{"id":3980,"date":"1964-05-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"1964-05-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1964-vol-45-no-5-the-family-cradle-of-law\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:29:18","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:29:18","slug":"may-1964-vol-45-no-5-the-family-cradle-of-law","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1964-vol-45-no-5-the-family-cradle-of-law\/","title":{"rendered":"May 1964 &#8211; VOL. 45, No. 5 &#8211; The Family: Cradle of Law"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The Crisis of our time is not so                     much a crisis in intergovernmental relations involving destruction                     by hydrogen bombs as it is a crisis in human relations involving                     disintegration in men&#8217;s minds.<\/p>\n<p> Society is assailed by all sorts of ideological propaganda,                     and seems to have lost its grip on the fundamentals of human                     life. In the same way, the bases of Roman imperial society                     had crumbled for half a century before those living under                     it realized the fact.<\/p>\n<p>Today&#8217;s young people have lived their lives from infancy                     in a world in turmoil. Uncertainties crowd upon them; they                     see adults everywhere bent upon violence and destruction.<\/p>\n<p>This is not the first such period. People who lived in the                     time of King Arthur expected the world to end in the year                     one thousand, and the reaction which followed its reprieve                     led to a burst of lawlessness and brutality which sickened                     Europe for centuries. Today&#8217;s reprieve from the nuclear war                     which seemed so imminent a few years ago is being followed                     by a similar reaction.<\/p>\n<p>What we call civilization has moved so fast that the structure                     and instincts of man have not kept up. As well as the ideological                     battles raging in the political world men and women and boys                     and girls must still face the profoundly individual issues                     of life and the vital inter-personal relations of parent                     and child.<\/p>\n<p>The most intelligent people are at a loss about what to                     think regarding the many questions hammering at us, and the                     time has come to look at the needs of parents and children                     steadily, clearly, and without pink glasses.<\/p>\n<p>That is why Their Excellencies the Governor General and                     Madame Vanier convened the Canadian Conference on the Family.<\/p>\n<p>The family is the single most important influence upon the                     life and future of the child. It is required to fulfil the                     definition given by St. Augustine: a group of people united                     by agreement as to the things they love. In such a society                     children learn that certain things are right and others are                     wrong, they grow from stage to stage of confidence, skill,                     affection, understanding and responsibility. They build character.<\/p>\n<h3>Changing times<\/h3>\n<p>In addition to the stresses caused by war&#8217;s alternating                     threats and armistices, there are other forces at work. The                     family has been subjected to violent assaults and shocks from                     revolutionary transformations in material living and psychological                     conditions. Children live at the wave front of past culture                     and are the plastic receivers of the culture of the future.<\/p>\n<p>Ways of behaviour change in the face of changed conditions.                     People feel differently and act differently toward one another                     from generation to generation. Parents and children are not                     looking through the same eyes. The children confront problems                     of choice and action different in kind and importance from                     those they watched their parents solve.<\/p>\n<p>If both parents and children realize these facts, then parents                     will be more tolerant of the vagaries of their children, and                     children will be more understanding of their elders. It is                     not necessary that they should always agree in mood, opinion,                     and impulse, but it is necessary that they should get together                     so as to live effectively, each on his own level.<\/p>\n<p>It is a hard doctrine for many parents when they are asked                     to believe that their children cannot be brought up as they                     were brought up. With intimations of mortality rustling in                     their ears, they are likely to be impatient of changes from                     the old ways.<\/p>\n<p>Some ideas and attitudes favoured in the first half of the                     century are not expansive enough for the second half. Upon                     analysis, however, it will be seen that most of the changes                     involve differences in expression and not in principles. We                     must learn how to use modernity without cutting adrift from                     the basic virtues which are the key to our humanity.