{"id":4049,"date":"1966-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1966-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1966-vol-47-no-11-the-canadian-family-enters-1967\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:18:32","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:18:32","slug":"november-1966-vol-47-no-11-the-canadian-family-enters-1967","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1966-vol-47-no-11-the-canadian-family-enters-1967\/","title":{"rendered":"November 1966 &#8211; VOL. 47, No. 11 &#8211; The Canadian Family Enters 1967"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The conscience of Canada as she                     enters her second century of Confederation should be determined                     upon restoring and preserving the great principle of individual                     and national life: the family. The harmonious family forms                     the nearest to complete basis for the happiness and prosperity                     of the person as well as the necessary foundation of society.<\/p>\n<p> In this latter part of the twentieth century we live in                     a highly dynamic world. No one expects or desires social development                     to come to an end. No one should expect the family to stop                     in its growth and adaptation. But we should see to it that                     the family preserves itself, in spite of all change, as a                     group united by agreement as to the things they love.<\/p>\n<p>The family is the smallest of social institutions, but it                     holds first rank in importance. We must not let it dissolve,                     not only because of its national importance or its religious                     significance but because by its dissolution every human being                     in Canada would lose some of his humanity.<\/p>\n<h3>Family virtues<\/h3>\n<p>The family unit functions as it does because of its efficiency                     contrasted with any other sort of social unit devised for                     such purposes. It provides for a child&#8217;s physical needs and                     trains him to survive; it affords the background in which                     he learns to live with other people; and it is a major source                     for the transmission of the values and knowledge of culture                     and religion. It develops the human virtues of love, pity,                     concern and sociability.<\/p>\n<p>There is a cold, calm, remote way of describing the family                     legally: &#8220;A collective body of persons who live in one house                     and under one head or management.&#8221; How far that is from describing                     this mother cell of society! Here we find the personal and                     social expression necessary to human life. Here is an island                     of emotional shelter in the midst of a turbulent sea. Here                     are people living together in mutual helpfulness, protecting                     one another&#8217;s interests.<\/p>\n<p>The family confers personhood. Only in it can a person be                     fully himself. In all other spheres of life one has to win                     recognition by accomplishment, but in the family one has status                     by existence.<\/p>\n<h3>Family patterns<\/h3>\n<p>Everyone has the desire to be not only a person, but to                     be part of something, to belong. In the family he finds the                     sort of fellow-feeling and mutual identification for which                     &#8220;we&#8221; is the natural expression. The essence of the family                     pattern is the acceptance of mutual rights and obligations.                     Sympathetic insight, called &#8220;empathy&#8221;, means the capacity                     to enter into and share the emotions, attitudes, interests                     and experiences of others. The mutual giving of affectionate                     understanding is one of the strongest bonds in family life,                     and is unique there. Respect for opinions, ideals, habits                     and privacy of the individual are part of the pattern.<\/p>\n<p>The shape of family behaviour is made up of many small pieces.                     Sacred writings teem with rites that protect family life.                     Little rituals observed today may form the framework of a                     larger comprehension, a consensus on values and objectives.                     A four-year-old is being incorporated into the family group                     as he completes his nightly prayer at mother&#8217;s knee by asking                     a blessing for his parents, his sisters, his brothers, and                     his grandparents. A mother, who has sung the same little song,                     &#8220;Sailboat&#8221;, to her son every evening for years has added a                     dowel holding the family structure together.<\/p>\n<p>Anniversaries may be festivals rich in pleasure and meaning.                     When parents and children get together for a quiet evening,                     talk over the family events since the last anniversary, and                     discuss their expectations for future years, they foster helpful                     solidarity by recollecting jointly experienced gratifications.<\/p>\n<p>The real core of family life lies in the behaviour of the                     individual members toward one another. The family circle is,                     as it should be, one of least reticence. The members of the                     family are free to speak out, to express themselves about                     mutual affairs and even about one another. It is &#8220;all in the                     family&#8221; and frankness is taken cheerfully.<\/p>\n<p>Good families do not just happen, but are the result of                     unselfishness, forgiveness and honour. Here is a drama in                     which everyone is playing a vital role, sharpening his perceptions                     of what is possible and desirable in life.<\/p>\n<h3>Family functions<\/h3>\n<p>How different that is from the suggestion by Plato that                     the State should care for all children. In some countries                     behind the Iron Curtain babies are put on a conveyor belt                     that carries them from institution to institution and turns                     them out into life without their ever having experienced the                     tenderness of a mother&#8217;s arms.<\/p>\n<p>Even in free Western countries the contribution of the family                     has been gradually decreased during the past century as state                     and community have assumed duties which at one time were the                     responsibility of the family.