Friday, November 11, 2016
Letter advocating for vegan meals at school
Dear Espoo City Decision Makers,
I am writing you in English because that is my native
language, even though I am citizen of Finland. I do hope you understand it, and
do not immediately trash this because it may be uncomfortable for you to hear.
Having contacted several lower-level decision makers, including
the school principle, health care officials, and the person in charge at Espoo
catering, I was finally urged by my friend, and Espoo representative Henna
Partanen, to contact you regarding my son’s tenacious decision to become a
vegan.
I will
first give you a bit of background. My son, Monn, is 7 years old, and
he’s been a vegetarian from birth. When he was smaller, a medical certificate
was required for vegetarian food at day cares. I found it ridiculous back then,
and simply lied and cited religion, after which, no questions were asked.
Nowadays vegetarian food is standard at schools, and vegetarians are no longer
discriminated against the way they used to be, back in the days.
When Monn
announced that he is a vegan, I asked him whether he would consider being vegetarian
at school, but vegan at home. Apart from the cow-yoghurt which he shared with
his father, he was already mostly vegan anyway. His answer was clear then, and
it has not shifted: He is a vegan. He also gave me an explanation which showed
he had thought about it and made a clear ethical choice.
It would be
highly dubious of me, as a parent, to force him to eat something he has
concluded is unethical when there are many viable alternatives. Making vegan
food is easy, and I have, among plenty of others, been doing it for the past 14
years. It is not more expensive than any other kind of food if done with the
right research and attitude. Of course, it is certainly more expensive than
meat food if kitchens persist in seeing the need to ‘replace’ dairy, eggs and
meat with vegan alternatives.
Veganism is not an ‘alternative lifestyle’. It's just a dietary choice for us, and a lifestyle (not an alternative), for some. Veganism, for me, and now for my son, is based on the belief that acting
violently towards, inflicting pain upon, and causing harm to other sentient
beings is in no way a natural part of our nature. Deciding on a vegan diet is
simply adhering to the logical conclusions that follow from that thought. From our perspective, when our diet is labelled a 'special diet', it is an insult. As far as we are concerned, it takes a 'special' kind of person to not take into consideration the suffering of others. But that's a battle for another day.
Monn is no
longer a 2-year-old who has never tried meat. He is now a 7-year-old who
questions why he was ever given dairy products or eggs to begin with. But don’t believe
me! Monn is going to film a video and post it tomorrow.
Now, I have
a few questions for you:
1. As planners
and educators, what are your views on a child's independent, harmless &
well-argued ethical choice? Will you accept it, or will you discourage him from
using his own reasoning capacity in the future?
2. If your
answer is "Yes, we DO encourage independent thinking," then, if you
accept his argument, will you treat him as an equal to his classmates &
provide him, based on his ethical choice, with the school meals which he is
legally entitled to?
3. If you
do not agree with his arguments, and are unwilling to accommodate them, please
do tell me what it is you are planning to do if and when he refuses to eat the
meals which he finds ethically wrong. And if the answer is still "no, we
will not provide vegan meals," then am I not, in principle, entitled to be
subsidised the amount Espoo Catering gets in order to make my child's food,
since they are not able to provide it?
My final
question: Will you continue to question his diet if we become Daoists? It is a
religion that a) is common in Thailand, Monn's country of birth and other citizenship,
and b) bans the consumption of animal products, garlic, & onion. This is
the alternative if it is deemed that carefully considered ethical reasons are
inferior to blindly following faith (see question 1).
I
understand that discriminating on the basis of religion is against the law in
the city of Espoo.
I am happy
to answer any questions regarding the ethical considerations of Monn's choice.
He is also happy to answer for himself if he is asked. If the above questions
feel complicated that is because they are. Ethical thinking often is quite
difficult. I believe, however, that encouraging children to take and defend an
ethical stance from an early age, and not simply to follow norms blindly, is
healthy for society.
From an
ethical and social standpoint, I see the main conflict being that we are trying
to fit together a blanket social service model and pluralistic values with a
low budget. One of the three has to go. If you are going to have blanket social
services and cater to pluralistic needs, you need more money from somewhere. If
you have pluralistic values and a low budget, then you can’t have blanket
social services, and you need to accept that you will not serve all equally, which
allows for plurality, in which case you have to allow for children in Monn’s
position to bring their won food. The final option is to reject a pluralistic
society, which means who can treat everyone the same and have a low budget.
Then you simply have to stop encouraging independent and diverse thinking.
Finding a
middle path is complicated, but perhaps there are other compromises:
It would
appear the City of Helsinki has a model that could be applied immediately. I
will cite from my friend, Henna Partanen, who got this response from Minna
Ahola of the Espoo Food Services.
”Koulujen kasvisruokalistan
muuttaminen enemmän vegaaneille sopivammaksi voisi olla kustannustehokkain tapa
toteuttaa jatkossa vegaaniasiakkaille sopivaa ruokaa kouluissa. Helsingin
kaupungilla on malli, jossa koulujen kasvisruokalistoilla on useampi
vegaaniruokavaihtoehto ja niinä päivinä, jolloin kasvisruoka ei ole vegaaneille
sopivaa, tarjotaan heille jäähdytettyä vegaaniruokaa edelliseltä kerralta.
Vegaaniruokailijoille ei tarjota erillistä ruokajuomaa, vaan ruokajuomana on
vesi. Tällä on saatu kustannukset samalle tasolle kuin muussa kouluruoassa. Tämä
voisi toimia hyvin myös Espoossa.”
Translation: 'Changing the vegetarian diet at school to be more suitable vegans overall could be the most cost-effective manner to cater to vegan clients at schools. The city of Helsinki has a model in which they have added more vegan options to the basic menu, and on those days that the vegetarian food is not suitable for vegans, they will be served refrigerated food from the previous day. Vegans are not offered a seperate drink to go with their food. They are served water with their meals. In this way, the costs of vegan food is at the same level as other school food. This could also work well in Espoo.'
There is
plenty of literature available about vegan nutrition, so I will not comment on
that, although if you have any difficulties finding it, or need some consulting
advice, I will gladly help.
Again, I am
happy to pack him lunch, if it makes things easier for you. It requires you to
convince Espoo International School that Monn will be allowed to bring his own
food, in which case, I'll make lunch, and the onus will be on the school and
teachers to satisfactorily explain to him why he is given different treatment.
And quite frankly, I think it is simply delaying the thinking you will
inevitable need to do in any case.
I do hope we get this resolved quickly, and that a first grader need not continue to feel he is being treated unfairly at school on a daily basis.
Best
regards,
Valisa
Krairiksh
Labels: children, espoo, ethics, first grader, nutrition, politics, school, school meals, vegan, vegan food, veganism
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