<\/p>\n<p>The democracy of which we are so proud poses problems in                     itself. Once upon a time democracy was only a political idea:                     today we have democracy in industry, in community life, and                     in the home. We are torn between the need for conformity and                     the need for individuality. As a consequence, we face risk                     and uncertainty, surprise and disappointment. If democracy                     is worth while, then we must accept these conflicts. As Kaspar                     Naegele, Professor of Sociology at the University of British                     Columbia said at the Lake Couchiching Conference in 1963:                     &#8220;Perfect ordering would surely spell death.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps democracy is being forced upon children when they                     are too young. To saddle a child or adolescent with freedom                     beyond his demonstrated capability of judgment is not fair,                     even though it be done under some high-sounding name.                     The privilege of developing children little by little up to                     the point where they can cope with the bewildering world into                     which they have been launched is the reward and crown of parenthood.<\/p>\n<p>It is popular to blame influences outside the home when                     a boy goes wrong, or to rail against television, radio, newspapers                     and magazines. But all these enter as a second influence,                     and if the first ( the ingraining of a sense of decency by                     parents ( has been effectively done then all these lose their                     power to debase.<\/p>\n<p>Trends towards evil are not so much carried in the germ                     plasm as they are developed by the culture that surrounds                     us in early years. This demands something better than the                     movies, the pulp magazines, the television dramas, and the                     fumbling experiences of companions. As a chief of police in                     Texas put it: &#8220;We are careful to see that the silverware and                     glasses are sterilized, but we let their minds feed on garbage.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Today&#8217;s children are caught, too, in the whirlpool of status                     seeking. While fathers drive stately cars and mothers offer                     their homes to admiring inspection, they lose their sons and                     daughters. Children learn to judge by the symbols people display                     and not by people&#8217;s individual worth.<\/p>\n<p>The outcome is broken homes, not necessarily by absence                     of one of the parents but by breakdown of the functions of                     the family. It is generally accepted that a complete group,                     consisting of father, mother, and children living in close                     harmony, is essential to the development of a balanced and                     socially adjusted personality. Only a few threads need to                     be broken in order to cause trouble. Tensions that snap these                     threads include conflict over the pattern of child education,                     disagreement over duties, restrictions and behaviour, and,                     very important, failure of the parents to keep up with the                     changing times.<\/p>\n<h3>Revolt of youth<\/h3>\n<p>It is normal for a person to demand some independence in                     middle adolescence.<\/p>\n<p>No one has ever been able to change from one kind of life                     to one totally different without marked unrest. Adolescents                     have progressed from the state of &#8220;Please help me&#8221; to &#8220;I can                     take care of myself&#8221;. They need, now, to learn the third,                     the responsible, stage: &#8220;Please let me help you.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The period of self-assertion is a phase of family life                     with which the good parent must cope without allowing any                     open breaks in family solidarity to occur. Youth is likely                     to overrate liberty, and to strike out in all directions to                     assert it. Parents are charged with the responsibility to                     teach the undoubted truth that there is no principle more                     widely seen in all nature, and more sternly enforced, from                     the scurrying ant on its hill to the star cities in space,                     than this: &#8220;Not liberty, but law, prevails.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The words &#8220;freedom&#8221; and &#8220;fights&#8221; have a magic sound in the                     ears of young people, who may translate them into self-indulgence                     and self-gratification. The time to start putting them                     into focus is before the impact of dawning personality has                     created habits in the children which will have to be vanquished                     some day by self-discipline or by the discipline of the                     law.<\/p>\n<p>It is important for parents to seek and to find the cause                     of deviation in children. The most obstreperous girl or boy                     may be merely lonely and baffled. The Angry Young Man may                     be only giving vent to suppressed feelings of frustration.                     Something in his nature has failed to find a disciplined outlet.                     In his boredom, and impelled by youth&#8217;s restless urge to action,                     he seeks to destroy. A Nihilist teacher, Michael Bakunin,                     said destruction is also creation: more properly, it is a                     substitute for creation.