From: The Local. Carl-Magnus
Helgegren, is a journalist, university teacher, and a proactive dad.
And like so many other dads,
Helgegren had to have the violent video-game conversation with his two sons,
Frank and Leo, aged ten and eleven respectively.
"We were sitting at the dinner
table last autumn, and my kids started telling me about this game they wanted
to play, the latest Call of Duty game, and told me about the guns and
missions," Helgegren told The Local on Friday.
Helgegren, who spent some time in
the Middle East as a freelance journalist when he was younger, was reminded of
his own experiences with guns and missions - where he faced violent
demonstrations and grenades to get a story.
"It was quite late in my life
when I finally started to scratch the surface of what war really was,"
Helgegren said.
"I thought I had a pretty good
idea from television, but when I was 29 I realized I had absolutely no idea
what war was. And my kids couldn't explain it, either."
So Helgegren struck a deal. The
family would take a trip to a city impacted by real war. The boys would meet
people affected, do interviews, and visit a refugee camp. And when they came
back home, they would be free to play whatever games they chose.
"They didn't believe me,"
Helgegren said. But he held out. First he considered Iraq or Afghanistan, but
concluded that current war zones were too dangerous. So this past spring during
Easter break, the family booked tickets to Israel and the Palestinian territories
- "the closest you can get to war on a tourist ticket," Helgegren
remarked.
"It wasn't until the second day
when we were there, eating at an Israeli street food stand, when they asked,
'Dad, are we really here because of the games?' And I said yes. Yes, we are
here because of the games. You need to see this."
They stayed with an Israeli family
and went to all the tourist sites, like the old city in Jerusalem. But it was
no pleasure trip.
"We went to
the Shuafat refugee camp in east Jerusalem. They saw the conditions
there, where people burned trash in the streets, and there was an illegal drug
market right next to the school. We went to a clinic where kids were being
stitched up every single day because they had been hit in the head with the
butt of a rifle," Helgegren recalled.
The family stayed in the Middle East
for ten days, and Helgegren said at times the journey was tough.
"I had to explain quite a bit.
I was especially thorough when explaining the politics and pointing out that
the Israeli politics do not necessarily reflect all parts of Israeli
society," Helgegren explained.
When the family returned to Sweden,
Frank and Leo decided not to play Call of Duty after all. They also said they
would like to go back one day.
But the journey didn't end there for
Helgeren. Since writing of his experience he has been hit by an onslaught of
incensed parents and aggravated tweets.
He noted that most of his own
connections were very positive - others were not.
"I have received messages
calling me the worst parent in the world, saying that I am traumatizing my
children, that I am a pompous bastard, and that I should be doused in
napalm," Helgeren told The Local. "I didn't really expect such a
reaction."
As Helgegren's article about the
trip was only published recently, he suspected that much of the criticism
stemmed from people's misconceptions about the situation in Israel at the time
of the family's trip.
"I think people didn't read
thoroughly, so they thought we were just there recently, when there is a
massive war going on," he said. "I also think that many people who
posted these dreadful comments just believe that the Middle East is a total war
zone at all times."
Interestingly, though, Helgegren
said that the harshest criticism came from people without children.
Johanna Nylander at the Swedish
Games Industry (Dataspelsbranschen) said she thought Helgegren was setting a
good example as a parent when it came to taking responsibility.
"But I don't think it's
necessary, perhaps, to take your kids to warzone. Just playing together with
them and showing an interest should suffice," she told Sveriges Radio.
She added that there was a big
difference between war in video games and children pretending to play war
"out in the woods".
"There have been kids 'playing
war' for generations. It used to be just out in the forest with sticks. But the
thing that separates video-game war from playing in the woods is that there's a
much lower risk of getting hit in the head with a stone or falling over when
you're playing video games," she explained.
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