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Our youth: hope or disaster?

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World Youth Day always evokes for me memories of a narrowly averted disaster. As a not-so-youthful seminarian teaching at the Ateneo de Manila High School back in 1995, I was tasked with shepherding my homeroom students during the overnight vigil and concluding Mass for the World Youth Day celebration in Manila. That final Mass at Luneta Park is now famous for having gathered the biggest crowd ever – more than five million people by some estimates – for a papal event. I recall how my students and I got stuck in the middle of the multitudes pressing forward to get a closer glimpse of the Pope. There were no crowd-control measures or attempts to regulate the human traffic in sight. I was gripped with fear of a stampede ensuing and my students being trampled underfoot by the rabble.

Once the Mass began, however, the crowds stopped surging toward the stage and settled down for a truly festive homage to the future blessed John Paul II. At day’s end, the spirit of the youth had prevailed, with everyone, young and old alike, rejuvenated in spirit.

Fast forward 15 years later, and now as a middle-aged priest, I recalled all these memories as I attended the recent World Youth Day vigil organized by the Archdiocese of Manila at the Ateneo de Manila University grounds. This gathering was meant to be a parallel event to the just-concluded World Youth Day in Madrid. Once again, my initial thoughts for this gathering were of disaster, but of a different kind: a disaster of indifference. I asked myself: Would our youth still be interested in such public displays of religious fervor? Given the fleeting attention span of the young, would an overnight vigil grab their fancy to the same degree as online entertainment or video games?

Again I was pleasantly surprised. I arrived at the vigil grounds where thousands of youth had gathered, undeterred by the furious rainstorm just a few hours earlier. And as I helped out in hearing confessions until way past midnight, I was impressed with the earnest attempts of the young to live good and meaningful lives.

These memories and events have prompted me to take stock of the fundamental attitudes we have regarding our youth. Sadly, it seems the youth are given little credit when it comes to the larger aspirations we have for our country and our world. We often view them with distrust and trepidation, a proverbial disaster waiting to happen.

For me, unfortunately, this shortchanging of the youth has become an occupational hazard of sorts.  As a college teacher, I often bewail the deterioration of reading and writing skills among the young. My colleagues and I constantly harp on how our students can be unoriginal and unimaginative, ready to pluck anything from the Internet and pass it off as their own work. In this age of abbreviated texting and “jejemonic” forms of expression, it is terribly easy to dismiss the current generation as inarticulate and indifferent to higher learning.

As a priest involved in social development, I usually find myself within circles where the youth are chastised for their lack of commitment to the ideals of justice and peace. I remember forums organized in the 1990s among non-government organizations to discuss the prospects for the “successor generation” in development work.  Many of these meetings would often start, to my dismay, with veterans in the NGO set ranting about how the young have not lived up to the ideals set by the pioneers in the field. Now I find myself ranting along the same lines, as I criticize the youth who are ready to join the exodus abroad or swell the ranks of call center workers rather than considering alternative careers.

And finally, as a pastor, I am often approached by the elderly who decry the lack of morals and the ungodly ways of the young. Admittedly, there are many times when it is tempting to sympathize with these complaints, to see the young as no longer interested in matters of the faith.

The problem with these attitudes is twofold.  First, in dismissing our youth, we inevitably end up glorifying our generation as a veritable “golden age” which the young can never equal. Second, and perhaps more seriously, such attitudes make it convenient for us to default on our obligations to the young. The youth may be our future, but for the moment they are also our charge. Whatever shortcomings they have are at least partly of our making, and the promise they hold are for us to foster.

One image from the recent World Youth Day in Madrid (prominently displayed in local tabloids) captures for me the unbridled hope that our youth bring. It is a picture of young pilgrims kneeling in prayer, even as they are being taunted by Spanish protesters objecting to the expense involved in the papal visit. Perhaps it is this steadfast commitment to the faith that led Pope Benedict XVI to describe the events in Madrid as a chance for young people “. . . to pray together and to renew their commitment to root their own lives in Christ, the Faithful Friend. [When they return home] they return there with the firm purpose of being a leaven in society by carrying the hope that is born of faith.”

