LETTER OF THE WEEK
Our children are reading again. Isn’t this fantastic? Isn’t this what
we’ve wanted to happen? With the distractions of television, video games
and after-school activities that can take up so much time, our children
are sitting down to read -- not just one book, but a series of three --
with more promised to come. Harry Potter is on the bestseller list and
well he should be. The “Harry Potter” books are well-written, inventive
and clever, appealing to youthful imagination and intelligence. Harry is
a role model who not only appeals to young people, but is actually a good
role model. Rather than being beaten down, Harry rises to become a young
hero, battling the forces of evil. Is there something wrong with that?
But wait. Some parents are displeased. In the Potter series, Harry has
been mistreated by his awful aunt and uncle and leaves to attend a school
for witchcraft and wizardry. According to a Daily Pilot article, some
parents are concerned about the issues of child abuse and sorcery (“Not
so wild about Harry,” Oct. 16). Please. Perhaps these parents should take
a refresher course in children’s literature. Either that or they’d better
be prepared to toss out just about every fairy tale and folk tale.
“Cinderella” -- aha! -- child abuse and sorcery. Watch out for that fairy
godmother. “Hansel and Gretel” -- child abuse and sorcery, again. I could
go on and on, but it’s pretty clear. Children’s literature was created to
help children deal with the world, to show them that they need not be
victims, but could stand up for themselves and succeed. That is what
“Cinderella” is about, that is what “Hansel and Gretel” is about and that
is what the “Harry Potter” books are about. And one more word about magic
-- the very word is magical. Do these parents remember seeing Peter Pan
and clapping to show that they believed in fairies? Do they remember
waiting for Santa Claus (a jolly old elf) and looking for the basket that
the Easter Bunny had left? All of this is part of the magical -- yes,
magical -- world of childhood. How dare they sully this wondrous and all
too brief time in a child’s life.
In this day, when we have, and have to have, people come into the
classrooms to lecture children on the very evils that exist in our
society, what could possibly be wrong with these children reading a bit
of constructive, escapist literature?
ELIZABETH EDWARDS
Newport Beach
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