<\/p>\n<p>Suddenly, it seems, in the past twenty years, families have                     awakened to the fact that substitutes are not really doing                     the job the family did. And so the United Nations thunders                     in its <em>Universal Declaration of Human Rights<\/em>: &#8220;The                     family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society                     and is entitled to protection by society and the State.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Family living needs material things, but only in the same                     way as walking requires a pair of feet. Where the walk takes                     one is something else. Within the family there must be developed                     aspirations and objectives which, while bringing into being                     a culture adapted to a scientific age, stimulate and develop                     the individuality of its members. The future of Canada depends                     upon the fostering of sane, responsible, integrated personalities,                     and this is an undoubted function of the family.<\/p>\n<h3>Family stability<\/h3>\n<p>The word &#8220;stability&#8221; when applied to the family does not                     mean social status stability, or economic stability, or stability                     enforced by law: family stability is concerned with the inner                     realities of life&#8217;s experiences.<\/p>\n<p>The world, changing from old controls to new, is finding                     constantly greater demand for the individual to know about                     and to face the personal and social problems of the modern                     age. The central issue in life remains choice. Moral judgments                     about how to behave, as well as career judgments about what                     to work at, must be made. They are forced upon us. For this                     reason, if for none higher, the family must be used to create                     the ability to choose and to judge wisely.<\/p>\n<p>It is in the family that children learn techniques, customs,                     folklore, and all the many features of their cultural heritage.                     These form the basis of judgment and choice. We may measure                     the success of the family in the next generation very largely                     by its willingness to work out approaches, treatments and                     training which will give young people the necessary guidance.                     This is its imperative duty.<\/p>\n<p>There are, in our Canadian society, prevailing principles                     of right action, decency and justice. They can be traced back                     to the <em>Institutes <\/em>of the Emperor Justinian fourteen                     hundred years ago: &#8220;to live honourably, to injure no other                     man, to render to every man his due.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These are principles taught in the home as preparation for                     the time when the child will make the transition to independence.                     As discipline relaxes in home and school, the need for self-discipline                     becomes correspondingly greater. It is upon what the home                     does today in conveying principles of ethics, manners and                     individuality that the future of Canada will be built socially,                     economically and politically.<\/p>\n<h3>Discipline<\/h3>\n<p>Family discipline is made up of love, sympathy, persuasion                     and compulsion. Children must learn obedience if they are                     to fit into adult situations without difficulty and pain.                     Obedience to instructions and laws is a primal requirement                     of business and society.<\/p>\n<p>Discipline is not only a protective device but a development                     device. Family rules have two functions: to restrain from                     wrongdoing and to guide simplicity.<\/p>\n<p>It is well, before laying down a law, to determine its purpose                     and to set reasonable limits to its practical application.                     Every parent, like every manager of an office or factory,                     has experienced the gradual pressing that people do against                     the fence of rules, testing where they can cause a bulge without                     reprimand, or a breakthrough without punishment.<\/p>\n<p>Parents need to be careful not to create artificial illegalities                     for the sake of enforcing discipline. Children are sharp-eyed.                     Some tend to become slack if special demands are continually                     made on them without obvious reason.<\/p>\n<p>One of the younger participants in the Canadian Conference                     on the Family remarked that children have good reason for                     rebelling if parents say &#8220;you can&#8217;t do it because I didn&#8217;t                     when I was your age&#8221;. Forms of social behaviour have changed,                     and the problem is to know on what line to take a firm stand                     and where to stretch a point.<\/p>\n<p>The infant years are important. Human life requires tender                     support in its beginnings. Psychoanalysis has revealed the                     need of children for warm-hearted parents who allow themselves                     to be loved and to love. If a child starts to grow away from                     parents it is not because the child is perverse but because                     some guidelines of affection have been allowed to fray.<\/p>\n<h3>A joint enterprise<\/h3>\n<p>Making a family is a joint enterprise. Parents are partners                     in a common cause, and as their children mature they too are                     brought into the partnership.<\/p>\n<p>Men and women make a supremely important decision when they                     choose their marriage partners. There is nothing in life so                     much a test of our common sense and sense of decency and our                     ability to manage interpersonal relations as is marriage.<\/p>\n<p>One might almost say that four things are necessary to happy                     married life. Each partner must have self-interest so as to                     keep alive mentally; each must be interested in the other,                     not passively and not only materially, but vitally and spiritually;                     both must be interested in their home and family in a co-operative                     and participating way; and both should share common goals                     outside themselves and their families. Such parents give their                     children models to imitate.<\/p>\n<p>It is not necessary that the wife should understand her                     husband&#8217;s job or keep up with its technical details, but she                     must understand its importance to him. The husband should                     be able to express a wide range of feelings openly and directly                     to his wife, and to become involved and interested in her                     activities.<\/p>\n<p>Both parents must keep up with development of their children.                     