É muito comum, no Brasil, os pais deixarem os filhos em brinquedotecas e creches com outras crianças e aos cuidados de pessoas que não conhecem.
Certa vez, eu falei coma minha esposa que se fosse na Europa isso seria muito complicado pois haveria uma enorme chance de que as crianças seriam culturalmente/religiosamente muito diferentes assim como as pessoas que cuidariam delas. O risco de um problema cultural/religioso era enorme.
Hoje eu leio um relato do jornal inglês Mail Online que relata que uma criança de 5 anos ficou em um lar com mulheres muçulmanas que usavam burkas e não falavam inglês, que falaram que a Páscoa era estupidez, que as mulheres europeias eram alcoólatras, que retiraram o crucifixo da criança e tiraram o bacon do lanche dela.
É a diversidade cultural tão desejada pelo Papa Francisco.
Prefiro a uniformidade cultural que ainda é possível encontrar no Brasil pelo o bem de meus filhos.
Vejam o relato do Mail Online abaixo:
Muslim foster carers 'told Christian girl, five, that Christmas and Easter are stupid and European women are alcoholics after taking away her crucifix and stopping her from eating bacon'
A white five-year-old girl told her mother Christmas and Easter are
'stupid' and European women are alcoholics after being fostered to two Muslim
families, it was claimed today.
The child, who is a native English speaker, also refused to take back
her favourite meal - spaghetti carbonara - because it contained bacon - which
Muslims do not eat.
The child, who is a native English speaker, spent the past six months in
two Muslim households after being placed into foster care in Tower Hamlets,
east London.
She was forced to live in Muslim foster homes where nobody spoke English
and her carers took away her Christian cross and encouraged her to learn
Arabic, according to The Times.
Local authority reports describe how the little girl sobbed and begged
not to be returned to her niqab-wearing carer’s home, telling a social worker:
‘They don’t speak English.’
The reports detail how the child was ‘very distressed’ and claimed the
foster carer had removed her Christian cross and encouraged her to learn
Arabic.
The two placements were made by the scandal-hit Tower Hamlets borough
council against the wishes of the girl’s family.
Local authorities are required to give due consideration to a child’s
religion, racial origin and cultural and linguistic background’ when placing
them into a foster home.
The girl’s mother is said to be horrified by the circumstances her
daughter has been placed in.
A friend told the newspaper: ‘This is a five-year-old white girl. She
was born in this country, speaks English as her first language, loves football,
holds a British passport and was christened in a church.
‘She’s already suffered the huge trauma of being forcibly separated from
her family. She needs surroundings in which she’ll feel secure. Instead, she’s
trapped in a world where everything feels foreign and unfamiliar. That’s really
scary for a young child.’
The girl lived with her first carer, who is believed to have worn a
niqab outside the family home, for four months. Her current carer wears a burka,
which covers her face entirely, when she is out in public with the child.
In April this year, an Ofsted inspection at Tower Hamlets council found
‘widespread and serious failures in the services provided to children who need
help and protection’.
The council’s children’s service was rated as inadequate and found to
have an ‘entrenched culture of non-compliance with basic social work
standards’.
The Department for Education said: ‘When placing a child in a foster
home, the local authority must ensure that the placement is the most
appropriate way to support [the child’s] welfare. A child’s background is an
important consideration in this decision.’
A council spokesman said: ‘We are unable to comment on individual cases.
In every case, we give absolute consideration to our children’s background and
to their cultural identity. All our foster carers receive training to ensure
they are fully qualified to meet the needs of children in their care.’
It’s not the first time Tower Hamlets has been embroiled in scandal. In
2014, a leaked government report suggested the mayor Lutfur Rahman had links to
Islamic extremist groups, including one seeking to set up a Sharia state in
Europe.
In 2011, it was reported a 31-year-old Asian woman who worked in a local
chemist’s had received death threats for refusing to wear a veil, even though
she was not a practising Muslim.
3 comentários:
Dois comentários:
1-"Foster home" não é creche, é um lar provisório de adoção que os serviços sociais usam para crianças que ou ficaram subitamente órfãs, ou sofreram e sofrem violência e foram resgatadas dos pais ou estao temporariamente sob tutela do serviço social por impedimento dos pais (país doentes ou hospitalizados, por exemplo).
2- Cuidado com o que o Daily Mail diz. Moro na Inglaterra e o Daily Mail é conhecidíssimo por inventar histórias, exagerar fatos e ser useiro e vezeiro em tentar criar disrupcoes sociais. Pode ser que isso seja verdade, não duvido nada de uma incompetência do serviço social. Mas se a fonte é o Daily Mail, cuidado, ele é tão ruim quanto o Guardian. Tente ver se a BBC confirma isso, e mais alguns jornais também. A BBC no Brasil é bem esquerdista, mas aqui se ela pisar na bola o mundo cai encima dela, então eles têm bastante cuidado em serem imparciais.
Também já morei na Inglaterra, meu amigo. Conheço bem os jornais e revistas de lá. Sei de que lado estão e suas credibilidades.
No caso, a reportagem tem nome e sobrenome, não é inventada.
Muito obrigado pela correção da palavra creche.
Grande abraço,
Pedro
Dos entes humanos provenientes do Islã, ora na Inglshislam ou dos comunistas promotores de lavagens cerebrais, de um ou outro modelo ideológico, que diferenças existem entre os que cuidam desses (des)ensinamentos?
Já pensou: á noite, num certo lugar mais deserto, v se depara com uma assombração dessa acima, e de óculos, para piorar?
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