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Variety
and a Light Touch are key with
Junior Youth Groups
In its original call to the Baha'i world to develop junior youth programs, the Universal House of Justice made a specific
point to emphasize the use of the arts in these programs:
"Creative attention
must be devoted to involving them [junior youth] in programmes of activity
that will engage their interests, mold their capacities for teaching and
service, and involve them in social interaction with older youth. The
employment of the arts in various forms can be of great value in such
activity."1 (emphasis added)
Junior youth
animators (facilitators) as well as training institute coordinators
therefore need to give some thought to the "great value" of using the arts
with junior youth groups. One can easily see how the arts can help
"engage their interests," but it may take some creative attention to
envision the use of the arts to "mold their capacities for teaching and
service." This article is intended to offer some basic principles and some
examples to assist animators in integrating the arts into their groups.
Moving beyond just drama
First off,
the earlier articles on Games, Skits and Role-playing are very much
applicable to junior youth. These are the most practical drama tools that
you will be able to turn to time and again when working with your groups.
Beyond that,
however,
the Drama Circle steps back from
promoting drama specifically and instead encourages a broader vision that includes the
many avenues through which creativity may flow.
Notice how the House of Justice calls for the use of "arts in various
forms." One learning we've had with the Drama Circle is that
focused, more disciplined
approaches to the arts, which are effective with youth and adults, meet
with some resistance at this age. A junior youth group is not necessarily the
venue to delve into a comprehensive theory of an art form that they would rather
just dabble in. They are more likely to benefit from the smorgasbord approach—a variety of hands-on activities that
keep them moving and engaged.
Allowing their interests
to lead
Now it is
probably best when these creative activities emerge from the inclinations of
the group itself and from the direction it is heading at a given time. For
example, one group wanted to do some baking as part of a service project. So
they picked a night, found a recipe, got together and did some baking.
Simple enough. They didn't need a discourse on the culinary arts, just some
supervision and room to explore. 
Notice that
in this particular example, it was not necessary for the animators to have
special skills to meet the need of the situation. Instead, the animator
helped in organizing the evening and in providing the kitchen stove. She was
there providing the kind of gentle leadership that allows young people to
experiment without that overshadowing, controlling presence that adults can
sometimes revert to when working with people this age.
Sharing and integrating
your skills
In some
cases, the inclinations of the junior youth group will pass beyond their own
capacities. And if the stars are aligned correctly, an animator will be
skilled in just that area. In other cases, it is exactly the animator's
skill in a certain field that makes the junior youth participants eager to
try it out.

For example,
in the Triangle cluster in North Carolina, we have the blessing of having a
bunch of djembes (hand drums), and we also have a number of animators who can
play the drum. It is only natural that our junior youth want on-the-spot
lessons in drumming. So a mindful animator might teach them a drum beat
pattern to the "O Lord, my God! Open Thou the door..." prayer, for example,
so that they in turn will be able to play that beat during the devotional
portion of the meeting. Therefore, the skill of the art is not external to
the experience of the group, but gracefully integrated.
1
Letter to the Bahá’ís of the World, 21 April 2000. |
Supporting their
blooming
capacities
Powerful
learning organisms that they are, junior youth are daily developing
competency with all kinds of matters, and many of them possess special
skills in various arts and crafts. It is only natural to capitalize on this
capacity by asking them to bring those skills into the group.
For example,
if one of them is an aspiring musician, you might ask him or her to play for
the group or perhaps for an event sponsored by the group. Better yet, if two
or three play instruments, they can be encouraged to learn a piece together
and then present. (Notice this is different from forming a band, which may
divert attention from participation in the junior youth group itself.)
Now it is
possible, under optimal circumstances, that the junior youth will, with just
a pat on the pack and a good word, succeed in executing the task—in this
case, choosing and rehearsing a song together. More often, it is necessary
for someone to work with them, to see them through to the completion of the
task, at one time stepping forward to guide, at another stepping back and
allowing them to lead. That someone is the animator, perhaps with technical
help from a volunteer trained in the relevant art.

It is no
calumny to say that junior youth, on the whole, have not developed the skill
set necessary to take a project from beginning to end without assistance.
This is where the animator plays a critical role, in introducing just the
right amount of encouragement and planning both to achieve the immediate objective and to instill an example of commitment and a pattern of
step-by-step task management that will serve them for years to come in their
own personal endeavors. Otherwise, junior youth who cannot take a project
from beginning to end soon become adults who cannot do the same.
Expanding into new
areas
A
further variation on their delving into a creative field is when the junior
youth decide to pursue a course which requires a skill set that neither they
nor the animators possess. In this case, the junior youth may themselves
know of someone who is trained in just the right field. If not and if
the pursuit seems justified, the animators should be able to help bring
someone in that can help the junior youth. This does not mean, of course,
that when that person arrives, the animators exit gracefully. Far from
it—for the animator possesses what is most essential to the group, which is
the understanding of the process of a junior youth group. In such a case,
therefore, the animator serves to accompany the "guest artist" in his or her
interactions with the junior youth and provides moderating cues to both the
visitor and the junior youth.
An example will serve well here. A junior youth group lost one of its
members in a tragic incident. The group decided, after prayer and
consultation, to create a memorial garden for their friend. This was no
small undertaking, but it was agreed upon by all. So the animators helped
the junior youth fashion a 5-stage plan over a seven-month period, and
though the animators were skilled at making plans, they had no experience with
memorial gardens. BUT one of the junior youth had a parent who was a
landscaper. As it happened, he agreed to participate.
The short of
the story is the junior youth worked hard, made all the important decisions
and pursued with perseverance the fundraising, the physical construction of the garden as
well as a befitting dedication service. From beginning to end it was a
blessed process, but more on point: While that father worked sacrificially
on the project, it was because of the consistent involvement and interaction
of the animators that the junior youth did not feel overrun.
Instead, it was always clear that this was their project, their gift to a
dear friend.
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"Core Activities" Page Headings:
1. Games
2. Skits
3. Role-Playing
4. Junior Youth
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