sandra-leigh
11-21-2012, 07:02 PM
(I had difficulty deciding where to place this discussion.)
Today I was having a discussion with someone who was fairly upset that our local Trans Day of Remembrance event was not suitable for all-ages, and in particular was not something she could bring her 10 year old to. The reading of the causes of death ("shot"; "beaten"; "tortured, throat slit, and dismembered") she felt was especially not suitable. I asked her for expansion around points such as reading the history of TDOR, around what the key speakers could say, around talking about matters such as people in our own city being beaten in school; but unfortunately she interpreted my questions as being condescending and would not answer.
I find I am having difficulty with envisioning how TDOR, an event centering on remembering murdered individuals, could be made "safe" for "all ages" without Hallmark'ing it down to just saying, "We are here to remember some people who died." I can imagine being careful to choose wordings and discussion that are (e.g.) PG14 (Parental Guidance, 14 years or older), but the "all ages" has me stumped. How can we talk about murder without talking about murder and without emphasizing the meaning right out of the event? "Delores De Silva: Gone to become a caretaker of the Outer Ring of the 7th Circle (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferno_%28Dante%29#Seventh_Circle_.28Violence.29)" ?
I do not have any children, so I will have to ask: at what age range is it suitable to talk to children (meaningfully) about the existence of murder; and about its meaning; and about how ugly some of its forms can take?
What age would you take your children to a TDOR event?
Your local events: were any of them "child-safe"? Was there are recommended minimum age? Were there efforts to make it accessible to a younger audience? Were the causes of death read out? Even if it included elements such as "throat slit" ?
Is TDOR meaningful without addressing violence in adult terms?
Today I was having a discussion with someone who was fairly upset that our local Trans Day of Remembrance event was not suitable for all-ages, and in particular was not something she could bring her 10 year old to. The reading of the causes of death ("shot"; "beaten"; "tortured, throat slit, and dismembered") she felt was especially not suitable. I asked her for expansion around points such as reading the history of TDOR, around what the key speakers could say, around talking about matters such as people in our own city being beaten in school; but unfortunately she interpreted my questions as being condescending and would not answer.
I find I am having difficulty with envisioning how TDOR, an event centering on remembering murdered individuals, could be made "safe" for "all ages" without Hallmark'ing it down to just saying, "We are here to remember some people who died." I can imagine being careful to choose wordings and discussion that are (e.g.) PG14 (Parental Guidance, 14 years or older), but the "all ages" has me stumped. How can we talk about murder without talking about murder and without emphasizing the meaning right out of the event? "Delores De Silva: Gone to become a caretaker of the Outer Ring of the 7th Circle (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferno_%28Dante%29#Seventh_Circle_.28Violence.29)" ?
I do not have any children, so I will have to ask: at what age range is it suitable to talk to children (meaningfully) about the existence of murder; and about its meaning; and about how ugly some of its forms can take?
What age would you take your children to a TDOR event?
Your local events: were any of them "child-safe"? Was there are recommended minimum age? Were there efforts to make it accessible to a younger audience? Were the causes of death read out? Even if it included elements such as "throat slit" ?
Is TDOR meaningful without addressing violence in adult terms?