What is like being an European Citizen? We ask who we are as citizens of a shattered Europe in the diversity of its History and of the culture of its people, in the different religious beliefs, in the different day-to-day routines, geographically so distant from each other and that isolate us from the feeling of belonging to a community, making Edgar Morin (sociologist and French thinker) say that '... the European order is the tumultuous clutter of the shipyard. Europe has never existed as a superior organization of the parts which constitute it.'
Is this feeling of belonging to this gathering unit one calls Europe and consecrated by the European Union really there? Are European citizens really sharing a set of fundamental values, so clearly defined by Vaclav Havel (President of the Check Republic, between 1993 and 2003) when he considered they consist in 'the respect for each human being and the freedom of Man, in the principle of solidarity, in the importance of the right and equal protection of the law; in the protection of all minorities: in the democratic institutions, in the separation of the executive, legislative and judicial power, in the pluralist political system; in the respect for the private property, private initiative and for the market economy; in the promotion of the civil society’? Can we consider that all European Citizens live according to these values? Are we conscious of the need to defend them as a way to promote the sustainable development, in the respect of heterogeneity? And what about the dreams, the expectations, do us all have the same ambitions taking into account the existence of so many asymmetries, namely the economic ones?
These were the questions that led us to initiate an etwinning project with partners from Poland and Romania. We are 8th grade students in a school located in the suburban area of Lisbon where several different cultures thrive. In our class there are students from different nationalities: Ukrainian, Brazilian, Mozambican and of course Portuguese. Therefore in this area different communities with different traditions coexist. We thought it would be important to share our traditions with other European students, so that we could develop a sense of unit and be able to diminish values, through the knowledge of the other students.
We are working in pairs and we are developing the following topics, all of them related to Portugal: Gastronomy, National monuments, the Educational system, religious traditions, Television programmes, traditional and modern music, natural parks, literature, and the expectations of the Portuguese students as Europeans. These project works aim to let our fellow students from Poland and Romania as well as our school friends from other nationalities know our country and our traditions. We will divulgate them in a blog organised by pair of students and by topics. These blogs can be consulted from the major blog.
Likewise, the students from other countries of our class will also publish, in this blog, information about their own cultures.
Our class is going to have the possibility to communicate directly with our partners from Poland and Romania, through email and in the etwinning chat room, as these partners of ours are developing similar projects and the exchange of ideas will be very interesting.
Is this feeling of belonging to this gathering unit one calls Europe and consecrated by the European Union really there? Are European citizens really sharing a set of fundamental values, so clearly defined by Vaclav Havel (President of the Check Republic, between 1993 and 2003) when he considered they consist in 'the respect for each human being and the freedom of Man, in the principle of solidarity, in the importance of the right and equal protection of the law; in the protection of all minorities: in the democratic institutions, in the separation of the executive, legislative and judicial power, in the pluralist political system; in the respect for the private property, private initiative and for the market economy; in the promotion of the civil society’? Can we consider that all European Citizens live according to these values? Are we conscious of the need to defend them as a way to promote the sustainable development, in the respect of heterogeneity? And what about the dreams, the expectations, do us all have the same ambitions taking into account the existence of so many asymmetries, namely the economic ones?
These were the questions that led us to initiate an etwinning project with partners from Poland and Romania. We are 8th grade students in a school located in the suburban area of Lisbon where several different cultures thrive. In our class there are students from different nationalities: Ukrainian, Brazilian, Mozambican and of course Portuguese. Therefore in this area different communities with different traditions coexist. We thought it would be important to share our traditions with other European students, so that we could develop a sense of unit and be able to diminish values, through the knowledge of the other students.
We are working in pairs and we are developing the following topics, all of them related to Portugal: Gastronomy, National monuments, the Educational system, religious traditions, Television programmes, traditional and modern music, natural parks, literature, and the expectations of the Portuguese students as Europeans. These project works aim to let our fellow students from Poland and Romania as well as our school friends from other nationalities know our country and our traditions. We will divulgate them in a blog organised by pair of students and by topics. These blogs can be consulted from the major blog.
Likewise, the students from other countries of our class will also publish, in this blog, information about their own cultures.
Our class is going to have the possibility to communicate directly with our partners from Poland and Romania, through email and in the etwinning chat room, as these partners of ours are developing similar projects and the exchange of ideas will be very interesting.