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Country boy [you'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll hurl]
Salon.com ^ | April 17, 2006 | Nina Burleigh

Posted on 04/17/2006 5:09:46 PM PDT by 68skylark

I cringed as my young son recited the Pledge of Allegiance. But who was I to question his innocent trust in a nation I long ago lost faith in?

When people give directions to the upstate New York hamlet of Narrowsburg, they always refer to the big red brick schoolhouse at the stoplight. Narrowsburg Central Rural School has been on the hill on School Street since 1929, educating four generations of local children.

Hardly anybody in town remembers a time when the campus -- with its white doors, sloping green lawn, and Stars and Stripes snapping in the breeze -- was not there. But last year, bankrupted by local fiscal mismanagement and the woes of the post-9/11 New York state economy, the little school was shuttered. When the last student skipped out of its double doors in the summer of 2005, janitors moved in with packing tape and boxes from a nearby egg farm to empty the classrooms. Among the pupils left behind was my son, a member of the last kindergarten class.

Our family first arrived in Narrowsburg in 2000, as city people hunting for a cheap house. For barely $50,000 we were able to buy the "weekend house" we thought would complete our metropolitan existence. But soon after we closed on the home, we moved to Paris, spurred by the serendipitous arrival of a book contract. When our European idyll ended after two years, and with tenants still subletting our city apartment, we moved into the Narrowsburg house. After growing accustomed to the French social system -- with its cheap medicine, generous welfare, short workweek and plentiful child care -- life back in depressed upstate New York felt especially harsh. We'd never planned to get involved in the life of the town, nor had it ever occurred to us that we might send our son to the Narrowsburg School. But suddenly we were upstate locals, with a real stake in the community.

In the fall of 2004, we enrolled our son in kindergarten at the Narrowsburg School. The school's reputation among our friends, other "second-home owners," was not good. "Do they even have a curriculum?" sniffed one New York City professor who kept a weekend home nearby. Clearly, Narrowsburg School was not a traditional first step on the path to Harvard. As far as I could tell, though, no one besides us had ever set foot inside the building. When my husband and I investigated, we were pleasantly surprised. The school had just been renovated and was clean, airy, cheerful. The nurse and the principal knew every one of the 121 children by name. Our son would be one of just 12 little white children in a sunny kindergarten class taught by an enthusiastic woman with eighteen years' experience teaching five-year-olds.

Still, for the first few months, we felt uneasy. Eighty of Narrowsburg's 319 adults are military veterans and at least 10 recent school graduates are serving in Iraq or on other bases overseas right now. The school's defining philosophy was traditional and conservative, starting with a sit-down-in-your-seat brand of discipline, leavened with a rafter-shaking reverence for country and flag. Every day the students gathered in the gym for the "Morning Program," open to parents, which began with the Pledge of Allegiance, followed by a patriotic song, and then discussion of a "word of the week." During the first few weeks, the words of the week seemed suspiciously tied to a certain political persuasion: "Military," "tour," "nation" and "alliance" were among them.

But it wasn't until our boy came home with an invitation in his backpack to attend a "released time" Bible class that my husband and I panicked. We called the ACLU and learned this was an entirely legal way for evangelicals to proselytize to children during school hours. What was against the law was sending the flier home in a kid's backpack, implying school support. After our inquiry, the ACLU formally called the principal to complain. She apologized and promised never to allow it again. While we were never identified as the people who dropped the dime to the ACLU, there was clearly no one else in the school community who would have done so -- and the principal never looked at us quite as warmly again.

Shortly afterward, another parent casually told me that she wanted to bring her daughter's religious cartoon videos in to share with the class, but couldn't because "some people" might object. When we later learned that the cheery kindergarten teacher belonged to one of the most conservative evangelical churches in the community, we were careful not to challenge anyone or to express any opinion about politics or religion, out of fear our son would be singled out. Instead, to counteract any God-and-country indoctrination he received in school, we began our own informal in-home instruction about Bush, Iraq and Washington over the evening news.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Politically, Narrowsburg is red dot in a blue state. It is not named for any small-town frame of mind, but for the way the Delaware River narrows at the edge of town, then widens into a serene, lakelike eddy that at twilight mirrors the lights of town and the ranch-style houses on the flats. The towering pines along the river are nesting spots for bald eagles that soar year-round in pairs above Main Street and swoop down into the river to sink their talons into trout sighted from a hundred feet up. That year, driving to school every morning along the water, my son and I witnessed the wind gradually scrape away the bright foliage, snow fall, and the ground freeze. In the white, leafless months, we could see the entire span of the Delaware River valley from the car, a long arc of pastoral perfection.

If you knew nothing else of the world, if you were just 5 or 6 or 10 years old, and this place was your only America, you wouldn't have any reason at all to question the Narrowsburg School's Morning Program routine. Hand over heart, my son belted out the Pledge with gusto every morning and memorized and sang "The Star-Spangled Banner." I never stopped resisting the urge to sit down in silent protest during the Pledge. But I also never failed to get choked up when they sang "America the Beautiful."

