

assert that this or that system is the last word on the subject is an

act of stupidity they decline to commit.

The members of the Modern School Association came to Stelton five and a

half years ago with plenty of good will, but very little experience in

education. They know many things now that were unknown to them when they

came, and they are conscious of the fact that they have many things yet

to learn. They have disclaimed at all times that they were academicians,

or were trying to establish a new system of pedagogy; all they have ever

claimed was that they were trying to apply the principles of liberty to

education. Holding classes in private houses, the old barn, and, during

the summer, in the open air, the children who have stayed with us have

grown and prospered so that, when they left us to go to High School and

had to stand a test with children of the regular public school, they

have shown themselves to be far in advance of those children. Looking

back over the nine years of the school’s existence it is possible to say

that some things have been accomplished, and that those things have been

appreciated is shown by the support accorded the school so that today a

twelve thousand dollar school house adorns the Ferrer Colony and stands

as a monument to the principles of libertarian education.

To create for our children an atmosphere of love, liberty and

solidarity, and make them feel that the world can be made a worth while

place to live in, and that the esteem of one’s fellows is more important

than heaping up wealth and bitterness; that in a world peopled with free

men and women insisting at all times on their right to live and to be

themselves, makes for the highest form of social organization. This is

our object, this is our aim. It is not pretended that a school with

sixty pupils can revolutionize education and change the economic and

political conditions of its times, but the members of the Modern School

Association at Stelton are pioneers and as such have blazed a trail to

be followed and broadened by those who come after them. For generations

children have been raised in “our image” and for generations poverty and

misery have been the common lot of the mass of men. It is time that

those who toil should realize that social systems are not changed over

night. And, as each new generation overlaps the old, more attention must

be paid to children or they will neutralize most of the work done by the

parents when they grow up and go out into the world. The organization of

trade unions to protect the interests of man as a producer, and of

co-operative societies to protect his interests as a consumer, are being

more and more recognized as foundation stones of the new social order.

With those two ideas is slowly rising that of libertarian schools for

children; schools where the principles of liberty, solidarity and the

dignity of labor in its truest sense will be taught and lived, and when

that time comes, labor will he invincible.

To this end the delegates to the Second Annual Convention of the Modern

School Association of N. A. held at Stelton on Labor Day, 1919, decided

to appeal to organized labor to help them build the school there and to

spread the principles of libertarian education among their members. The

appeal has been answered in part and we are encouraged to believe it

will be answered still further as time goes on, for the workers realize

more and more that the school as at present organized is being used to

undo the work they are doing. We are aware that the realization of the

plans will be difficult, but as Ferrer said more than a decade ago, “we

want to begin, convinced that we shall be aided in our task by those who

are everywhere struggling for human liberation from dogmas and

conventions which assure the support of the present iniquitous social

organization.”