FromBelgiumWithLove
Unregistered
You have direct family experience of the scheme and so are much better placed to offer a view. Your mother had a good experience of the scheme, those quoted in the report had a very different one.
No, he doesn't. What he describes is something entirely different. The fact that he mentions a name in French suggests his mother came from one of the French-speaking cantons, which were the wealthier part of the country. The Verdingkinder were a feature of the dirt-poor, barely above substistence-level farming German-speaking cantons (which is why they are referred to by a Swiss German regionalism). Unless his mother's parents had their parental rights taken away, permanently, or were dead, and she was sold of at auction on a market to the lowest bidder who needed cheap farm labour (lowest bidder as in: the person who asked for the lowest amount of money from the canton which ran the scheme) , he has no direct family experience with the practice at all. At these markets, the children were put on display, and the prospective buyers could touch them to judge if they were good working stock.
It is entirely possible that these were a few isolated incidents and/or the views of someone whose experiences would always be coloured by their own attitudes.
So you think there might have been a few isolated incidents of abuse, but the scheme itself was sound and ethical?
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