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Ricardo Baesso de Oliveira |
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Paulo
Freire
and
Spiritism
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To live
in full
the
proposed
ethics
of
Jesus,
in
contemporary
times,
is a
challenge
conquered
by few
people.
Paulo
Freire
(1921-1997)
was one
of those
people:
a life
turned
to
ethics
and
responsible
for
pedagogy
directed
to human
wholeness,
concerned
with our
intellectual
and
moral
growth.
He was
awarded
the
title
“Patron
of the
Brazilian
Education”
due to
his
honest
practical
work and
editorial.
Books
like
Pedagogy
of the
Oppressed,
Pedagogy
of Hope,
and
Pedagogy
of
Autonomy
still
today
have an
impressive
influence
on
Brazilian
Education.
As
Kardec,
Freire
also
believed
that
school
education
could
not be
limited
to mere
formal
education,
which is
concerned
only
with the
intelligence,
but
should
be
interested
in the
being in
its
entirety,
working
in
changing
habits.
About
this
matter
he
wrote:
"the
scientific
preparation
of the
teachers
must
match
their
ethical
straightness.
It's a
shame
any gap
between
that and
this.
Scientific
education,
ethical
correctness,
respect
for
others,
consistency,
ability
to live
and
learn
with the
different,
not
allow
that our
personal
discomfort
or our
antipathy
towards
the
other
makes us
accuse
him of
not
complying
with his
obligations,
which we
must
humbly
and
constantly
also
devote
ourselves
to”.
He also
wrote:
"to
transform
the
educational
experience
in pure
technical
training
is
belittling
what is
fundamentally
human in
education:
its
forming
character.
If you
respect
the
nature
of the
human
being,
the
teaching
of the
contents
cannot
give up
oblivious
to the
moral
education
of the
student.
Educating
is - in
substance
- to
form".
He
believed,
as we
Spiritists
also
believe,
that the
spiritual
progress
can only
occur in
a life
committed
to
ethics
and
social
justice.
He
wrote:
"hence
the
angry
tone,
legitimate
anger,
which
involves
my
speech
when I
refer to
the
injustices
that the
tattered
in the
world
are
subject
to. My
point of
view is
the one
of the
“wretched
of the
Earth”,
of the
excluded.
I do not
agree,
however,
on
behalf
of all,
with the
terrorist
actions,
since
they
cause
the
death
and
insecurity
of
innocent
human
beings.
Terrorism
denies
what I
have
been
calling
universal
ethics
of
the
human
being.
The
ethics
that
condemns
the
exploitation
of the
labor of
human
beings;
that
condemns
hearsay,
by
accusing
and
stating
that
someone
said A,
knowing
that
what was
said was
B,
distorting
the
truth,
misleading
the
unwary,
striking
the weak
and
helpless,
burying
the
dream
and
utopia
promising
knowing
that the
promise
will not
be
fulfilled,
testifying
untruthfully,
speaking
bad of
others
just for
the sake
of doing
it".
To
overcome
the
crisis
in which
we find
ourselves,
we must
walk on
the path
of
ethics
Examining
the
political
struggle
for
better
days for
our
country,
he put
it this
way: "if
we
really
want to
overcome
the
crisis
in which
we find
ourselves,
we need
to be
ethical.
I do not
believe
in
anything
without
it or
out of
it. One
of the
fatal
mistakes
of
political
activists
of
authoritarian
messianic
practice
has
always
been to
totally
ignore
the
understanding
of the
world of
the
popular
groups.
Seeing
themselves
as
carriers
of the
saving
truth,
their
irrefutable
task is
not to
propose
it, but
to
impose
it on
the
popular
groups".
And "I
also do
not
believe
that the
policy -
when
giving
flesh to
this
ethical
spirit -
can
never be
dictatorial,
contradictorily
from the
left or
consistently
from the
right.
The
authoritarian
path is
already
in
itself a
violation
to the
disturbingly
inquisitive
and
searching
nature
of men
and
woman,
who are
lost
when
they
lose
their
freedom”.
And
also:
"More
than a
being in
the
world,
the
human
being
has
become a
presence
in the
world,
in the
world
and with
others.
A
presence
that
takes
part,
transforms,
speaks
about
what he
does,
and also
about
his
dreams,
that
observes,
compares,
assesses,
evaluates,
decides,
and
breaks
up. As a
conscious
presence
in the
world, I
cannot
escape
the
ethical
responsibility
of my
behavior
in the
world.
This
does not
mean to
deny the
genetic,
cultural,
and
social
conditioning
to which
we are
subject.
It means
recognizing
that we
are
being
conditioned
but not
determined.
To
recognize
that
History
is a
time of
possibilities
and not
determinism,
that the
future
is
problematic
and not
inexorable".
In his
rich
life, he
maintained
absolute
coherence
between
what he
said and
what he
practiced
on
issues
such as
autonomy,
tolerance,
authority,
freedom
and
humility.
Upon
returning
to
Brazil
after 15
years of
exile,
he was
interviewed
by
dozens
of
journalists,
and
said: "I
came to
relearn
Brazil,
and
while I
am in
the
relearning
process,
of
recognition
of
Brazil,
I do not
have
much to
say. I
have
more to
ask".