<\/p>\n<p>One remedy to be applied while more permanent ways of adjustment                     are being sought is to give young people constructive things                     to do. In an age of space exploration, ping-pong is not                     enough to fill all a child&#8217;s mind. We need to give adolescents                     room to move around and exercise not only their bodies but                     their minds. If what we do provide is not being used it is                     because our organization and our inspiration are defective.<\/p>\n<h3>Delinquency<\/h3>\n<p>The beginning of delinquency is not the first time a boy                     or a girl is caught by the police in an illegal act. It started                     long before that, in family toleration of disobedience, insolence                     and irreverence. Dr. David Abrahamsen, a Norwegian psychiatrist,                     says baldly in his book <em>Who are the Guilty? <\/em>&#8220;In general                     we may say that the causes of a child&#8217;s delinquent behaviour                     may be traced to his parents.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A delinquent is one who is not able to make the necessary                     adjustments to fit him to his environment. He feels no need                     at all to live up to the expectations of others.<\/p>\n<p>But he reflects in some measure the world around him: a                     society in which the emphasis is on material things and on                     speed, on violence and the idea drilled into us by false advertising                     that we should get what we want now and settle, if any settlement                     is insisted on, at a later date.<\/p>\n<p>Delinquency is not something solely for backward or impoverished                     youths. It is indulged in equally by bright, high IQ, children                     of the well-to-do. Some garden suburbs are just                     as much plagued by destructive mischief as are big cities.<\/p>\n<p>The basic ill is not something that can be put right by                     a flick of a philanthropic wrist that sets up societies and                     agencies. It lies at the heart of our accepted values. It                     is condoned by what Judge Redmond Roche, Court of Sessions,                     addressing a convention of police chiefs in Montreal, referred                     to as &#8220;the apathy and moral decay of the population&#8221;. Chief                     Justice James C. McRuer, of the Ontario Supreme Court, said                     in Toronto that violent juvenile crimes do not reflect on                     the great body of young people in Ontario, &#8220;but they do reflect                     on the manner in which the adult population is discharging                     its responsibility&#8221;. Hugh Christie, warden of Canada&#8217;s largest                     prison, said five years ago in an address to a Management                     Association that his institution is filled with spoiled children.<\/p>\n<p>Commissioner George B. McClellan of the Royal Canadian Mounted                     Police put it this way when addressing the Empire Club in                     Toronto: &#8220;It is not juvenile delinquency I want to speak about                     ( it is parental delinquency ( because, in my humble opinion,                     the group which is creating the troubles I have referred to                     is, for the most part, a product of irresponsible homes and                     irresponsible parents. I think the trouble begins in the home,                     and ultimately it will have to be corrected in the home.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Very often, said the Commissioner, &#8220;I have heard the cry                     of an anguished or bewildered parent, &#8216;How did my child get                     to be this way?&#8217; Well, the seed for good or evil is in all                     of us, and the fruit of it depends on its cultivation.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Obviously these experienced speakers believe that it is                     better to prevent the problem of delinquency from arising                     rather than to invoke the law to cure its effects.<\/p>\n<h3>Rules for raising misfits<\/h3>\n<p>Instead of giving the usual catalogue of virtues to be cultivated,                     Commissioner McClellan sharpened his lesson by listing ten                     effective methods to use so that a child will become an antisocial                     misfit:<\/p>\n<p>(1) Do not have any rules for child behaviour or obedience                     in the home. This will ensure that the child has no clear                     concept of right or wrong.<\/p>\n<p>(2) If you have any rules, enforce them intermittently.                     Ignore them when you are in good humour and knock the kid                     silly if he breaks the rules when you are tired and out of                     sorts. This will confuse him thoroughly. He won&#8217;t know what                     is expected of him and will eventually resent all discipline.<\/p>\n<p>(3) Air your domestic disputes right out in front of the                     children, preferably with a little name-calling. This                     will ensure that he has no respect for either of his parents.<\/p>\n<p>(4) Never give a child any chores or regular duties around                     the home. This will convince him that you and the world owe                     him a living, without effort on his part.