I am a big Raffi fan… as a child I listened to his music and now the boys love him too and recognize his songs and his voice…
I knew that he was for child rights and was an amazing spokeperson for children and now, I respect him even more…
Look at this… A Covenant for Honouring Children
The words of A Covenant for Honouring Children suggest nine guiding principles for living. Taken together, they offer a holistic way of restoring natural and human communities, thus brightening the outlook for the world we share. They form the basis for a multi-faith consensus on societal renewal.
Respectful Love
is key. It speaks to the need to respect children as whole people and to encourage them to know their own voices. Children need the kind of love that sees them as legitimate beings, persons in their own right. Respectful love instills self-worth; it’s the prime nutrient in human development. Children need this not only from parents and caregivers, but from the whole community.
Diversity
is about abundance: of human dreams, intelligences, cultures, and cosmologies; of earthly splendours and ecosystems. Introducing children to biodiversity and human diversity at an early age builds on their innate curiosity. There’s a world of natural wonders to discover, and a wealth of cultures, of ways to be human. Comforted by how much we share, we’re able to delight in our differences.
Caring Community
refers to the “village†it takes to raise a child. The community can positively affect the lives of its children. Child-friendly shopkeepers, family resource centres, green schoolyards, bicycle lanes, and pesticide-free parks are some of the ways a community can support its young.
Conscious Parenting
can be taught from an early age; it begins with empathy for newborns. Elementary and secondary schools could teach nurturant parenting (neither permissive nor oppressive) and provide insight into the child-rearing process. Such knowledge helps to deter teen pregnancies and unwanted children. Emotionally aware parents are much less likely to perpetuate abuse or neglect.
Emotional Intelligence
sums up what early life is about: a time for exploring emotions in a safe setting, learning about feelings and how to express them. Those who feel loved are most able to learn and to show compassion for others. Emotional management builds character and is more important to later success than IQ. Cooperation, play, and creativity all foster the “EQ†needed for a joyful life.
Nonviolence
is central to emotional maturity, to family relations, to community values, and to the character of societies that aspire to live in peace. It means more than the absence of aggression; it means living with compassion. Regarding children, it means no corporal punishment, no humiliation, no coercion. “First do no harm,†the physicians’ oath, must now apply to all our relations; it can become a mantra for our times. A culture of peace begins in a nonviolent heart, and a loving home.
Safe Environments
foster a child’s feeling of security and belonging. The very young need protection from the toxic influences that permeate modern life-from domestic neglect and maltreatment, to the corporate manipulations of their minds, to the poisonous chemicals entering their bodies. The first years are when children are most impressionable and vulnerable; they need safeguarding.
Sustainability
refers not merely to conservation of resources, renewable energy development, and anti-pollution laws. To be sustainable, societies need to build social capacity by investing in their young citizens, harnessing the productive power of a contented heart. The loving potential of every young child is a potent source for good in the world.
Ethical Commerce
is fundamental to a child-honouring world. It includes a revolution in the design, manufacture and sale of goods; corporate reform; “triple bottom line†business; full-cost accounting; tax and subsidy shifts; political and economic cycles that reward long-term thinking. Ethical commerce would enable a restorative economy devoted to the well being of the very young.
I am going to be following him more closely now and I would love to get my hand on the book and CD for us “Beluga-Grads” 🙂
Resisto Dancing, Songs of a Compassionate Revolution, the musical expression of Raffi’s Child Honouring philosophy…
I’d never heard of Raffi before; now you’ve got me wanting to listen to him.
You really should get your hands on some of his songs… I was raised on his songs and the boys love him too…
I am so happy to be a Beluga-Grad!!
We are Raffi fans too. I remember my Mom singing Baby Beluga to me… it’s a favourite of my girls now too 🙂 I am so getting my hands on that book and CD! Thanks for sharing this info 😀
I love Raffi!! Ijn fact I listened to his album constantly during the night for the first few weeks after Genny was born. I still sing her baby beluga on most evenings!
I thought I’d let you know, my husband went to some of his different web-sites and found songs, or parts of songs, he lets people down-load for free! We all love him and will be buying some of his music real soon.
Thanks Mammal-mama… I had found those too 🙂
I can’t wait to hear the full versions of some of those songs. I have quite a few of the ids songs and we also have a DVD with three live concerts of his… the boys love it and it really is timeless…