When
someone
asked
him,
"what
can we
do to
follow
you?"
Paulo,
in his
typical
way of
being,
replied:
"If you
follow
me, you
destroy
me. The
best way
to
understand
me is to
reinvent
me and
not try
to adapt
to me".
On
another
occasion
he said:
"to
think
right is
not
being
too
certain
of our
certainties.
Hence it
is so
important
to know
the
existing
knowledge
and know
that we
are open
and able
to
produce
the not
yet
existing
knowledge".
Solidarity,
unlike
philanthropy,
is the
help
that
releases
Like the
Spiritist
Doctrine,
he made
the
distinction
between
Charity
considered
as
solidarity
and
Charity
as
philanthropy.
Solidarity,
he said,
is the
help
that
frees,
which is
provided
to the
one that
is in
need, so
that he
no
longer
will be
in need.
Philanthropy,
in turn,
has a
compensatory
nature,
seeking
to
correct
the
consequences
of
social
projects
wrongly
equated,
such as
the
unfair
distribution
of
wealth,
but not
acting
to
promote
the
correction
of these
injustices.
Solidarity
is
positively
built
and can
inspire
the
creation
of
structural
mechanisms
that
avoid
the need
for
subsequent
compensation.
His
vision
on
tolerance
is deep
to show
that the
virtuous
tolerance
should
not be
understood
as a
favor
that the
tolerant
provides
to the
tolerated,
because
it puts
him in a
superior
position
regarding
the
other.
Tolerance,
according
to
Freire,
is the
quality
of
living
with the
different
and not
with the
inferior.
Thinking
on the
necessary
harmony
between
opposite
actions,
such as
to
do/not
do, go
forward/go
backward,
act
now/wait
a while,
he
proposes
a new
virtue:
"patience
in
impatience".
He
wrote:
"I never
accept
just
being
patient
or just
impatient.
To work
creatively
in the
world we
have to
be
patiently
impatient.
If you
are just
impatient
you
destroy
your
dream
before
it had
to be
destroyed.
But if
you are
just
patient,
other
people
will
destroy
your
work".
Although
he
militated
almost
exclusively
in the
university
environment,
he never
refused
to
confess
his
faith in
God and
his deep
admiration
for
Jesus.
Once in
Europe,
someone
asked
him
about
the
influence
of the
great
educators,
of the
great
philosophers,
in his
work. He
boldly
replied:
- "In
the
first
place,
Jesus! I
consider
Jesus an
educator”.
On
another
occasion,
talking
about
the
virtue
of hope,
he said:
- "One
of the
reasons
why I
have
hope is
because
I
believe
in God.
I am
convinced
that I
am more
than my
body".
Paulo
Freire's
testimony
about
his
father,
who
followed
Spiritism
Freire
was a
Catholic.
However,
his
father,
who died
when
Paulo
was 13,
was a
Spiritist
and he
respected
him
deeply
for it.
We found
a
touching
testimony
about
the
Doctrine,
in a
seminar
that
took
place in
an
American
university
in 1996.
The
question
was:
- “Sir,
what
kind of
experiences
formed
you in
your
childhood”?
His
answer
was the
following:
- "My
father
died
when he
was 54
years
old.
This
happened
in 1934
and I
feel his
presence
almost
as if he
were
here
now;
such was
his
influence
and
presence
in my
life
because
he died
when I
was 13.
In our
short
experience
my
father
taught
me a
lot. He
gave me
serious
testimony
of his
respect
for
others.
With him
I
learned
tolerance.
For
example,
he was a
Spiritist,
a
follower
of Allan
Kardec,
the
French
philosopher
who
created,
organized
and
systematized
a
Spiritist
doctrine.
My
mother
was
Catholic.
Of
course,
he was
not the
type
that
went to
Church,
he did
not
believe
in the
bureaucracy
of the
Church.
He did
not
accept
the ways
of
believing
in God
offered
by the
Catholic
Church.
That was
in the
first
half of
the
twentieth
century,
and it
was a
fantastic
example
of his
openness
and
courage.
I
remember
when I
was
seven
years
and
should
make my
first
communion.
I went
to see
him to
tell him
the
following
Sunday I
would go
to
Church
to have
my first
encounter
with
God. And
he said,
“I'll go
with
you”.
You
cannot
imagine
how
those
words
marked
me up to
this
moment.
This was
a deep
understanding
of
tolerance,
respect
for the
different.
Here was
a father
in a
very
particular
society,
very
conservative.
He could
say,
“No, all
this is
a lie. I
will not
let you
accept
such a
lie”!
Instead,
he went
to
Church
and gave
me a
fantastic
example
of the
fundamental
and
absolute
importance
of
solidarity,
how the
respect
for
others
is
absolutely
essential".
References:
1 -
Pedagogy
of
autonomy:
Paulo
Freire.
2 –
Pedagogy
of
solidarity:
Paulo
Freire,
Nita
Freire
and
Walter
de
Oliveira.
3 -
For a
pedagogy
of
questioning:
Paulo
Freire
and
Antonio
Faundez.
4 -
Pedagogy
of the
Oppressed:
Paulo
Freire.
5 -
Pedagogy
of hope:
Paulo
Freire.
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