| Jean Barman, Yvonne Hébert, Don McCaskill - 2011 - 181 páginas
...rejection of other aspects, had its effect on the Amerindian youth. As Father Le Jeune had remarked: The freedom of the children in these countries is so great,...of their instruction without the conversion of the parents.45 Consequently, the missionaries saw schooling as but one aspect of a multifaceted and long-range... | |
| Denys Delâge - 1993 - 420 páginas
...Generally speaking, however, church authorities considered it impossible to 'train' the children. The freedom of the children in these countries is so great,...without the conversion of the parents. And consequently, all well considered, the first matter to which we should attend is the stability of the marriages of... | |
| James Rodger Miller - 1996 - 602 páginas
...pondered the significance of his brief career as a student. In 1639 the Jesuits concluded that the 'freedom of the children in these countries is so...of their instruction without the conversion of the parents.'40 Henceforth they would work to convert adults and to ensure 'stable marriages,' which was... | |
| Karen L. Anderson - 1991 - 264 páginas
...this issue. As Le Jeune wrote in 1639: The freedom of the children in these countries is so great, they prove so incapable of government and discipline,...despair of their instruction without the conversion of their parents. And consequently, as well considered, the first matter to which we should attend is... | |
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