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REMEMBERING GEORGE LYWARD
(See links below)
Saving lives with a
second chance
“As a Finchden
Manor old boy, I know it offered a compassionate answer to the
problem of young offenders.”
As he returns to work this week, Tony
Blair faces ever more strident calls from sections of the media to live
up to his promise of being "tough on crime, tough on the causes of
crime". It does seem to me that the government's tabloid-driven policies
on the former don't seem to be having much effect on the latter.
Of course, "the causes of crime" vary according to where you happen to
sit on the political spectrum. Yet whether you ascribe it to emotional
or economic deprivation, poor parenting, stress, drugs, alcohol, mental
illness or downright wickedness, this much is fact: across every section
of society a significant minority of teenagers, mostly boys, simply go
off the rails every year – causing distress and damage to other people
and to themselves.
This derailment is a constant, no matter how "tough on crime" the
government of the day happens to be. More punishment doesn't necessarily
result in less crime – witness a juvenile jail population already at
record numbers and growing. Of course wickedness exists and society has
to be protected from it. Of course it's unacceptable to be mugged,
assaulted or burgled.
Yet the real issue is not how harshly young offenders should be
chastised, but how to stop as many of them as possible from offending
again. A 1998 study by the National Association for the Care and
Resettlement of Offenders found that young prisoners were very likely to
have suffered deprivation of all kinds, including physical and sexual
abuse and mental illness.
No less an authority than Lord Woolf pointed out in these pages recently
that rehabilitation is demonstrably more effective than retribution at
preventing reoffending. This mild observation by the retiring lord chief
justice was met with howls of tabloid derision and he was dubbed "Lord
Let-em-out" by the Daily Mail for his pains.
However 50 years ago, amid consternation at a sharp postwar rise in
juvenile delinquency, Fleet Street gave the notion of rehabilitation a
considerably warmer reception – in the form of glowing reviews and
widespread coverage for a book called Mr Lyward's Answer, by the
distinguished war hero Michael Burn MC.
In it, he charted the work of pioneering educationalist George Lyward at
the Finchden Manor community in Kent, where youths already on a fast
track for Borstal or Broadmoor were given a second chance - indeed, a
second childhood – as an alternative to committal. The regime offered no
fixed routine other than four meals a day, cooked by the boys
themselves, no locks on the doors, no regulations and no formal therapy.
As Burn noted, Lyward's success rates with reoffending were so much
better than conventional approved schools or mental institutions that
local authorities trampled each other in the rush to get places at
Finchden for teenage tearaways in their care. In the long-term, a few
years there was so much cheaper than locking them up for the rest of
their adult lives.
As a suicidal 16-year-old, I was referred there myself a decade after
Burn's book came out, and the experience saved my life - like the lives
of many others. Well-known Finchden old boys have included actor James
Robertson Justice, blues legend Alexis Korner and the Channel 4 art
critic and author Matthew Collings.
The severity of the problems Lyward grappled with, and the fact that not
every story had a happy ending, can be judged by the fact that three of
the boys Matt and I knew there in the late 60s are now serving prison
sentences for murder. There was no silver bullet, no simplistic
tabloid-friendly cure-all for issues of mental illness or sheer
criminality.
None the less, the community provided a safe respite for all of us and a
better future for many. This weekend Michael Burn, now aged 93, will
return to Lyward's birthplace in Clapham, south London, to address a
mass reunion of old boys 75 years after the community was founded.
Lyward himself is long dead and Finchden Manor long closed, yet its
legacy lives on. Not only in Burn's book - now available free on the
internet through one of the many Finchden websites - but more
importantly in the grey- and white-haired men who'll be there this
Sunday with their families, friends and grandchildren. A living
testimony to Lyward's compassionate answer to the problem of young
offenders in a bygone age.
Tom Robinson
September 1, 2005
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,9115,1560344,00.html
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