A' p'us.
Et voilà. C'est fini. Nos jolis diplômes sont en poche, et on repart sous nos latitudes diverses.
C'est très étrange, et ça me rendait hier un peu tristounet et grommeleux.
Après une petite nuit d'hôtel, nous avons charrié notre cargaison d'ânes morts jusqu'à l'Eurostar, d'où j'écris ces quelques lignes.
Maintenant j'ai hâte de rentrer en France et à la maison.
Dès que j'ai accès à une connexion qui ressemble à quelque chose, je vous mets des photos de la remise de diplômes qui était très bien. On a offert plein de cadeaux, on a beaucoup pleuré, on s'est beaucoup huggé, on s'est beaucoup promis de tous se rendre visite bientôt. Croisons les doigts et refusons le cynisme trop facile qui consiste à se dire narquois que personne n'en fera rien.
J'y ai fait un joli discours que je vous copie/colle:
C'est très étrange, et ça me rendait hier un peu tristounet et grommeleux.
Après une petite nuit d'hôtel, nous avons charrié notre cargaison d'ânes morts jusqu'à l'Eurostar, d'où j'écris ces quelques lignes.
Maintenant j'ai hâte de rentrer en France et à la maison.
Dès que j'ai accès à une connexion qui ressemble à quelque chose, je vous mets des photos de la remise de diplômes qui était très bien. On a offert plein de cadeaux, on a beaucoup pleuré, on s'est beaucoup huggé, on s'est beaucoup promis de tous se rendre visite bientôt. Croisons les doigts et refusons le cynisme trop facile qui consiste à se dire narquois que personne n'en fera rien.
J'y ai fait un joli discours que je vous copie/colle:
In a time where sneers are more valued than smiles, where indifference prevails and commitment is suspicious, where to dream and to hope is to be naive and a fool, children have a lot to teach us.
When you work with children, you feel yourselves changing, reverting back to a more innocent stage ; your hard rind cracks, your cynicism dissolves, and once again you can see the world as a place of wonder, full of marvels to discover, of joy and laughter.
We lose so much as we grow up. Somebody breaks our heart, and we stop believing in love. We're faced with an unfair world, and we stop believing in justice. Our ideals are mocked and scorned and we stop dreaming. We see evil prevails, and we stop hoping.
But truly, which is foolish ? To resign or to fight back ?
If there is one lesson to be learned of history, is that change never simply “happens”. What looks like an unstoppable wave, a continuous evolution is really the sum of all the individuals acting, deciding, pushing in one direction, until all together, they become a force, and things become different.
Brecht said “change the World, it needs it.” It is pointless to just wish that all the bad things in our world go away. It is up to us to change it.
And for that, during these three years, we've been given two special powers.
We talked a lot this year about imagination and reasoning, but we should never forget their close relatives : dream and hope.
If I had to say in two words what Montessori is about, what a Montessori course gave me, it's the two words I would choose : dream and hope.
For we are dreamers. Our dream is one of a united world, where the children from our classrooms have become enlightened adults who lead the world towards peace. Our dream is that trust and love in children are stronger than authority and anger. Our dream is that children need to be guided and not shepherded, that they should cooperate and not compete, that our expectations should be a bar to reach and not the bars of a cage.
People, people who know better, will tell you that this is all a dream.
And they're right. It is a dream, but there is nothing wrong with that.
If humans never dreamed ,we would still be in caves, complaining that it's really cold and dark in here. And then someone dreamed that they could domesticate fire. He was probably laughed at and mocked. But he was right.
Our dream is now a little more than a hundred years old. It was the dream of a woman, a scientifically-minded, no nonsense kind of woman. It is still relevant, it is still worth dreaming, it's a standard that one can be proud to hold.
Hope is the wind that blows in mankind's sails. Hope is believing that tomorrow will be better than today. That things do get better, and will continue to do so, as long as we don't despair.
From the very beginning, when the first humans decided not to eat all their grains, and to sow it, it was an act of hope. The hope that today's efforts will secure a better future. And the plentiful reaping proved them right.
When mankind hopes, nothing can stop it. When it stops, it is doomed.
Our adventure here lasted for three summers, for three years.
We arrived from all corners of the world, all so different, all so diverse, and yet united. There is a reason why this group was so special, so close-knit. We all shared a common sense of purpose, seekers and travellers, here to learn, here to make a difference. Most came from afar, some half-way across the globe. Even our trainers were wanderers, wise women coming to give us gifts of knowledge.
Well... gifts might be a bit too nice a way to put it.
As all the spouses and families here well know, there is nothing easy about a Montessori course. It has been hard, it has been intense. There was joy, and there was anger, there was tears and there was laughter, there was mumbling and muttering, there was awe and rejoicing.
We all made sacrifices to be here, to go all that way. Some couldn't finish, some had to take more time. There is no doubt that there was a cost. There is also no doubt that we're all so much richer now : rich with friends, rich with knowledge, rich with dreams and hopes.
For all that we owe a great debt to Ann, Jackie, Carol, Diane, Carla, Kyla and Melinda, for their passion and dedication.
And we all owe each other a huge debt of gratitude, for making these three summers so special, for making them possible, for making them a treasured memory I will cherish preciously.
During these three years, we also talked about planting seeds a lot. We can see it in two ways :
In one way, we are the fertile fields in which our trainers preciously deposited seeds of knowledge that will grow and grow as we work with children. In another, the world is the land. And we are the seeds. Each seed is a promise, an old pact with the Earth. And after this training, each of us are gifts that Ann and Jackie are offering to the world. A gift to children everywhere. A promise, a hope that now lies in us the power to change the world, to make a better future happen.
So now, three years have gone by. The seeds have been planted. The course is over. Let the harvest begin.
