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Apr 18By smarthomer

Gulf and Yemenis: We are no longer afraid of isolation

In the late nineties of the last century, the American magazine Newsweek published a report about two American parents living in California who decided to raise and educate their children independently, away from all means of technology and formal education, there is no television, no radio, no telephone, no Internet, and no schools. Nor any technical means that can be used in their education. Only, books were the only reference for their culture, their knowledge of life and the world. They were completely convinced that the education system and all technology tools would push their children to turn them into canned social molds similar to programmed robots.

خليجيون ويمنيون: لم نعد نخاف العزلة

Indeed, the children grew up very smart, and very healthy, but they were characterized by a very strange social behavior, they had their world, their priorities, their judgments, and their taste, so when they grew up they were unable to integrate into the society that was behind them, and ahead of them at the same time.

In 2016, the American movie Captain Fantastic won several awards for addressing a similar topic related to a cultural question related to philosophy, religion, history and beliefs, where a father devotes his life to raising his six children on correct physical foundations and strict intellectual education, away from technology and schools. But he is forced to leave his system and go into the outside world, to face challenges related to his idea of ​​the meaning of life and fatherhood within his own vision of the templates of mass social media channels that present us with the meaning of things in readiness through education, culture and religion, and through the massive technology that sweeps children to become unknown beings.