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Raising Kids Who Care

 

It was one of those mornings when I was in a hurry, but the universe had other plans.  I sat my groggy four-year old down with a buttered bagel so I could rush to get ready while she ate, but when I came running back to her, I saw that she had placed a favorite coffee-table book in front of her and was quietly, deliberately dropping crumbs on the page.  Not only was Sophia oblivious to my urgency to get out the door, but there was a new mess to clean, right on top of a cherished book.

When I demanded, “What is going on?”  She gently answered, “Mommy, I want to share my bagel with them.” I looked more carefully at the open page.  She was looking at the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, specifically on the photo of the family from Mali, West Africa. 

That’s when I forgot about the rush to get out the door.  With my two older daughters, both in middle school at the time, we had been talking about compassion and the idea that humanity is like a single body – when one part is hurt, even if it’s seemingly insignificant, like a tiny splinter on their pinkie, we feel it all over and it can get in the way of our doing and feeling our best.  Pain and suffering far away do affect us, even if we don’t personally know the country or the people.  Sophia must have been listening.

After glancing at other photos of families from around the world, flush with diverse colors, shapes and types of abundant (mostly processed) food in the glossy book, she fixated on the Malian family, fifteen people in one home, all with beaming smiles and showcasing their simple food for a week.  Her reaction: to share. No one was around to tell her it was the right thing to do, or to guilt her in to giving.


Photo Source: Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, Peter Menzel and Faith D’Aluisio (Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 2005)

The take-away for me was powerful. Children have an incredible capacity to care, to give, and to empathize, from a very young age.  It has nothing to do with pity.  An instinct for justice comes naturally to a young child, who is free from skepticism, prejudice and doubt.  

When parents see that kernel of compassion in our children we want to cultivate it.  And when world leaders come together to debate the big questions of our time, like they do each September in New York for the opening of the UN General Assembly, issues of poverty and peace make headlines that we can explore at age-appropriate levels with our children.  Like the development of a muscle, this awareness often grows undetectably, but can be deliberately nurtured.  Here are five steps I’ve found to help empower kids to care and want to make a difference.

5 Ways to Cultivate Caring in Kids:

  1. Talk about it. When you see qualities like compassion and generosity displayed, point them out, whether it’s at the dinner table, while grocery shopping, or in a movie.  Without our realizing, Sophia was paying attention to the conversations on service, friendship and caring that we were having with our older daughters. Discussing complex ideas through these positive qualities, or virtues, helps them frame difficult situations, nearby or far-away.
     
  2. “Be a friend to the whole human race.” When you widen your circle of friends to include people from diverse backgrounds, your children can imagine that anyone who looks and lives differently from them could be their friends.  We had friends from West Africa, with similar clothing as the family in the picture, so the family in the photo didn’t seem so foreign to our four-year old. Sharing comes naturally among friends.
     
  3. Learn about causes - together. Feel empowered to be part of the solution to global poverty by learning about the Millennium Development Goals . These eight practical, achievable objectives were adopted collectively by the world’s leaders to stamp out extreme poverty by 2015. In Growing Up Global, I include a framework for discussion and simple action steps on the Goals for kids of all ages.
     
  4. Embrace a cause. Of the Goals, is there a specific one that tugs at your heart or that has impacted your own family, like education or maternal health? Once you decide on an issue, you can look up action initiatives and causes in Growing Up Global, on globalcitizen.org, unicefusa.org, or on globalgiving.org. Lemonade stands, book drives, haircuts, movie nights, 10K races, babysitting, skipping a snack – when these efforts are dedicated toward helping others, they go from mundane to unforgettable.
     
  5. Nurture inspiration. From Nobel Peace Prize winners to so many great causes started by kids and TV events , learning real stories about real people making impact can inspire kids to follow their dreams for a better world. Watch the Global Citizen Festival Central Park concert livestreamed on September 29. Global Poverty Project founder Hugh Evans started his quest to end world poverty when he was just fourteen years old and his effort continues to gain momentum and supporters fifteen years later. Tuning in to the concert is a wonderful way to imagine how far dreams and ideals can go in touching hearts and helping lives.