Listening to their little voices, I felt guilty for being a non-believer. When I was 5 years old, in 1965, did I understand what my lefty parents were saying about the Kennedy assassination, Watts and dead-soldier counts? Who was I to deprive my son, or his eleven kindergarten chums, of their faith in a nation capable of combining "good with brotherhood?" In a 5-year-old's perfect world, perhaps such places should exist.

That November, at the school's annual Veterans Day program, the children performed the trucker anthem "God Bless the USA" (one of the memorable lines is "Ain't no doubt I love this la-aand, God bless the USA-ay!"), as their parents sang along. About a dozen local veterans -- ancient men who had served in World War II, and men on the cusp of old age who had served in Korea and Vietnam -- settled into folding chairs arranged beneath the flag. When the students were finished singing, the principal asked the veterans to stand and identify themselves. Watching from the audience, I wondered if anyone would speak of the disaster unfolding in Iraq (which was never a word of the week).

No one did. The men rose and stated name, rank and theater. Finally, a burly, gray-bearded Vietnam veteran rose and said what no one else dared. After identifying himself, he choked out, "Kids, I just hope to God none of you ever have to experience what we went through." Then he sat down, leaving a small pocket of shocked silence. No one applauded his effort at honesty. On the contrary, the hot gym air thickened with a tension that implicitly ostracized the man, and by extension -- because we agreed with him -- me and my husband.

A month later, just before Christmas, my son and I drove together into New York City with bags of children's clothes and shoes that he and his sister had outgrown. The Harlem unit of the National Guard was putting on a Christmas clothing drive for Iraqi children. On the way into the city, I tried to explain to my son what we were doing, and -- as best I could -- why. As we crossed the George Washington Bridge and the Manhattan skyline spread out below us, I began to give him a variation on the "Africans don't have any food, finish your dinner" talk. I wanted him to understand how privileged he was to live in a place where bombs weren't raining from the sky. It was a talk I'd tried to have before, but not one he'd ever paid much attention to until that day, trapped in the back seat of our car.

In simple language, I told my son that our president had started a war with a country called Iraq. I said that we were bombing cities and destroying buildings. And I explained that families just like ours now had no money or food because their parents didn't have offices to go to anymore or bosses to pay them. "America did this?" my son asked, incredulous. "Yes, America," I answered. He paused, a long silent pause, then burst out: "But Mommy, I love America! I want to hug America!"

- - - - - - - - - - - -

A month after the Christmas outburst, the first rumors that all was not well with the school began circulating. Fiscal mismanagement, high fuel and retirement costs, and the depleted state economy had created a huge and unexpected cash shortfall for the tiny district. The parents at Narrowsburg School soon had a figure: It was going to cost just over $600,000 to keep their school open for another year. Chump change in Washington and New York City, but impossible to collect in a town where the median family income is barely $45,000. By late June 2005, the little school's fate was sealed. To my surprise I found I was deeply sorry about it.

The patriot-ization of our son was thorough enough to survive the summer. He decorated his birthday cookies with red, white and blue sugar, and in his summer camp program, when doing arts and crafts, those were the colors of paint he favored. "I made the stars red, white and blue -- like the flag!" he exclaimed, holding a paper mobile he'd strung together.

Now it has been almost a year since my son scampered down the steps of Narrowsburg Central Rural School for the last time. We've since returned to the city, driven back to urban life more by adult boredom than our children's lack of educational opportunities. Our son is enrolled in a well-rated K-5 public school on Manhattan's Upper West Side; not surprisingly, the Pledge of Allegiance is no longer part of his morning routine. Come to think of it, and I could be wrong, I've never seen a flag on the premises.

My husband and I realized, though, that Narrowsburg did more than mold our boy into a patriot. He can, it turns out -- despite the warnings of other city parents -- read at a level twice that of his new peers. Since we returned to the city, he has learned how to ride a bike, long for an Xbox, practiced a few new swear words and, somehow, learned the meaning of "sexy." He has pretty much stopped favoring red, white and blue.

How soon childish national pride is shed, I sometimes think now, and not a little wistfully. Only once it was gone did I realize that, after our initial discomfort, my husband and I had begun to see our son's patriotism as a badge of innocence. His faith was a reminder to us that the reason we are devastated by the war in Iraq and the Bush presidency is that we too love America. We too want to believe in its potential for good and brotherhood.

Our family now visits the Narrowsburg house only on weekends and holidays. Sometimes we pass the stately red brick school building, so recently renovated with thermal windows and elevators for the disabled, a town landmark for 75 years. The flag still flies there, but the doors are padlocked and the windows are black.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; US: New York; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: moralabsolutes; ninaburleigh; rural
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I cringed as my young son recited the Pledge of Allegiance.

The author had me going for awhile -- until I realized this had to be a parody of the thoughts of an earnest, clueless, unpatriotic leftist.

1 posted on 04/17/2006 5:09:48 PM PDT by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark

How sad that the kid got it...lost it...and the parents never had it.


