Vital Spark wrote: ↑Mon Oct 30, 2017 12:04 am
The students I teach who have the most open minds are those who have spent some time abroad. Sadly, their open-mindedness gets beaten out of them once they're back on Thai soil.
My father was born during WWII in Liverpool and certainly remembered the aftermath. He expressed many xenophobic, racist and bigoted views despite having travelled the world with the army in his early adult life. He died - too young - in 2005 and would not have been able to cope with the runaway train that the PC ‘industry’ has become. My daughter, 18 next month, sees everybody as a potential friend and feels threatened by nobody of any persuasion. I do everything I can to follow what my daughter has shown me rather than my father.
A wise person once taught me that diversity is a given; inclusion is a choice. To my mind, it’s fine for Thais to think we don’t wash dishes with water, or perhaps that we don’t wash at all, so long as they are happy to accept this as a way of life, equal in merit to their own.
In many ways my father knew this, even if he didn’t entirely understand it applied to him, as he would frequently tell me that “everyone sits down to take a sh*t: nobody is better or worse than you”.