“Sweet childish days, that were as long
as twenty days are now…” -
William Wordsworth
I was out driving this afternoon whilst going out to meet up with friends and I passed by a park in Carlton. It was a cool but fine afternoon and many people were about. I stopped at a red traffic light and my eye caught and father and his two young children. They must have been three or four years old and they were having such fun. They were playing in a big pile of fallen autumn leaves. Jumping into the midst of the heap, tossing up the dry leaves, rolling around them while squealing with delight. Their father was laughing while watching them, and I too stared from across the road, smiling and partaking vicariously of their carefree and joyous pleasure.
How short our childhood is, in retrospect! While we are young time flows so slowly, and our perception of time is dilated by our limited experience of it. Just as is perception of distance, which seems to be judged by our smaller stature. “Are we there yet?” – that ever-familiar cry seems to exemplify the enormity of both time and space as experienced by the child. Yet, while looking a the scene in the park this afternoon, I thought ruefully how now, in my middle age, time seems to rush by (nearly half the year is over – where did it go?). Cars, trains, planes, our busy lives have made space smaller, and all too quickly “we are there”.
When was the last time I experienced the pure unadulterated pleasure those children playing in the fallen leaves this afternoon were enjoying? Surely decades ago, when I was a child myself. The magic kingdom of childhood, a happy place, a carefree place, a place where we enjoy life the best, or so it should be. For some children things are not as rosy as this…
Today is the United Nations’
International Day of Innocent Children Victims of Aggression, which is observed every year. The purpose of this day is to acknowledge the pain suffered by children throughout the world who are the victims of physical, mental and emotional abuse. This day affirms the UN’s commitment to protect the rights of children. The day originated when UN workers raised the alarm as they were appalled by the great number of innocent Palestinian and Lebanese children victims of war. On August 10th, 1983, the United Nations General Assembly decided to commemorate June 4th of each year as the International Day of Innocent Children Victims of Aggression.
While considerable progress has been achieved in the past few years in obtaining a framework of international norms and commitments that protect the rights and wellbeing of children, the general situation for children remains grave and unacceptable.
It is only appropriate that tonight’s music for Song Saturday is devoted to children and what better than
Robert Schumann’s “Kinderszenen” (Scenes From Childhood - 1838) played by Vladimir Horowitz. This is a 1962 studio recording from New York City.
Movement 1: Von Fremden Ländern Und Menschen (Of Foreign Lands and Peoples)
Movement 2: Kuriose Geschichte (A Curious Story); starts at 1:33
Movement 3: Hasche, Mann (Blind Man's Bluff); starts at 2:42
Movement 4: Bittendes Kind (Pleading Child); starts at 3:18
Movement 5: Glückes Genug (Happiness); starts at 4:13
Movement 6: Wichtige Begebenheit (An Important Event); starts at 5:02
Movement 7: Träumerei (Reverie); starts at 5:49
I have got grandchildren in Israel and grandchildren in Australia. There is of course a huge difference in their experience of childhood.
ReplyDeleteIn Australia, the children can go to parks after school and ride safely in the street. The worst thing that happens to the children is they have their television viewing curtailed or they have to sleep two children to a bedroom because the family cannot afford a house with 5 bedrooms.
In Israel, the parents understand that terrorists target kindergartens, primary schools, high schools, universities and school buses. Every toddler must learn where the closest shelter is, where to go if terrorists bomb McDonald's, who are the guards who protect their schools every day of the week.
I would give anything in the world for Israeli children, especially my grandchildren, to have a real childhood.
A lovely post, Nicholas, an important reminder of what and who matters. If we looked after the world and each other with something similar to the way we feel children should be looked after, we'd be in quite another world, wouldn't we?
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful post, although it has a sting in its tail, Nicholas... It is so sad to still see so many children around the world denied the happiness and security that childhood deserves. It is truly something that should make us all ashamed as human beings.
ReplyDeleteThe music is beautiful!
Poor Schumann... I always feel sorry for him when I listen to his music. Such a great mind and talent devastated by mental disease!
ReplyDeleteChildren in many parts of the world are still abused and exploited, but the most distressing is the use of children as suicide bombers by fanatic organisations...