<\/p>\n<p>(5) If he is disciplined at school, always go to the school                     and tear a strip off the teacher or the principal in front                     of the child. This will create an excellent contempt for authority                     at any level.<\/p>\n<p>(6) Later, when he has trouble with the police, which is                     most likely, bawl out the officer, or, better still, the Chief,                     being always sure to refer to the &#8216;dumb cop&#8217;. This procedure                     will earn the child a diploma in contempt for authority.<\/p>\n<p>(7) When you are out driving with the family, exceed the                     local speed limit, but slow down when you see a police car.                     Be sure to speed up as soon as the police car is out of sight.                     This will show the child that the law is to be observed only                     if there is any danger of being caught.<\/p>\n<p>(8) If you are stopped by the police for speeding, and you                     are speeding, always deny flatly that you were exceeding the                     speed limit. Make a big fuss over it. Your child will then                     know that cheating and lying are acceptable procedures.<\/p>\n<p>(9) If you have managed to chisel a few dollars on your                     income tax, be sure and tell the family at the dinner table                     that night how smart you are. This should convince the youngsters                     that stealing is all right if you can get away with it.<\/p>\n<p>(10) Never check up on where your youngsters are in the                     evening. Never mind what time they get home. Never, never,                     try to learn anything about their friends. This one is almost                     sure fire.<\/p>\n<p>These suggestions of the wrong way to raise children to                     be decent citizens were made by the man who, of all others                     in Canada, because he is head of the Royal Canadian Mounted                     Police, knows most about what enters into the making of law-breakers.<\/p>\n<h3>A positive approach<\/h3>\n<p>Parents who wish to help their children toward a happy,                     decent life need not carry their problem into space for solution.                     They need only strive to reach their ideal through purifying                     and strengthening the old institutions.<\/p>\n<p>Young people need rules to guide them and standards by which                     to judge themselves. The home takes its rightful and eminent                     place in preparing children for life when basic principles                     are quietly and firmly announced and lived up to. The final                     test is not how amenable young people are to compulsion of                     the law, but how far they can be trusted to obey self-imposed                     law.<\/p>\n<p>The time has come to cease emphasizing the gadgets of everyday                     living, and to set over against them the imperishable qualities                     of honesty, integrity, unselfishness and respect for law.<\/p>\n<p>A family is a project in group living in which the thing                     to do and the thing not to do are absorbed through precept,                     example and practice. Children are born the most helpless                     and unwitting of animals, the least armed with ready instincts                     to fit them for survival, the slowest to develop their potentialities                     of autonomy and at the same time the most receptive, the most                     imitative, the most educable, the most richly endowed.<\/p>\n<p>To the child, with his short perspective, life is all foreground,                     composed of the persons who feed, carry, coddle, amuse, slap                     or abandon him. These people are responsible not only for                     immediate care, but for all the years of his life, because                     they build his personality at the same time as they nourish                     and protect his body. In a good family the child grows up                     in an atmosphere of mutual respect and learns to respect others;                     he participates in wholesome, unselfish, democratic practices;                     and in the nature of things he will project all these into                     his wider adult life.<\/p>\n<h3>Discipline<\/h3>\n<p>Discipline in the home is not at all on a par with the &#8220;snap-to-it-and-obey-orders&#8221;                     sort of discipline learned in an army. It goes back to the                     origin of the word: that which was studied by the disciple                     of any teacher was a discipline.<\/p>\n<p>Does your child do a brave or noble or unselfish act? Praise                     him for it. Was it also an unwise act? Reprimand him for it.                     When a Spartan performed heroically in a battle, the chief                     magistrates gave him a garland, but as soon as they had done                     so they fined him a thousand drachmas for going out to battle                     without his armour.<\/p>\n<p>The child does not want a do-as-you-please,                     permissive, world. It makes him confused and unhappy. He wants                     a stable, reliable, wall around him, defining his world, giving                     him a large free area but telling him exactly how far he can                     go.<\/p>\n<p>This wall can be built of such things as respect for others&#8217;                     property and rights, respect for elders, observance of the                     conventions which lubricate social life. If children are not                     taught these things they are being handicapped, and, says                     R. P. Smith in one of his books: &#8220;the reason these kids are                     getting into trouble with cops is because cops are the first                     people they meet who say, and mean it, &#8216;You can&#8217;t do that&#8217;.