Are the youth our hope or are they an impending disaster? The choice is ours to make.


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Tags: Roberto E. N. Rivera , S.J. , youth

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  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Simon-Jaring/100001072073145 Simon Jaring

    i checked in the bible if the phrase, “the youth is the hope of our country” and i find it negative. but in the sense that youth has a better chance to change, definitely yes. but if they will not change and will follow the old rubbish system, there is no hope. the bible is telling us only through Jesus we have hope. can the senate solve the helicopter scandal?

    • http://jaoromero.wordpress.com Jao Romero

      isingit ba naman yang helicopter scandal na yan. maghanap ka kausap mo sa ibang lugar tsong.

  • http://jaoromero.wordpress.com Jao Romero

    i am 30 and if i was there in Madrid, i would join the protesters.

  • http://www.facebook.com/baldomarrio Rio Legaspi

    IT IS A DISASTER BECAUSE THE STATUS QUO DOES NOT CHANGE, EDUCATORS ARE WEAK IN INSPIRING THE YOUTHS MIND TO WORK FREELY, MOST OF THEM ARE AFTER THE MONEY. MATAGAL NA NINYO SINASABI NA ANG KABATAAN ANG PAG-ASA NG BAYAN, PERO NASAAN BA TAYO NGAYON? IBIG SABIHIN MAHINA ANG TAGAHUBOG NG KAISIPAN AT YAN ANG MGA TEACHER NATIN NGAYON!

  • Anonymous

    Filipino youth? Amazing but Dumb. He can name a tune in less than 5 notes at times even its singer (fantastic!) but doesn’t know what antibiotics and acronyms are. The Pinoy youth is a Google of American passing fancies and fads from fashion, to song, to street dance, aping (*like those unggoys of Party Pilipinas) everything American including his white skin. Inside his brain, however, these youth are academically inadequate in the more sensible and useful things in life. The Filipino Youth? Ayun in their school uniforms tumo-tomo ng alcohol sa Chevonss, Gulligans, and other beer houses, in stead of doing their HW or reading in the library..  The Dope of the Fatherland, eka nga ni Jose.

  • Anonymous

    “The youth may be our future, but for the moment they are also our charge. Whatever shortcomings they have are at least partly of our making, and the promise they hold are for us to foster.” 
    People seemed to have missed this part. We need to read and understand the article first before we comment. 

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_FN3D4W6RMVV7LI6ORL3YUZOBSY Vincent

    I read an article wherein the pilgrims encountered protesters shooting insults at them. they asked “why are they doing this? they brought catholicsm to us. i dont understand why they are like this.”

    typical willful ignorance or censorship. all you need to do is read. there are mountains of reports as to why the western world feels that way. it would be wise to find out, rather than just throwing blind faith.

    sadly all these reports are nothing more than propaganda to the faithful. the danger is the youth is impressionable, to both the modern world and conservative dogma. sadly the two do not mix. it would be disastrous if they go to either extreme.

    but for me, if they continue to follow conservative dogma, that is one step forward but two steps back. I am 29, i would gladly join the protesters.

  • Anonymous

    You were a youth before… are you a disaster now?

  • http://twitter.com/toothpastesales be honest

    This topic should never be discussed. There are always good and bad in youth, adults, human beings.
    Future leaders will come from youth. Period. So where is the disaster thought come from ????

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Leo-Paras/100000161187703 Leo Paras

      or where did the youth came from?

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Leo-Paras/100000161187703 Leo Paras

    Which comes first the egg or the chicken? From the elders or the youth? And what is the model presented by this self righteous church to the smallest unit of society and to society itself.
    As I see it this church is more interested in the affairs of governments around the world instead of the affairs of individuals inside the families of their flock



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