2 posted on 04/17/2006 5:17:44 PM PDT by Conservative4Ever (Buy Danish!)
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To: 68skylark

Hmmm, I didn't know that "BJ" Burleigh was married.

Husband must be a complete wimp.


3 posted on 04/17/2006 5:18:29 PM PDT by FormerLib ("...the past ten years in Kosovo will be replayed here in what some call Aztlan.")
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To: 68skylark

This just makes me want to smack somebody.


4 posted on 04/17/2006 5:19:21 PM PDT by Belasarius (Yet man is born unto trouble, as the sparks fly upward. Job 5:2-7)
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To: 68skylark

"We too want to believe in its potential for good and brotherhood. "

Naah, ain't buying it. Feel sorry for their kid though.


5 posted on 04/17/2006 5:20:44 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: 68skylark

An emailer to Instapundit asks: "My question is, why do anti-war liberals get so offended when people question their patriotism, when they spend so much time questioning it themselves?"


6 posted on 04/17/2006 5:22:01 PM PDT by Roscoe Karns
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To: Conservative4Ever

How sad that the kid got it...lost it...

He didn't "lose" it, it was carefully and systematically
removed by his parents and their school system.


7 posted on 04/17/2006 5:22:08 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: Conservative4Ever

How sad that the parents think their point of view is the right one.


8 posted on 04/17/2006 5:22:51 PM PDT by originalbuckeye
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To: 68skylark

yeap.. a good buddy of mine has a hunting camp in the narrowsburgh, ny area... its a beautiful area and its a stones throw away from PA.. nice area, but libs from the city are infesting a lot of upstate ny.


9 posted on 04/17/2006 5:24:09 PM PDT by BigTom85 (Proud Gun Owner and Member of NRA)
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To: 68skylark

I could only get half way through the second section before I realized how much I hated the author who was the personification of everything evil in this country of freedom to be evil.


10 posted on 04/17/2006 5:24:44 PM PDT by johniegrad
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To: 68skylark

Why didn't they just stay in France? These people have no clue what it is to love your country and your God.


11 posted on 04/17/2006 5:25:03 PM PDT by coton_lover ("If He who was without sin prayed, how much more ought sinners to pray?" --St. Cyprian)
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To: 68skylark
...and the point is?

I will always be grateful for my chance to grow up in rural America; I wouldn't trade it for anything. And my patriotism stuck.

12 posted on 04/17/2006 5:25:16 PM PDT by RedBeaconNY (If you want to know what God thinks of money, look at the people He gave it to.)
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To: 68skylark

America as a whole is worth defending. But I am not sure the Upper West Side of NYC is.


13 posted on 04/17/2006 5:25:37 PM PDT by ikka
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To: 68skylark
The author had me going for awhile -- until I realized this had to be a parody of the thoughts of an earnest, clueless, unpatriotic leftist.

It sure reads like a parody, but I'm not too sure.

14 posted on 04/17/2006 5:28:09 PM PDT by SIDENET (Gonna shake it, gonna break it, let's forget it better still)
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To: RedBeaconNY
I will always be grateful for my chance to grow up in rural America; I wouldn't trade it for anything. And my patriotism stuck.

Exactly, me too.

15 posted on 04/17/2006 5:30:17 PM PDT by SoDak
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To: 68skylark

These people make me sick. Go back to France and stay there.

Maybe once you're a full fledged Dhimmi and just breathlessly expousing how great it is, you'll think again about the country you turn your back on.


16 posted on 04/17/2006 5:30:42 PM PDT by Malsua
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To: Roscoe Karns
An emailer to Instapundit asks: "My question is, why do anti-war liberals get so offended when people question their patriotism, when they spend so much time questioning it themselves?"

Yeah, thanks for that comment. I should say thanks to Instapundit for bringing this column to my attention. I assume most every freeper reads Instapundit constantly -- but if there are one or two who don't, they really should start.

17 posted on 04/17/2006 5:31:40 PM PDT by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark
After growing accustomed to the French social system -- with its cheap medicine, generous welfare, short workweek and plentiful child care -- life back in depressed upstate New York felt especially harsh.

Please, Ms Burleigh go back to France!

What a condescending bleep! I love the hypocrisy of the left...trapping her kid in the car and lecturing to him about the poor as they drive from her SECOND home! Notice how she repeatedly makes in know that she has money and the hicks of Upstate, well, are hicks who sometimes surprise them with clean schools and intellect...not very often of course. (sniff, nose in air)

This article is full of the usual crap perpetuated by the left....I feel sorry for her son.
18 posted on 04/17/2006 5:32:39 PM PDT by socialismisinsidious ( The socialist income tax system turns US citizens into beggars or quitters!)
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To: 68skylark
The author is trash and America is great in spite of idiots like her.
19 posted on 04/17/2006 5:34:27 PM PDT by Texas_Jarhead (Say NO! to "No Illegal Alien Left Behind" legislation...)
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To: 68skylark

This article made me sick. How sad for the little boy.


20 posted on 04/17/2006 5:35:03 PM PDT by JHL
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