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Title: School and War Author: Madeleine Pelletier Date: 1926 Language: en Topics: education, nationalism, World War I Source: Retrieved on 10th September 2021 from https://forgottenanarchism.wordpress.com/2015/03/23/school-and-war-by-madeleine-pelletier/ Notes: From a French original made availble on Marie-Victoire Louis’ blog http://www.marievictoirelouis.net/index.php?id=327&auteurid=251 originally published in La Fronde, 31/12/1926
Mr. Herignhoc, a professor at the Law Faculty in Toulouse, has just
written an article, in the journal “Scientia”, about “The Rational
Organisation of the Society of Nations”. He would like it to organise,
on top of its organisms of direct defence against war, world education,
by example by fighting illiteracy.
That is all well and good, but I think we could go further along this
path of civilisation.
The mass of workers and peasants is infected with jingoism. To assert
this, you only have to try and have a discussion in a foreign language
in a workers’ cinema or any other popular setting. Immediately, you will
attract disparaging remarks: “What are they mumbling there! Couldn’t
they stay in their countries!”, etc.
This xenophobia of the people doesn’t grow unaided; obviously, tradition
transmits it, but school, as it is today, only intensifies it.
History should be entirely reformed. It centres, as we know, around
wars; we could even say, according to primary school history books, that
history is only a succession of wars and treaties.
We must write a history which speaks less of kings, of their ministers
and of their generals and more about the people. How people lived in the
olden days, how work was organised, what the living conditions of
workers and peasants looked like. How people lived, their food, their
clothes, their houses, their furniture. What women’s conditions were,
how were families organised, what influence religion had, what people
did for leisure, etc.
Even for small children in primary school, it could draw an abridged
picture of every nation on earth, with their language, their
governments, their customs.
To talk about wars would be necessary, but only to condemn them; we
could say who made up armies; how recruitment was made; what the life of
a soldier, a life of looting, a given death sentence; say how little
human life was worth.
After such an education, people would no longer believe that foreigners
are savages and that only France is civilised.
In the school courtyard, war-like games would be banned. We could
replace them, for example, by something of the same kind, but with a
benevolent idea: make kids play firemen, rescuers, etc.
I think it wouldn’t be hard, with a ministerial decree, to ban the
selling of any military toy: no more guns, swords, helmets, uniforms or
tin soldiers. We could replace tin soldiers with, for example, football
players, or athletes doing exercise.
Nothing pops into the brain which doesn’t come from senses.
When all jingoism will be banned from education, it will disappear from
people’s mentalities.