The boy who wanted to be ‘uncle’, by Albert Soler

Who was an ‘uncle’, the poor boy Canet must be thinking. Almost at the same time that some schools urge to abandon – however violent – the tradition of hitting sticks to a log on Christmas Eve, so that it releases gifts, in the Canet school the child is singled out and threatened to ask for his rights to be taken care of. The ‘tió’ should be sung sweetly, lest it be altered, but they can be done calls to stone the child’s house and to make him empty in class. Five years. Very young he has learned how the ‘lacistas’ spend them with those who do not play their game. How happy I would be if I could become ‘uncle’, he keeps thinking.

Of course, the Christmas tree does not speak Spanish, which exempts him from stones, insults and boycotts. Nor does he speak Catalan, like a good trunk, but that does not matter, what matters is that he does not pronounce a single word in Spanish, that is enough to be treated with kindness. In addition to developing in a child the desire to be a piece of wood, the case of Canet is a magnificent example of the Catalan way of resolving conflicts, always based on a few fools and smart-ass ones who take advantage of them. The fools are, among others, the alleged gourmet and the no less alleged agent of the Mossos, who are the ones who take the complaints for inciting hatred on social networks. The smartass are all the ‘lacista’ politicians, who take advantage of the fact that fools are very foolish, and thus they do not have to open their mouths, lest they. Or is it that someone has heard some ‘lacista’ politician ugly tweets against the child and his family? They are as cowards as others, because if something characterizes lacismo is the absolute absence of brave men, but even among cowards there are more imbeciles than others. That has been the case since the beginning of the ‘procés’ and it will not change just because it is already dead and buried, it is already part of the Catalan idiosyncrasy. After, of course, they are also the parents of other schoolchildren who join the cause, But that is not surprising, anyone who has fallen by mistake in a WhatsApp group of parents of students knows the calico.

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So, let’s see who can blame the child who wants to be ‘uncle’. Even if he was a ‘tió’ from the old days and they beat him to death one night a year. Better that than being permanently harassed.

Reference-www.elperiodico.com

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