HomeOld_PostsShould children celebrate Valentine’s Day?

Should children celebrate Valentine’s Day?

Published on

EDITOR — IT came as a shock to learn that my children’s primary school formally communicated that pupils were expected to come to school dressed in red and complementing colours in celebration of Valentine’s Day.

A lot of questions came to mind.

Do the school authorities understand the pagan origins of Valentine’s Day?

Is it appropriate to teach primary school-going children about romantic love or romance?

Is it appropriate to teach my ECD A daughter and Grade Four son about alien cultural practices meant to pierce our moral fabric?

Who do the school authorities think will foot the bill for buying gifts and roses?

Are we not infusing the wrong ideas into our children’s heads, especially the older ones who are experiencing puberty?

I do not think any of these questions will elicit a positive answer.

From my understanding, Valentine’s Day celebrates an obscure character called St Valentine with a questionable sexual orientation, and I think such festivals have no place in our culture.

I read elsewhere that Valentine’s Day was founded in the early modern England and spread throughout the English-speaking world in the 19th Century.

It has since been commercialised, raking in billions every year.

We have fallen hook, line and sinker for this gimmick which is there to milk our pockets, yet most do not even understand it’s origins.

It is high time Zimbabweans wake up and smell the coffee!

Baba Thandeka,

Ruwa.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest articles

Leonard Dembo: The untold story 

By Fidelis Manyange  LAST week, Wednesday, April 9, marked exactly 28 years since the death...

Unpacking the political economy of poverty 

IN 1990, soon after his release from prison, Nelson Mandela, while visiting in the...

Second Republic walks the talk on sport

By Lovemore Boora  THE Second Republic has thrown its weight behind the Sport and Recreation...

What is ‘truth’?: Part Three . . . can there still be salvation for Africans 

By Nthungo YaAfrika  TRUTH takes no prisoners.  Truth is bitter and undemocratic.  Truth has no feelings, is...

More like this

Leonard Dembo: The untold story 

By Fidelis Manyange  LAST week, Wednesday, April 9, marked exactly 28 years since the death...

Unpacking the political economy of poverty 

IN 1990, soon after his release from prison, Nelson Mandela, while visiting in the...

Second Republic walks the talk on sport

By Lovemore Boora  THE Second Republic has thrown its weight behind the Sport and Recreation...

Discover more from Celebrating Being Zimbabwean

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading