Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, what was your response?
We told him it was an angry person. Kid decided that it was probably someone like the Grinch who probably didn’t have enough kindness.
Wow I can see why you were so concerned.
I was mostly a little flat footed and surprised. I just would not talk to my kid about someone getting killed on my own, and for that reason, I was surprised to get such a pointed question about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, what was your response?
We told him it was an angry person. Kid decided that it was probably someone like the Grinch who probably didn’t have enough kindness.
Wow I can see why you were so concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Actually I think it’s a perfect age. Most, if not all 4 year olds will think that it’s a bad thing that MLK was assassinated. My hope is that kids with these types of educational experiences will grow up to become adults who think that it’s a bad thing to assassinate people who work for justice.
This is, perhaps, somewhat of a tangent, but MLK, JFK, RFK, and Malcolm X all had young kids when they were assassinated.
Imagine what those Moms had to tell their kids. Imagine the questions that these kids must have had. My hope is that by sharing the truth of our history in age-appropriate ways with even pre-school students, we can foster the kinds of communities that reject violence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, what was your response?
We told him it was an angry person. Kid decided that it was probably someone like the Grinch who probably didn’t have enough kindness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, what was your response?
We told him it was an angry person. Kid decided that it was probably someone like the Grinch who probably didn’t have enough kindness.
Anonymous wrote:So, what was your response?
Anonymous wrote:I mean, it's pretty central to the narrative...