Time for parents to understand their kids' importance
Updated: 2016-06-13 09:03
By Cai Hong(China Daily)
|
|||||||||
Yamato Tanooka, a 7-year-old Japanese boy who miraculously survived six days alone in a mountain forest, leaves hospital in the Hokkaido city of Hakodate on June 7, 2016, with his parents making a deep bow.[Photo/IC] |
The rescue of seven-year-old Japanese boy Yamato Tanooka after he survived six nights alone in Hokkaido's woods prompted the whole of Japan to deliberate on how to properly disciple children. Tanooka's parents forced him out of their car and left him on a mountain road in the bear-inhabited forest on May 28 as punishment for throwing stones at cars and people.
While Japanese rescue workers and Self-Defense Force personnel were scouring the forest for Tanooka, he had walked almost 7 kilometers to a SDF training facility. He kept himself warm by sleeping between two mattresses and drank water from a tap he came across in the SDF training camp (he didn't get anything solid to eat).
The second grader's endurance and survival skills awed the whole of Japan. And his parents were condemned for treating their son too harshly-some people called for understanding of parental frustration, though.
Many Japanese parents consider disciplining children an important part of their children's development. As an old Japanese saying goes, there are four things to be feared in life: earthquakes, thunder, fire and fathers.
In old times, Japanese fathers were regarded as strict and men of authority. But it seems their authority (when it comes to raising a child) has diminished over the past generation.
Related Stories
Parents climb 'Celestial Ladder' to win luck for examinees 2016-06-09 08:09
Parents and students on exam day 2016-06-08 08:18
Japanese boy abandoned by parents in Hokkaido forest found alive 2016-06-03 11:47
Should parents take a day off on Children’s Day? 2016-05-30 09:52
Today's Top News
Euro 2016 violence spreads to second French city
Former Italian Berlusconi to undergo surgery
The can-do generation to the fore
Riding the wave
China lists first sovereign offshore RMB bond on LSE
British PM denounces Brexit's 'complete untruths'
47% of European businesses would expand in China
Xi urges Washington to boost trust
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Hollywood snaps up rock star's dog film |
Chinese people welcome dispossessed |
The can-do generation to the fore |
Riding the wave |
Leisure giants buoy cruise market |
She followed her heart |