Are school nativity plays a good idea? |
"If Christian festivals aren't recognised in schools, what hope is there that non-Christian festivals will be respected?"
One of the vital roles of schooling in Britain is to give young people a
broad understanding of other religious communities and equip them to get
along with people different from themselves. Children
can mark festivals such as Christmas, Diwali and Hanukkah without needing
to share the same faith. We must all make an effort to understand other people's
beliefs. It's vital to move beyond shallow phrases like 'tolerance' and build
a society where joyful acceptance of difference is the norm. Events as simple
as a nativity play are one step towards people of all faiths (or none) living
happily together. Schools have become very focused on literacy and numeracy,
so nativity plays are a breath of fresh air. They help children understand
that effort and energy result in the pride of a job well done. They encourage
creativity and build self-esteem, which help children achieve more
elsewhere.
"A nativity play is indoctrination: asking children to just accept the story without giving them any tools to question it" Britain is not a Christian country. We might be subjects of a Christian Queen, but Britain's really a mongrel nation with a variety of religions and many people of no religion. The nativity play isn't relevant to the vast majority. We to need to learn about other religions so we can be tolerant, but we need to keep it in proportion. Other religious celebrations in school such as Diwali or Chinese New Year last a couple of days, but preparations for Christmas start in October. Rehearsing the nativity play takes up two precious months of the curriculum. The same tired story is repeated every year and it's not even a nice story: a woman forced to give birth in a dirty stable. I'd also question why children spend two months learning words by rote to a play that isn't a great literary work and does notting to develop their English or grammar. Children learn a lot from staging plays public speaking, acting, teamwork - but it doesn't have to be religious. Nativity plays bring in religion through the back door. It's indoctrination of the worst kind: asking children to just accept the story without giving them any tools to question it. Many schools blindly follow the tradition without considering alternatives - it's Christmas so it's nativity play time. I also think that with the highest teenage pregnancy rates in Europe, it's wrong to suggest to five year olds that babies are made by twinkling stars. By not having a nativity play, we're not laying the damaging foundations that pregnancy is someone else's responsibility. There's no valid reason to include a nativity play in school - it's just a bad habit that needs to be broken. |