How do you raise kids who want to make a difference? What will you do to end extreme poverty?

 

Homa Sabet Tavangar is the author of Growing Up Global: Raising Children to Be At Home in the World (Ballantine Books, 2009) and www.growingupglobal.net.

Posted by Homa Sabet Tavangar in Poverty for column GPP - United States on Sep 25th 2012, 23:48

Comments

26/09/12 5:53am - Posted By Juliet - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
I love this post! One thing that we do is keep food or other supplies in our car to give to our homeless neighbors. For a while we gave out tins of sardines until a friend who is a Hurricane Katrina refugee and still homeless after all this time came out and admitted he couldn't handle eating any more of them. We had a laugh about it, and at his suggestion I now keep a pack of thick socks in the car to give out because our homeless friends are often on their feet all day and wear out socks very quickly. Anyway, my children have taken a lot of ownership of this and my daughter loves to be the one to give out whatever we have. We still pray for the soul of one of our homeless friends who died a few years back. He was a friend who had lived a very hard life, and we think about him often.
27/09/12 9:32am - Posted By Tam - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
Great post! I have three little kids, aged 5, 4 and 2, and you're right about their sense of justice coming naturally. They each chose a child to sponsor from the WV website, and I put the photos up in the kitchen where we can talk about them. My 5yo son was a bit annoyed when WV replaced "his boy" with a girl! lol! But they like talking about the poor people, and the older two even got their heads around "live below the line" pretty well (since they told their dad to sponsor me... hehehe).


When I was little, Mum and Dad used to turn off the electricity for a week each May, just to give us a taste of compassion. It was fun for us, but the idea stuck. I hope I can do a good job with my kids, especially by being a good example myself.
27/09/12 9:10pm - Posted By Homa @growingupglobal - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
I love the idea of keeping something in the car as a very tangible way to show how we can give a hand anytime, right where we live. Need is everywhere. And photos of children whose education or other needs you sponsor will be remembered for a lifetime. Many adults I've interviewed who are working to make a difference on a large scale had an experience as a child sponsoring another child, and remembering their photo among family photos at home.
12/10/12 12:49am - Posted By Enohonfoh - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
Travel!! I know that's the point of your last tip, getting the ptrpsosas, but I can't stress enough how important, enlightening and life changing it is to actually get out there and travel with your kids from a very young age. And don't put it off til the kids are older. I know traveling with kids seems daunting but with some planning it's possible and enjoyable.One of the most magical parts of traveling internationally with out two young sons (almost 7 and almost 4) is witnesses how children don't allows barriers such as not sharing a language interfere with their natural curiosity about other people. Our oldest son still talks about the friend he met on a 30 minute train ride in Japan three years ago they didn't speak the same language and only had a short time to bond, but for my son the connection was real and lasting. When it was time to disembark the boys exchanged token gifts (a small plastic dinosaur and a coin from our country), which is a cherished souvenir. (I recommend that when you do travel you take small gifts like this to give as you interact with people coins or stickers from your home country with perhaps a flag are easy to carry and exciting to receive.)While I understand that many families' budgets are tight and big trips aren't possible, my husband and I have decided that our travel budget is going to get more attention than many other things. And there are ways to travel frugally if you are determined, you can make it happen. Last tip for raising Global kids: Learn a second language. Even just a few words opens kids ideas to other cultures and makes them realize that there are many ways of doing things in the world. Remember, what might seem difficult to you is not necessarily for kids, whose brains are sponges. And if you are traveling to a country where the local language is different from your own, it becomes even more important to learn the language. Just learning how to say, hello', goodbye', please', and thank you' will take you a long way in a foreign culture.
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