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www.wHATIsyOURNAME.yOU (MANUAL) 163
economical pressures that push millions of people to leave their countries and move to
richer countries have caused a change of social reality. It is a change that not only con-
cerns the fact that you can get products and information easily, or that you can eat a pizza
margherita anywhere, but also implies a relationship with people born in other countries of
the world. These people bring different traditions and cultures, which, without a reflexive
approach, seem to be incommensurable. Adolescents, like children, perhaps succeed more
than adults in opening up to different cultures, thanks to the curiosity that pushes them
towards whatever is new and different. It is thanks to this curiosity that Rosaria, in the last
episode, discovers how Fela is linked to his Nigerian origins. Even though he arrived in Italy
when he was a child, Fela has not lost his ties with them, for even his name recalls a parti-
cular phase of Nigerian history. Also, even though he grew up in an Italian family and learned
their culture and traditions, he remains close to his grandma, the only survivor of his birth
family. The boy, respectful of the Neapolitan tradition of the Sunday lunch, uses it to meet
his grandma with his adoptive family every Sunday. He has become a living bridge between
his native culture and that of the family in which he grew up; in fact, his stepsister considers
Fela’s grandma to be her third grandma.
You can find further resources to explore the concept “traditions” in the manual for Hanadi,
episode 5.
Discussion Plan: Culture and traditions
1. Does my name have a meaning in my culture?
2. Does my name have a meaning within my family’s traditions?
3. Is every person’s name meaningful?
4. If I have my grandfather’s or grandmother’s name, does that mean that I am
continuing a family tradition?
5. Every year, on the first of January, my family and I celebrate the New Year, but
my Chinese friend does not. Why?
6. Why do the children from my area do San Antonio’s bonfires on January 17th, but
not those who live in Vomero?28
7. Why does Rahma’s mother always wear a headscarf?
8. When Gennaro’s grandmother goes to the church she wears a headscarf. Does
she do it for the same reasons as Rahma’s mother?
9. Andrea’s family is very Catholic and they never eat meat on Fridays. If Andrea
eats a hamburger on Friday, does he violate a rule or a tradition?
10. Flora’s family is vegetarian and they never eat meat. If Flora eats a hamburger
does she violate a rule or a tradition?
11. If my Indian friend moves his head from left to right when he nods, instead of up
and down, can I understand what he wants to say?
28 One of the neighborhoods in Naples.
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Buch Reflective Cosmopolitanism - Educating towards inclusive communities through Philosophical Enquiry"
Reflective Cosmopolitanism
Educating towards inclusive communities through Philosophical Enquiry
- Titel
- Reflective Cosmopolitanism
- Untertitel
- Educating towards inclusive communities through Philosophical Enquiry
- Herausgeber
- Ediciones La Rectoral
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 172
- Kategorien
- International
- LehrbĂĽcher PEACE Projekt