Some are unaware until it is too late of the changed status                     of their daughters. Women were, until not many years ago,                     indifferent to the need of securing recognition of themselves                     as members of society. Economic opportunity has opened new                     doors to them. If a daughter&#8217;s voice is not heard and respected                     in the family council, she is fitted by education and she                     is free under today&#8217;s social code to move out to an apartment                     or lodgings.<\/p>\n<h3>Changing times<\/h3>\n<p>There is something dramatically intense about this age.                     It is not to be wondered at that today&#8217;s children, who have                     never seen a world without automobiles, telephones, radio,                     television, electric light and airplanes should react to life                     in a different way from the way of their gas-lit, horse-drawn                     grandparents. When those grandparents looked up at the night                     sky they saw the moon and stars and constellations, but when                     their grandchildren look up they see space vehicles.<\/p>\n<p>In the course of Canada&#8217;s past hundred years the family                     has witnessed changes in birth folkways, economic activities,                     recreation, education, and religious behaviour. The task today                     is to evaluate changes, to agree on a basic ideal which shall                     be upheld, and to accommodate without disruption to the emerging                     pattern.<\/p>\n<p>We must get away from the idea that any disturbance of an                     existing condition is a sign of deterioration. Change need                     not mean decay. Instead of becoming alarmed at the processes                     of change, or of fearing dire results, the family should glory                     in the opportunity to live in such a time, to cope with its                     problems, and to set up guidelines for the future.<\/p>\n<p>It is not enough to shore up old institutions against changing                     tides. We need a type of family that reflects the underlying                     springs and currents of this period in time, and bases its                     navigation upon principles found through the ages to be good.<\/p>\n<h3>Adolescence<\/h3>\n<p>As a child grows into his teens it is natural that he should                     look more and more outside the family for his play and social                     activities. If the parents are emotionally stable they can                     grant autonomy to their children without difficulty.<\/p>\n<p>Some things that are done are bound to cause annoyance.                     Children, when put in possession of power and freedom which                     they feel to be altogether new, will take a delight in the                     exercise of them. Their manifestations may be extravagant,                     like regressive unkemptness and crude manners.<\/p>\n<p>Parents must guard against leaving room for these young                     people to feel themselves to be left solitary at a crucial                     point in their maturation from childhood to adulthood, compelled                     to work out problems alone or with only the fumbling guidance                     of others of their age group.<\/p>\n<p>But we should not underestimate the strength, wisdom and                     foresight of young people. Their stubbornness and stoutness                     of mind arise from natural pride in the capabilities they                     feel they have. They know more than the aged of a previous                     generation; they have more information, more stimulation.                     However, they still need the family.<\/p>\n<p>If a junior member opts out of the family he is losing something                     that is bigger than his gain. He may be venturesome and tough                     when making minor experiments in the art of living, but when                     it comes to matters which affect his whole life happiness                     he must have a place to turn for guidance. Parents have learned                     many lessons &#8220;the hard way&#8221;, and they would like to save their                     children some of the pain they experienced.<\/p>\n<p>There is a tiresome repetition in published interviews and                     television debates of the phrase &#8220;they don&#8217;t understand&#8221;.                     When we hide behind &#8220;they do not understand&#8221; we are doing                     two things: we are indulging in self-pity and we are admitting                     our inability to communicate our ideas. Unless both parents                     and children make an earnest effort to understand the other                     point of view they are in no position to challenge it.<\/p>\n<h3>What to do<\/h3>\n<p>One way to reach mutual understanding is through the family                     council, where a companionable family exchanges experiences,                     ideas, and the sharing of burdens. Everyone gets to see just                     a little bit more of any situation than was at first apparent.<\/p>\n<p>Where family members engage in intimate, personal and informal                     communication, they come to know one another intelligently,                     and as a group they become better able to deal with problems                     raised by internal and other forces.<\/p>\n<p>A dynamically unified family has not solidified into a closed                     corporation run by rules. Its unity is based upon the consensus                     of its members; it emphasizes the individuality of its members                     and their personality development; it is characterized by                     the adaptability of the group and its members in meeting crises;                     it works out differences as they arise.<\/p>\n<p>The qualities of the family council are: to hear courteously,                     to answer wisely, to consider soberly, to convince and persuade                     rather than to overrule, and to decide impartially.<\/p>\n<p>Even highly-charged feelings may have their sting drawn                     off in a family conference. Giving expression to conflict                     of ideas lessens the tension which arises from suppressed                     and unsolved conflicts.<\/p>\n<p>The family council is constructive, too, because it throws                     new ideas on the table, and families need new ideas just as                     much as do business concerns. One family council, debating                     the problem of getting young children away from absorption                     with television and interested in reading and constructive                     activities, produced 37 suggestions.<\/p>\n<p>Parents who wish to be perfectly stable have the feeling                     sometimes in dealing with their children that the world is                     on a slight tilt. All parents know, even when their affection                     remains high, alternate periods of hope and despair.