| |
"To Whom This May
Concern," wrote a local college
student in a recent e-mail, "For one
of my school assignments I am required
to participate in volunteer work. I
was wondering if you could provide me
with any information on how I could go
about doing this at your school."
I chuckled to myself while I read the
message. Compulsory volunteerism is
one of my favorite oxymorons. It
always brings a smile to my face.
Actually, that's not true. It chagrins
me to no end that now we think we have
to compel young people to perform acts
of kindness. I'm talking more than pet
peeve here.
But what is so wrong with insisting
that kids try out the experience of
giving to others? This is the argument
of my niece, who attends an elite
private academy in another city. If
the students at her school weren't
made to do it, she informed me, then
most of them probably wouldn't.
Two major things are wrong with
compulsory volunteerism by my
reckoning:
First, as a writer striving for the
precise use of language, I can't seem
to overlook the fact that, by
definition, to "volunteer" means to do
something of one's own free will, and
without receiving any compensation in
return. Forcing a student to volunteer
violates both conditions: The free
will is removed from the act and there
is the extrinsic reward of satisfying
the requirement.
Second of all, it erodes the spirit of
giving, which is a sacred act. It robs
the giver of the full satisfaction
that results from performing a true
act of charity. Likewise for the
recipient, who will never know the
giver's real intent.
How did we get to this point? I can't
help but feel that our system of
education is at least partly to blame.
It has become trendy these days to
require students to perform a token
amount of "community service," as
volunteering is more commonly referred
to today. Many high schools, and now
some universities, have established it
as a graduation requirement.
And perhaps the problem runs deeper
still. In 99.5% of our nation's
schools there is very little that is
voluntary. Perhaps it is simply the
logical next step to dice volunteering
into the soup, too.
Meanwhile, as I write this, a
community group in my city is busy
organizing the Thanksgiving dinner
that it holds every year for those
with nowhere to go for a special meal
on the fourth Thursday in November, or
nobody to share it with. They fed over
6,000 people in 2001, making it one of
the largest such efforts in the U.S.
How do they do it? You guessed it:
entirely with volunteers, young and
old. When my wife and daughters and I
assist with the cooking on Wednesday
evening, there is often very little to
do. There are too many helpers — and
no one is getting credit for it.
[click here to
contact Chris] |