Monday, January 19, 2026

Doris Lessing - on Education

 In 1971, Doris Lessing wrote something that still makes people uncomfortable today.

She said that every child, throughout their entire education, should be told this:
"You are in the process of being indoctrinated. We have not yet evolved a system of education that is not a system of indoctrination. We are sorry, but it is the best we can do."
She continued: "What you are being taught here is an amalgam of current prejudice and the choices of this particular culture. The slightest look at history will show how impermanent these must be."
Then came the part that still resonates fifty years later:
"Those of you who are more robust and individual than others will be encouraged to leave and find ways of educating yourself—educating your own judgments. Those that stay must remember, always, and all the time, that they are being molded and patterned to fit into the narrow and particular needs of this particular society."
This wasn't just abstract philosophy.
Doris Lessing knew exactly what she was talking about.

THE WOMAN WHO EDUCATED HERSELF
Born in 1919 in Persia (now Iran), Lessing moved to Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) at age five. Her father, a wounded World War I veteran, had come to Africa hoping to farm and find peace.
What young Doris found instead was the rigid world of colonial education—systems designed to maintain social hierarchies and produce compliant citizens of the British Empire.
She attended convent schools and girls' schools where the curriculum reflected the assumptions of the time: that the Empire was righteous, that certain ways of thinking were correct, that questioning authority was improper.
At fourteen, she left formal schooling behind.
But she never stopped learning.
Lessing became a voracious reader. She devoured books on politics, philosophy, sociology, and literature. She educated herself through public libraries and borrowed books, through conversations and fierce curiosity.
"A public library is the most democratic thing in the world," she later wrote. "People who love literature have at least part of their minds immune from indoctrination. If you read, you can learn to think for yourself."

A LIFE OF QUESTIONING
In her twenties, Lessing joined the Communist Party, drawn to its promise of equality and justice. Later, disillusioned by its failures and authoritarianism, she left.
She moved to London in 1949 with her young son and almost nothing else. Within a year, she published her first novel, The Grass Is Singing, about the brutal realities of colonialism and racial segregation in Africa.
The book was a success. But Southern Rhodesia and South Africa weren't impressed.
In 1956, because of her outspoken criticism of apartheid and racial injustice, both countries declared her a "prohibited immigrant." She was banned from the places where she grew up.
The irony wasn't lost on her: the systems she criticized proved her point by silencing her.

THE GOLDEN NOTEBOOK
In 1962, Lessing published The Golden Notebook, a novel about a woman writer trying to make sense of her fractured life through four separate notebooks.
The book explored ideas that were radical for its time: women's inner lives, sexuality, political disillusionment, the gap between how we present ourselves and who we really are.
It became a landmark of feminist literature, though Lessing herself bristled at the label.
"It's stupid. There's nothing feminist about The Golden Notebook," she once said. "The second line is: 'As far as I can see, everything is cracking up.' That is what The Golden Notebook is about!"
What she cared about wasn't labels. It was truth. The uncomfortable, complicated, contradictory truth of human experience.
And in 1971, when she wrote the introduction where her famous quote about education appeared, she was doing what she always did: refusing to let comfortable assumptions go unchallenged.

THE UNEXPECTED NOBEL
For decades, Lessing kept writing. She produced over fifty books—novels, memoirs, science fiction, plays. She explored everything from African politics to the psychology of aging to imagined futures where civilization had collapsed.
In 2007, at age 87, she was shopping for groceries when she came home to find reporters camped outside her London flat.
"You've won the Nobel Prize for Literature!" they told her.
Her response? "Oh Christ!"
She added, with characteristic directness: "I've won all the prizes in Europe, every bloody one, so I'm delighted to win them all. It's a royal flush."

THE SPEECH ABOUT HUNGER FOR BOOKS
Because of health issues, Lessing couldn't travel to Stockholm for the ceremony. But she sent a lecture that captured everything she believed.
She titled it "On Not Winning the Nobel Prize."
In it, she didn't talk about herself or her achievements. Instead, she talked about Zimbabwe—the country of her childhood—and the desperate hunger for education she'd witnessed there.
She described villages where people hadn't eaten for three days but were still talking about books and how to get them.
She told of a friend, a Black writer from Zimbabwe, who taught himself to read from the labels on jam jars and discarded encyclopedias.
She contrasted this burning desire for knowledge with students in wealthy countries who took education for granted, who had access to everything but valued little of it.
"In order to write, in order to make literature, there must be a close connection with libraries, books, with the Tradition," she said. "I have a friend from Zimbabwe, a Black writer. He taught himself to read from the labels on jam jars."
Her point wasn't that formal education was worthless.
It was that true education—the kind that changes how you see the world—requires something more than classrooms. It requires hunger. Questioning. The willingness to think for yourself.

THE LEGACY
Doris Lessing died on November 17, 2013, at age 94.
She had lived through colonial Africa, World War II, the Cold War, the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the digital revolution. Through it all, she kept writing, kept questioning, kept refusing to accept easy answers.
Her quote about indoctrination continues to circulate today—shared by people across the political spectrum who see something true in it.
She wasn't saying education is bad. She wasn't attacking teachers.
She was saying something more nuanced: that all education carries the assumptions of its time and place. That what seems like eternal truth in one generation looks like prejudice to the next. That the best thing education can do is teach you to question—including to question the education itself.
"There is only one way to read," she wrote, "which is to browse in libraries and bookshops, picking up books that attract you, reading only those, dropping them when they bore you... and never, never reading anything because you feel you ought."
Real learning, she believed, doesn't happen when you accept what you're told.
It happens when you learn to question who's doing the telling—and why.
And when you're hungry enough to find answers for yourself.

From FB page ~Unusual Tales



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