<\/p>\n<p>An interesting question arises: what is being done effectively                     to provide education especially designed to help these parents                     and prospective parents? While the definitive plan for family                     life is being drawn up through the research of sociologists                     and others, some immediate action is called for.<\/p>\n<p>If we accept the conception of the family as that of guiding                     children by interpreting and integrating the conflicting impacts                     of the world upon them, we presuppose that parents are keeping                     themselves abreast of what is happening by studying, reading,                     and discussing these things.<\/p>\n<p>Any conversation between parents reveals that they recognize                     the precarious state of the family in our society. They see                     the need, and they have good intentions about doing something,                     but just how to go about it is not clear. Without guidance,                     the task is like trying to untie knots while wearing mittens.<\/p>\n<p>During the past thirty years there has been an increasing                     awareness on the part of members of many professions of the                     function they perform in counselling on marriage and family                     problems beyond the traditional scope of their practice. Not                     only ministers, lawyers, psychologists and social workers                     are consulted, but general medical practitioners, teachers,                     foremen and managers are approached: anyone, in fact, who                     appears to be in a position to give advice.<\/p>\n<p>We need something more definite, more fixed, more readily                     available. No sweeping philosophies or meticulous statistics                     will do, but a programme of education and leadership, starting                     now.<\/p>\n<p>Churches of all faiths have a vital role. They need to put                     forth immediately an imaginative and vigorous and continuing                     effort to make themselves the powerful nucleus of families,                     sustaining, advising and proffering the infinite help and                     comfort of religion.<\/p>\n<h3>Not new, but newly urgent<\/h3>\n<p>The need for good family relationships is not new. One of                     the oldest books in the world, written six thousand years                     ago, advised Egyptian princes: &#8220;Take care of thine own house,                     cherish thy wife.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In 1964 the Canadian Conference on the Family was convened                     by Their Excellencies the Governor General and Madame Vanier                     to consider how to meet existing and developing pressures.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;The structure of a civilization may change,&#8221; said the Governor                     General in his opening address. &#8220;From time to time the emphasis                     may be placed on different values, but one thing always remains                     immutable: the family.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>After mentioning that he and his wife had often spoken of                     their hopes and fears in this regard, he went on to say: &#8220;We                     have talked of our fears because we have been impressed by                     the tendency to forget that the union of man with woman carries                     noble and great responsibilities that are fundamentally sacred,                     and that the raising of children depends upon the devotion                     of their parents. We have not been without hope, however,                     because we are confident that Canadians in facing up to the                     problems that exist will be able to work together in building                     a society that is more aware of truly human values, and so                     more respectful of family ties.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Conference gave rise to the Vanier Institute of the                     Family, whose President is Dr. Wilder Penfield. The Institute                     is to continue the work started by the Conference, directing                     large research projects, holding periodical scientific meetings,                     and co-ordinating research for other welfare agencies.<\/p>\n<h3>There is no place like home<\/h3>\n<p>We are still turning pages in the history of Canada and                     the development of the family.<\/p>\n<p>What sort of family seems to be emerging as Canada celebrates                     the hundredth anniversary of what the City of Saint John saluted                     in 1867 as &#8220;the greatest of all modern marriages&#8221;? It is,                     indeed, like the confederation of the provinces. It is a companionship                     family, emphasizing intimate interpersonal association. It                     is characterized by the giving and receiving of affection;                     the assumption of equality of husband and wife; democracy                     in family decisions, with a voice and a vote by the children;                     the personality development of its members as a family objective;                     freedom of expression consistent with family unity; and the                     expectation that the greatest happiness is to be found in                     the family.<\/p>\n<p>In a country like Canada the words &#8220;There is no place like                     home&#8221; should not sound quaint or amusing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":86,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[46],"class_list":["post-4049","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-46"],"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>November 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 11 - The Canadian Family Enters 1967 - 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\/november-1966-vol-47-no-11-the-canadian-family-enters-1967\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"November 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 11 - The Canadian Family Enters 1967 - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The conscience of Canada as she enters her second century of Confederation should be determined upon restoring and preserving the great principle of individual and national life: the family. The harmonious family forms the nearest to complete basis for the happiness and prosperity of the person as well as the necessary foundation of society. 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The harmonious family forms the nearest to complete basis for the happiness and prosperity of the person as well as the necessary foundation of society. 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