In the musical South
Pacific Lt. Joe Cable is a Philadelphia blueblood who has fallen in love
with a Polynesian girl. As much as he loves Liat, he knows he could never marry
her. He laments about bigotry in “You Have to Be Carefully Taught,” a song
about how children learn from a very early age to hate and fear people who are
different from them.
Hatred is not born in us; we’re taught it, often from
a very early age. It’s passed along from generation to generation until we have
no idea why we hate members of another race, religion, ethnic group, political
party, sexual persuasion, or country. We just do. And taken to extremes, this
hatred often becomes deadly. Hatred is what creates bullies, violence, wars,
and terrorists.
The only way to combat hatred is to teach children
not to hate. This can be a daunting task, but it’s one we all need to undertake
if we’re ever going to find a way for people to get along with each other, no
matter their differences.
To that end I wrote The Magic
Paintbrush. Without being preachy, The Magic Paintbrush
addresses the issue of differences, in this case, a kingdom that is all
pink at war with a kingdom that is all blue for longer than anyone can remember—so
long that no one even knows what started the feud. It takes two children from
another land to point out to the rulers of both kingdoms how we're all really
the same inside and the benefits to getting along.
With the holidays fast
approaching The Magic Paintbrush would
be a perfect gift for youngsters on your gift list. And maybe the adults will
learn something, too. The book is suitable for readers eight years old and up
to read on their own and can be read to younger children.
The Magic Paintbrush
When nine-year-old Jack and his seven-year-old sister
Zoe are snowed in for days with nothing to do, their complaints land them in
every guy’s worst nightmare—the kingdom of Vermilion, a land where everything
is totally pink! At first Jack is mistaken for a spy from the neighboring
kingdom of Cobalt, but Zoe convinces Queen Fuchsia that they’re from New Jersey
and arrived by magic.
Queen Fuchsia needs a king, but all the available
princes in Vermilion are either too short, too fat, too old, or too stupid.
Jack and Zoe suggest she looks for a king in Cobalt, but Vermilion and Cobalt
have been at war since long before anyone can remember. Jack and Zoe decide
Vermilion and Cobalt need a Kitchen Table Mediation to settle their
differences. So they set out on an adventure to bring peace to the warring
kingdoms—and maybe along the way they just might find a king for the queen.
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3 comments:
Thanks for the post -- and the book! Any book that helps children learn how to all get along with each other is appreciated.
Thanks for stopping by, Angela!
Anyone from New Jersey who arrives by magic has to be alright...and good luck with it btw...
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