Hazing...an eye-opener
Posted on Tuesday, 19 September 2017
Hazing
…an eye-opener
By Apolinario Villalobos
Now and then, front pages of newspapers scream expositions
on deaths that result from hazing. Investigations are conducted. Parents and
concerned organizations hold rallies to put an end to the fatal ritual…and most
often, they bark at the wrong tree.
There is already a law against it. Some schools ban fraternities.
The police is doing its part. Meanwhile, concerned parents and organizations
forgot to call the attention of other parents, especially, the students,
themselves. The fact is that, most students who join fraternities to have a
feeling of security and belongingness, are already of age, and know what they
are doing, yet they do it. They read
news about death resulting from hazing, yet, they take the risk by still
joining.
With all those mentioned circumstances, why should parents
blame the school?...and the police who cannot solve the crime immediately? Some
parents blame the world, but themselves and their sons and daughters who upon
entering the portal of colleges and universities become ambitious and arrogant.
These sons and daughters thought that they can have a share of prominence in
the campus by joining fraternities, and have their fingers or knuckles bear the
mark of affiliation.
Some parents of hazing victims, on the other hand, insist
that they did their part by warning their sons about joining such kind of
organization. Really?... It has been found out that parents of some students
who died from hazing belong to the fraternity that the departed tried to be
part of! Some parents are even known to remind their sons and daughters to see
to it that the fraternity that they will join, also has government officials as
members, so that the latter can be approached for help in times of need. The
price of selfishness is too expensive, indeed!
Some schools are doing the right thing by letting their
students sign a release waiver, so that they will not be blamed if the latter
would insist on joining a fraternity. The police is not in the position to pass
on the blame, in view of the existing law, because it is their duty to solve a
crime. Besides, passing on the blame will not solve the problems on hazing that
is pestering the campuses. Many cases of hazing that result to the death of
neophytes are left unsolved, hence, relegated to the sidelines, with their
folders turning yellow and accumulating dust in filing cabinets of courts.
Doubts are floating if hazing can be possibly put to a stop,
as officers of the fraternities involved are entrenched in the different nooks
and corners of the government, with some even staff of schools, and who just
remain silent every time a new case hits the pages of newspapers and aired over
TVs and radios. Helplessness and futility of the effort is very evident.
The hazing victims have been given the opportunity to enjoy
a much coveted, but expensive education, but they wasted it because of their arrogant
social climbing attitude and desire to be part of the elite crowd in the
campus. And, most unfortunately, many students who were known to be shy, have
learned to smoke and imbibe alcoholic drinks after joining fraternities.
Before viewers who are members of fraternities will misjudge
me, I would like to make it clear that I am not referring to all students as
being arrogant with social climbing attitudes that push them to join
fraternities. Most, especially, I am not contending that all parents are
selfish enough as to encourage their children to join fraternities known for
their members who are government officials. I know that there are still many
students who are sane enough to make use of the hard-earned money of their
benefactors – parents, elder brothers or sisters, by focusing their mind to
their studies.
A student need not join a fraternity to shine in the school
campus. The school is intended for learning and not for negative socializing.
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