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is no need, in teaching discipline or respect for                     the law, to plant morbid guilt feelings in the young mind.                     Laws are not enacted to make any particular person unhappy,                     but to contrive rather that everyone may have the opportunity                     to be happy without interference.<\/p>\n<p>The law of Canada is a control of ourselves through each                     other. It tells the free man how far his absolute freedom                     extends and what his enforceable duties are. It operates in                     the spirit of honour, good faith and equitable firmness. Its                     precepts are, as stated by the Emperor Justinian in the year                     533: to live honourably, not to injure another, to render                     to every man his due.<\/p>\n<p>Observance of the precepts of the law arises out of developing                     affection for the good. Goodness is not simply an absence                     of wrongdoing, but a love of the things that are honest and                     of good repute.<\/p>\n<p>Some parents may feel baffled and incompetent when they                     start to make plans for shouldering this responsibility. They                     should have no hesitation in calling upon qualified outside                     advisers. It is not a sign of weakness to secure professional                     help when facing a new situation that is of so momentous importance                     to the welfare and happiness of their children and so vitally                     needful to their own peace of mind. The church, the school,                     and the social agencies will gladly give their experienced                     help to any parent who is timid, anxious and baffled.<\/p>\n<p>This is not to advocate institutionalism, which cannot ever                     replace the family as the cradle of law. As Marya Mannes says                     in her very modern survey of life in the United States, the                     children must have &#8220;the soft wide lap, the kind hands, the                     tender face&#8221; of mother or grandmother. Parents who have a                     healthy respect for themselves, think sensibly about themselves,                     and understand themselves, can give their children the mature                     emotional guidance which they need to grow up into mature                     adults, but they may need help with the way they go about                     it.<\/p>\n<p>It goes without saying that parents who seek respect for                     their precepts must, as the principle of the law of equity                     puts it, &#8220;come with clean hands.&#8221; Children can detect insincerity                     a thousand light years away. They will learn best from parents                     who have shown by their example that they can accept responsibility                     for leading their own lives effectively.<\/p>\n<p>As for the children&#8217;s responsibility, the ancient commandment                     still thunders from Sinai: &#8220;Honour your father and your mother.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Moving toward the light<\/h3>\n<p>People may make massive compilations of facts, statistics                     and opinions, and assemble them in impressive arrays of arguments,                     but in the end they produce only a few humble truths.<\/p>\n<p>In the transmission of ideals and of culture, in the building                     of character and the qualities needed in this changing world,                     the family of today must be the burden bearer and the path                     breaker. It recognizes children as being more important than                     things, ideas as more precious than gadgets, and personal                     worth the touchstone by which all other values are tested.<\/p>\n<p>With every generation the world has a new chance to strengthen                     these values. Parents of today should give their children                     some memories to guide them, memories of family life in which                     justice was upheld, affection unstintingly given, discipline                     tenderly explained and fine example habitually displayed.                     Thereby they move the sleeping images of good things inherent                     in their children toward the light.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[44],"class_list":["post-3980","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-44"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>May 1964 - VOL. 45, No. 5 - The Family: Cradle of Law - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1964-vol-45-no-5-the-family-cradle-of-law\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"May 1964 - VOL. 45, No. 5 - The Family: Cradle of Law - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The Crisis of our time is not so much a crisis in intergovernmental relations involving destruction by hydrogen bombs as it is a crisis in human relations involving disintegration in men&#8217;s minds. Society is assailed by all sorts of ideological propaganda, and seems to have lost its grip on the fundamentals of human life. 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Society is assailed by all sorts of ideological propaganda, and seems to have lost its grip on the fundamentals of human life. 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