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BWNS -- Teacher appreciation days in Canada and Australia


From Bahá'í World News Service <bwns@bwc.org>
Date Thu, 23 Dec 2004 16:12:21 +0200

Baha'i World News Service
See story, photographs, and maps at http://news.bahai.org
For more information, contact editor@bahaiworldnews.org

Teacher appreciation days held in Canada and Australia
Mill Bay, Canada, 23 December 2004 (BWNS) -- Baha'i communities across Canada
and Australia paid respect to the teaching profession at events that marked
World Teachers' Day.

The role of the educator is given prime importance in the Baha'i Faith, and
Baha'i communities in various countries have been active supporters of the
occasion, which was initiated by UNESCO in 1993 and is observed
internationally in October.

In Mill Bay, British Columbia, Canada, teachers at five schools received a
framed quotation from the Baha'i writings that indicate the importance of
teachers: "The education and training of children is among the most
meritorious acts of humankind."

Baha'is also presented the teachers with gifts of homemade fudge and plant
arrangements.

Across the country, the Baha'is of Richmond Hill, Ontario organized a teacher
appreciation event on 23 October 2004 that included a dinner and show at a
local community center.

"Our teachers don't have lucrative corporate bonuses, commissions, or large
salaries," said Bahador Derakhshani, one of the organizers.

"Yet their work is so critical in shaping the minds and soul of every future
mother, father, doctor, lawyer, engineer, executive."

The dance academy of a nearby Baha'i-inspired school in Stratford, Ontario,
Nancy Campbell Collegiate, performed dances that depicted topics such as
unity and the elimination of racial and social prejudice.

The principal of the school, Cora McNamara, addressed the gathering on the
importance of the role of teachers.

Australia
Organizers of teacher appreciation events in Australia reported some teachers
saying that it was the first time in their careers that they had received
such recognition and appreciation for their efforts.

Events were held in Australia, in such places as Cairns, Darwin, Melbourne,
Hobart, and Perth.

In Melbourne, teachers, school principals, a local mayor, and members of
parliament gathered at a dinner and presentation ceremony for teachers.

The Victorian state parliamentary secretary for education, Liz Beattie, was
the keynote speaker for the evening.

"I commend the Manningham Baha'i community for hosting this dinner to pay
tribute to teachers," Mrs. Beattie said.

"They are not always given the generosity and the credit that they deserve,"
she said.

Mrs. Beattie encouraged the audience to reflect on the effect that their own
teachers had made on their lives.

"It is important that as a community we acknowledge not only the dedication
of teachers but also their professionalism," she said.

National Baha'i education officer Kath Podger also addressed the gathering.

"The Baha'i Faith teaches that our true reality is spiritual, rather than
physical and that one of the attributes of man is his nobility," said Ms.
Podger, a member of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of
Australia.

Referring to the responsibility of educators in light of this understanding,
she said it is their responsibility to "assist the child to develop and take
ownership for their own spiritual progress."

Mrs. Beattie presented six school principals with books for the school
library and 80 schoolteachers with certificates of appreciation.

Ms. Podger presented certificates of appreciation to 15 volunteer teachers of
Baha'i children's classes.

The certificates included the quote from the Baha'i writings that Mrs.
Beattie had referred to in her speech: "The education of children is as the
work of a loving gardener who tends his young plants in the flowering fields.
The question of goodly character is of first importance."

Australian Baha'is also organized morning teas, dinners, and presentations at
school assemblies.

In the weeks leading up to teacher appreciation events in Australia, children
attending Baha'i religious education classes in government schools and after
school Baha'i education classes, showed appreciation to their teachers for
the contribution they made to their lives.


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