Yesterday about lunchtime, the twittersphere went slightly crazy over an opinion column written by an articulate 11-year-old named Charlie Fine. In his column, Charlie calls for NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell to stand up to “religious conservative” Fred Nile over his attempts to abolish ethics classes in NSW schools.
He wrote in part:
The facts show that only 33 per cent of the world is Christian, and in NSW a quarter of children choose not to attend lessons on theological scripture. I think it is possible to be non-religious and a good person.
By all means, Mr Nile, you go out and be as Christian as you want; I respect that entirely. But that does not give you and your supporters the right to attempt to shape a future generation of adults in your mould – that is a religious conservative.
Before long, Charlie’s piece was the top article on The Sydney Morning Herald website. By this morning it had been tweeted more than 600 times, making it one of the most heavily tweeted National Times articles ever.
I confess that when I first read the piece, I did so with one eyebrow raised. Do 11-year-olds really write like this? Had some parent played a hand in this? Others on Twitter were similarly suspicious.
But once I looked more closely at the byline I immediately realised my mistake. I know Charlie through his parents who are friends of mine. He is the type of kid who asks lots of questions about social issues, reads newspaper articles on politicians that interest him — Silvio Berlusconi being one of his favourites. He also takes an active interest in learning to express himself articulately and enjoys debating and public speaking.
Of course, part of the reason why some adults find it hard to imagine children as capable of crafting articulate, rational arguments is because we so rarely hear their voices in the public sphere. When it comes to media representation, children are invariably constructed as vulnerable victims in need of protection, or as troublesome deviants in need of discipline. Both constructions serve to legitimise adult intervention and policing of children and young people. Both constructions also infantilise young people and render them as apolitical, voiceless subjects devoid of any agency.
Top Comments
we go to school with Charlie and by all means this is entirely what he would write. We happily know for a fact he is a great supporter of Mao Zedong and russian leader vladmir ledin
As the debate relates to ethics classes in Australia it perhaps would have been better to quote the percentage of Australians who identified as Christians rather than those around the world.
In the letter it is quoted that "only 33 percent of the world is Christian,...". This is true according to the CIA World Book of Facts (see https://www.cia.gov/library.... However the percentage of Australians who identify as Christian is 63.8% (also according to the CIA World Book of Facts).