Dr. Suzuki's motto: "Nurtured by Love"
is very well encapsulated in the following passage:
"In the Babema tribe of South Africa, when a
person acts irresponsibly or unjustly, he is placed
in the centre of the village, alone and unfettered.
All work ceases, and every man, woman and child in the
village gathers in a large circle around the accused
individual. Then each person in the tribe speaks to
the accused, one at a time, each recalling the good
things the person in the centre of the circle has done
in his lifetime. Every incident, every experience that
can be recalled with any detail and accuracy is recounted.
All of his positive attributes, good deeds, strengths,
and kindnesses are recited carefully and at length.
This tribal ceremony often lasts for several days. At
the end, the tribal circle is broken, a joyous celebration
takes place, and the person is symbolically and literally
welcomed back into the tribe."
from "The Art of Forgiveness, Lovingkindness and
Peace" by Jack Kornfield (Bantam)
When I read this I heard a resounding "Yes, yes,
yes!" stir within. This is the only way to treat
the criminals in our society and it needs to begin in
the home long before any negative acts are committed.
"What has this to do with music practice?"
you may well ask.
Dr. Suzuki used the above approach by teaching with
love and to help parents do the same. So often in lessons
I see the frustration on the faces of parents sitting
in lessons and I cringe to think that maybe later their
child will receive some form of reproach later for not
doing something 'right' in the performance. Indeed,
the Suzuki approach is a triangle between parent, teacher
and child and as teachers it is our duty to help parents
enable their child at home in music practice. There
is not always time in lessons to discuss difficulties.
This is the sad state of our Western living, we are
always on a time constraint and we have lessons which
start and finish at a certain time. But that is another
story for another newsletter...
The above story of the Babema tribe is an example
of what can be achieved when we help another human being
recall all his/her positive traits and deeds. When practising
with our children our language is crucial. Instead of
saying "No that is wrong do it again" can
we find something right about what we have heard then
suggest adding the correction? Can we disguise it as
a fun challenge? "I heard the word 'cat' very clearly
and now let's sing the word 'dog' clearly". How
many more words can we sing really clearly?"
We can turn the practice into a game and show our child
how much fun we have doing the practice. Could we use
another term for practice and say "Improvement
Time" or simply "Let's Sing/Play!"
I know I need to remember all of this as a teacher and
also as a wife and step mother. Criticism never achieves
anything worthwhile and positive, praise does it.
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