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| The
Georgist Weekend School |
| [Reprinted from the
Henry George News, November, 1959] |
FOR a year or two I had carried around with me a curiosity
concerning those weekend gatherings of young Georgists in Britain that I
had been reading about. And so, when I was there this September, I went
to one at Hoddesdon, just outside of London. I went as a spectator and
returned full of admiration and perhaps confirmed in my earlier
suspicion that maybe we of the Henry George schools in America have been
missing an important bet in ignoring this British invention. But, before
going all out, I should put in this reservation: we must admit it is far
from certain that our young people would respond as have those of
Britain.
To understand how these weekend schools work in England, one must get
clear in mind that this device, from the viewpoint of the London office
that arranges them, is not just another "conference." Also, it
is not an assembly and forum where the old-timers make speeches. Rather,
it is a gathering of the recently indoctrinated youth with just enough
teachers and other seasoned Georgists to help with the answers when
answers are needed.
The management definitely avoids newspaper publicity and is careful not
to overawe the gathering with big names or big personalities or
world-famous speakers. Rather the emphasis is put on the young people
themselves. They're consulted in advance and each of those believed able
to undertake it is persuaded to prepare a ten-minute talk on some
assigned topic. In cases where a speech is viewed by the beginner as
simply overwhelming, a compromise is reached and a paper is accepted
which the author reads. No preparation is demanded, but whether it be a
talk or a paper, hours of work - even days - go into it. When the speech
is made, it is discussed and perhaps answered or opposed by other
students, but rarely by the older Georgists. Each weekend program is
worked out in advance for morning, afternoon and evening sessions,
interrupted of course twice a day for a thirty-minute tea. The program
contains an occasional free period, but the astonishing thing to me was
how seriously they followed their program, with no tendency to skip
meetings or use the affair as a recreational excuse. The spot chosen is
invariably well removed from town, and the English youth in attendance
is commonly not over-equipped with motorcars or motor bikes.
The "country house" selected - and of these many can be found
in England -has dormitory rooms aplenty, with bedding, a dining room, a
kitchen, and a staff. The fare is sufficient and the cost low - so low,
in fact, that it seems that the expense of the weekend has been no
deterrent in getting a sizable turnout of recent graduates. The total
attendance has generally run from thirty to sixty.
Just what the effect of these gatherings, fall and spring, has been on
the George movement in Britain, may be difficult to measure. But the
London head, representing the Henry George School throughout the British
Isles, regards them as the final fillip - the climax of all their
educational effort. It has proved the culminating experience that each
time has made Georgist crusaders out of hitherto mild and complacent
graduates.
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