Raising children in the national tradition is possible now, in the industrial age?



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Raising children in the national tradition is possible now, in the industrial age? and got a better answer

Response from
And perhaps it is necessary. After all, the meaning of a nation's existence, as Likhachev said, is in its culture. Russia also has something to remember and something to be proud of.

Response from 0[+++++]
And maybe it's necessary. After all, the meaning of a nation's existence, as Likhachev said, is in its culture. Russia, too, has something to remember and something to be proud of.

Response from 0[+++++]
I think they forget in civilized Europe - every year there's an idiotic argument about the political correctness of celebrating Christmas and putting Christmas trees in central squares when there are a lot of Muslim immigrants - what if it hurts their feelings? Do you call that forgetting? And it is always possible to educate children in the traditions of the nation, if only one were to be a bearer of those traditions. But all traditions should be meaningful, because I know examples when young people live by traditions while under supervision.

Response from 0[+++++]
Let's teach the Georgians, Armenians, etc. to Russian culture, they'll be very useful. Don't think they have everything in this matter - they have their own culture. Well, teach your own children, and when there will be five of them in 50 years, they will be teachers of national culture in Russia!

Response from 0[+++++]
Everything needs a measure and a combination of the pleasant and the useful.

Response from 0[+++++]
It is not possible, it is necessary. No one prevents you from taking your child to church to read Russian and Orthodox literature, to visit museums, and to listen to good music. If you teach a child to eat chocolate then the likelihood of addiction to eating soy substitute is reduced. Because you'll have something to compare it to.

Response from 0[+++++]
your life with your children is the best tradition national if you cram it in you'll get a negative result you should just live normally.

Response from 0[+++++]
And there are options-see what they do.

Response from 0[+++++]
has long since ceased to be an industrial country and has gone a long way ahead of its time.

Response from 0[+++++]
You shouldn't impose an excessive tribute to the traditions of your ancestors on your child - they live now, not before. So when a child knows a lot about tradition and culture, it's good, but is it worth it to educate a child in these traditions?

Response from 0[+++++]
If it is possible, and only with the help of a circle of like-minded people. Not every child will be able to feel normal in such a situation.

Response from 0[+++++]
a little bit of the good stuff. Depends on what counts as a national tradition. If you force a child to wear a sundress, kokoshnika, knee-high boots to school, I doubt that it will do any good. Take Muslim communities in Europe for example. They live by their own notions, in their own closed world. Do you want your child to have a confined world? I like the way they treat it in Spain. They go to fiestas in national costumes, each province has its own, they gather in their penias, what a social circle. So that's identity without globalization.

 

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