Pubdate: Wed, 11 Feb 2004 Source: Trinidad Guardian, The Copyright: 2004 The Trinidad Guardian. Contact: http://www.guardian.co.tt/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2982 Author: Sat Maharaj CARNIVAL BEGINS ASH WEDNESDAY Carnival does affect the behaviour of some children. But Minister of Education Hazel Manning must make up her mind about the causes of the daily stabbings, sex trade, drug trade, bullying, gang wars and violence by students against each other or teachers. Relying on advisers, she last week blamed drugs for the violence. The week before, she claimed the violence was a seasonal affair and that it will die down after Carnival. Both theories cannot be true, even if drugs may have a constant impact on many aspects of student behaviour. For example, students dependent on drugs may engage in bullying other students to get money to buy drugs. They may engage in stealing or even to eat other children's lunches. Some of the schools' sex trade may involve addicts exchanging sex for drugs. Students connected to pimps or drug dealers may use violence to settle contracts with the rules of their criminal employers. All of these things are (may be) happening, but they are not seasonal. The fundamental problems reflect the breakdown in authority at the level of the Ministry and at home. Children at denominational schools do not show the Minister's seasonal pattern of Carnival violence. Denominational schools have a good record of parents' involvement with the management of the schools, the principals and the boards. The Minister's Carnival revelation has it merits. Culture, like religion, is a system of communication of ideas and preferred patterns of behaviour using symbols. The cross and the trident are religious symbols in Christianity and Hinduism. Bhajans and hymns are also symbols. The rituals of puja, like the discussions between a Hindu parent and a child, also take place through language or sound symbols. The symbols of calypsoes encourage children to "get on bad, mash down de place, wine on a bam bam, jook like a dog, wine like a hog," and many such incitements to lawlessness, immoral behaviour and lewd unlawful sex. Schoolchildren are prohibited by laws from consenting to the sexual activities Carnival songs encourage or even demand. There was a Jamaican song which was popular on maxi-taxis in which the little girls in the song plead, "Please help me. Take my virginity." Some calypso role models are drug addicts. As role models they are the antithesis of the family life and patterns of behaviour which produce law-abiding responsible children. The Minister is right to associate Carnival with violence. She must also associate Carnival with sexual promiscuity and the spread of AIDS and with the abuse of alcohol and other illegal drugs. The effects are not confined to Carnival season as the Minister seems to think. They cannot be so confined. When children get entrapped in the Carnival culture of lewdness, sexual irresponsibility, the flaunting of nakedness and irresponsible behaviour, it does not end on Ash Wednesday morning. Carnival actually begins on Ash Wednesday! This country must face the fact that the soca songs at traditional and new chutney calypso tents provide an unmixed incitement to violence and sexual irresponsibility. One calypso this year glorifies the career of kidnappers and bandits. Such symbols as entertainment for children do have consequences. Children who are constantly told that people who have material wealth are thieves while at the same time are incited to crave such wealth are put in a difficult situation. There are almost no calypsoes extolling the virtues of hard work or self-sacrifice to acquire education or provide property or wealth. Such children who are influenced by TV or BET get a distorted message from the calypsonians and the media. They advise that it is good to consume wealth but do not encourage sacrifices to get it. They are told to get fancy cars and designer clothes to be somebody, while the calypsonian blames every businessman, even the small vendor who may have mortgaged his family to the bank. Carnival symbols, especially calypsoes, have become dangerous to children. Calypsoes are now a preferred symbolic instrument for spreading racial hatred. Many studies have shown that the State's control of arts is an essential step in controlling the minds of the people. The point is that radio, film and television have an immense impact on the problems of plural societies. And Carnival is pre-eminently about symbols which influence behaviour. Children in our schools have been known to abuse their Indo-Trinidadian teachers with the words taken verbatim from calypso! The use of calypso to spread anti-Hindu messages or hatred against the Indo-Trinidadian community is a recent phenomenon. This must impact negatively on the psyche of children who are misled by calypso role models and the racist symbolism. Mrs Manning has done us a favour by linking Carnival with school violence. She needs to commission a study on the impact of racist calypsoes on children. Another study should investigate the impact of calypso role models and their songs to the local AIDS epidemic which is similar to the epidemic in black or Sub-Saharan Africa. Carnival culture may be dangerous to children in many ways. The Minister must do more than make a tenuous connection. She needs to study the impact of the role models and their symbols on the endemic violence and lawlessness in our schools and society. SATNARAYAN MAHARAJ is the Secretary General of the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin