A BICULTURAL APPROACH TO RELIGIOUS EDUCATION Virgil
Transcription
A BICULTURAL APPROACH TO RELIGIOUS EDUCATION Virgil
A BICULTURAL APPROACH TO RELIGIOUS E D U C A T I O N Virgil Elizondo Mexican American Cultural Center P.O. Box 28185 San Antonio, TX 78228 The Human Struggle: The Praxis of the Religious Educator In these times of growing international crisis and new rise of nationalism we are faced with a challenge that will not and cannot be dismissed: the world has become a crowded small village. Upheaval in a country that was once considered foreign and distant is now taken as a crisis in the international scene. The social struggles in countries like Nicaragua and El Salvador are no longer considered scuffles between unhappy peasants in an unhappy country. They have risen in stature because the ploys of those once distant lands are now the plights of neighbors with implications that go beyond the conventional models of nationalism and culturalism (racialism). New models of living and perceiving the world are necessary for humanity to survive. We must pass from the competitive ghetto models to cooperative family models of human living. We must make the model of Jesus, whereby one brother freely gives his life that others may live, our model of living. In our Judeo-Christian tradition we affirm that God enters our historical process. This entrance is not one of miraculous and apocalyptic comings. God enters the world by default: he has never left it. It is in the day to day grind, the mundane work-a-day world where God is most active. It is through him that the transformation from chaos to order takes place (Genesis), enslavement becomes freedom (Exodus), death becomes life (Death-Resurrection of Jesus), and division becomes harmony (Pentecost). Such is the work of God. The work of humanity, however, often works contrary to that of God. In our sinfulness we seek to isolate ourselves, building cities surrounded by walls, to divide and conquer for personal self-gain even at the destruction of others. Our walk are made to Reliiiious Education 258 Vol 76 No 3 May-June 1981 VIRGIL ELIZONDO 259 separate us: keep what we like and is useful, and exclude what is foreign and different. Our walls are made of bricks: those of physical, social and cultural differences that separate us and uphold our own narrow-minded vision of the world as God's way for all! The way of sinful humanity is one of self-fulfillment through material goods: prestige and power through the deprivation and destruction of others. Our way of life, our gain, our power, our possessions become our idols — our ultimate gods. This is the on-going sin of the world. In the present moment of history, we know that the transformation of humanity's sinful ways has indeed begun, but we are a long way off before the final completion. The struggle between God's way and the ways of sinful humanity are at the very core of the world's problems and potential self-annihilation. It is the task of the religious educator to reflect, teach, clarify and celebrate this process of struggle and transformation as it takes place within our own historical and cultural journey. Religious educators must situate themselves (1) within the tradition of their own people and (2) in the midst of chaos, slavery, death, and division. This was the position of the first religious educators: the Prophets. They stood within the dialectic of God's way and humanity's sinful ways and spoke the truth — the concrete and specific truth about authentic good and destructive evil. The Prophets did not hesitate to speak out against the idols of their time; they did not hesitate to reflect and clarify the sin of humanity; they did not hesitate to live the way of truth. They illumined the blindness of social sin, for once sin has disintegrated to the level of becoming an idol, once it has been established as part of the normative world view, it is blind to the status quo. Out of these men and women of prophecy, misfits as they were taken to be, we discover our tradition of witnessing and teaching, clarifying and celebrating God's way into the praxis of our human journey. This is the tradition of the religious educator, this is his/her challenge: not to uphold the cultural idols that we have grown comfortable with, but to shatter them with the teaching of the Father. The "American-U.S." Reality — The Makings of An Idol If our religious tradition and the Prophets have spoken to us very directly, there is another tradition that has asserted an even stronger influence in our society: Americanism. 260 A BICULTURAL APPROACH The core of what it means to be American was formulated in the foundational moments of this country, solidified during the formative years of our history and transmitted through the literature, folklore, and media of our society. The American image our tradition has built is the WASP image with the English language as its base and the Protestant work ethic as its cultural philosophy.1 This normative image of "Americanism," is one that has permeated all streams of life in the U.S. It functions as a totalitarian image which overshadows any cultural diversity or ethnic makeup and seeks to shut out anything "other" than itself. A person is considered foreign if he is not part of this in group and becomes identified by the otherness he/she displays, i.e., "spie," "dago," "nigger." One only has to look at the history of the Catholic Church in America as well as the struggle of Eastern European immigrants to see this problem in the formative years of the U.S. Catholic Church.2 The threat of the "other" has long been a problem in the U.S. The original inhabitants of this land were eliminated because they were labelled "diabolical savages."3 Soon after the bombing of Pearl Harbor history tells of the mass prejudices against Japanese Americans. They were not one of US. The random discrimination against Mexican Americans because they appear to be foreigners still exists today. And the pain of one of this country's greatest sins still stares us in the eyes: slavery. We do not deny that there have been and continue to be destructive segregation and malicious prejudices; too many of them are still too evident today. From flagrant violation of human rights to subtle systematic forms of economic disadvantage, our people, Americans as we all are, still suffer from cultural and racial discrimination. Believing that the "American" i.e., WASP way is the way remains our biggest obstacle, our biggest idol, our biggest sin. 1 The good and the bad aspects of this foundational image are beyond the scope of this paper to discuss. However, we are convinced that in a functional way of speaking, "Americanism" as unquestioned patriotism has functioned as the fundamental religious conviction of this land — everything else being of secondary importance. For some interesting readings of this point, consult: Alexis de Tocqueville, De la Démocratie en Amérique, (Paris: Gallimard, 1961); Elise Marienstras, Les Mythes Fondateurs de la Nation Américaine, (Paris: Maspero, 1976); Robert Michaelsen, "Americanization: Sacred or Profane Phenomenon?," in Marty and Peerman (eda), New Theology No. 9, (New York: MacMillan, 1964). 2 Andrew M. Greeley, An Ugly Little Secret: Anti-Catholicism in North America, (Kansas City: Sheed, Andrews and McNeel, 1977); also, The American Catholic, (New York: Basic Books, 1976). 3 Martin E. Marty, Righteous Empire, (New York: Dial Press, 1976). 261 VIRGIL ELIZONDO In spite of this a new image is beginning to rise. It is an image recognizing one's cultural tradition and searching for one's cultural roots. People are beginning to realize that they do not have to ignore their cultural heritage. They can be who they are, but "be" in a new way. The idolized idea that Americanism is equated with White Anglo-Saxon middle-class values is being threatened by the liberating discovery that the uniqueness and originality of the U.S. is precisely that it is a nation of nations. The challenges we are faced with are many and the potential for a new creation is fascinating! We have to begin to discover models of living and relating that are new and unoppressive; that are not fearful of God-given otherness (difference) but welcoming. Our new model of biblical America must be inclusive rather than exclusive. Out of the chaos of many nationalities existing within one nation we have to create a truly new order — a novus ordo secloruml It is the talk of today: biblical prophets — the religious educator — to point the way and clarify the vision of the new social order. We have to turn the enslavement of stereotyping into the liberation of the children of God who can truly celebrate and appreciate their own uniqueness and originality. A celebration not of superiority/inferiority but of life-giving complimentariness. A Gospel Perspective The quest for survival as the absoluteness of my way above all others, must be transformed into dying to my own egocentric and ethnocentric ways so as to be enriched by the others. Recognizing the beauty and uniqueness of the "other's" way, which like my own, is a product of humanity's cooperative efforts with the Creator, is the fruit of the Spirit which allows us to cry from within our hearts: Abba! The conversion of ethnic and racial divisions into a new unity is truly the work of the Spirit. It is a task of bringing together our gifts of language, cultures, traditions, and history into a new and harmonious unity. The best image I have for this is what I call the stewpot image. Imagine a large kettle filled with all the ingredients needed for a stew: carrots, celery, potatoes, meat, salt, pepper. . . . The stew is cooked by heat, the necessary tension, and in the process of cooking, of becoming, each ingredient is forced to give up something; to die somewhat to itself. The end product 262 A BICULTURAL APPROACH is a stew made up of all the parts. No one ingredient ceases to be but each one now exists in a radically new way. Each ingredient has enriched and been enriched by the other. 4 The "tradition" of religious education as was mentioned earlier is the way of the Prophets. The "model" of religious education, then, is the way of the Prophet: Jesus. The challenges that face us as a people of God and members of the same crowded village cannot be dealt with by creating new ideologies and writing new laws. Our civil rights acts and emancipation laws have failed to stop discrimination and prejudice because our cultures, prejudices are too deeply engraved in all the fibers of our being. Our models of change must look deeper into our own hearts and center themselves on the call of the Gospel. What we need most of all is not new laws, but new attitudes of the heart. This call is the radical acceptance of other as "other." It is the call to "love your neighbor" as yourself. This message which appears to be simple and platitudinous is the very core of what Jesus is all about. In fact, the radical acceptance of loving the other as other is the way of God; it is the way of the incarnation: God radically accepting humanity in flesh and blood. The kenosis of God, his emptying of all into the reality of the other is the radical fundamental chosen acceptance of the humanity of God (Philippians 2:6-11). This is the radical love that exists at the very core of the Gospel message. Having experienced God's love, I can now begin to love others as God loves me! This experience is the conversion of the heart and the birth of a new person. Such a person will see and appreciate self, and others, and would in a radically new way — so radical, that it will turn all knowledge and criteria of judgment inside out! It is what John's Gospel (John 12:24) calls the dying to oneself to discover New Life. It is the radical love of neighbor whereby I enter into his/her reality, into his/her world view, into his/her culture. I live with my neighbor, in solidarity, love and compassion. This in turn leads to "otherness." It is through love that we become the other; it is through becoming the other that we understand them; no longer in a judgmental way, but truly as fellow human beings. It is through this radical love and understanding that we experience this metanoia. Precisely because we love, we seek to understand! 4 For an excellent and very precise presentation of the various models of diversity in the U.S., consult: Andrew M. Greeley, "The Persistence of Diversity," The Antioch Review, 1981. VIRGIL ELIZONDO 263 The mere desire to understand the other will not bring us to understanding or love. Many times trying to understand without loving brings us to a new sense of righteousness. We believe we understand when in fact we do not. It is here in the love that leads to understanding that we discover new attitudes which will be born out of a new experience of the positive value and richness of multicultural living. We must always keep in mind that Christianity is not an ideology or religious myth but the concrete experience of unlimited love which transcends human boundaries, limitations, or expectations. We speak about it only after we have experienced it. It is foolishness and stupidity to those who have not experienced it and hypocrisy to those who speak about it without living it. The Hispanic Perspective: Blessings of an Idol Broken The love for the United States and the patriotic spirit of the Hispanics for this country is certainly beyond question. Our people are proud to be citizens of the United States of America and have certainly proven this in their willingness to serve in the military and to give their lives for the sake of this country and the principles for which it stands. But we cannot ignore the oppressive and dehumanizing treatment we have often been subjected to by our fellow countrymen. In the past, many of our people simply tried to assimilate and become "good Americans" — forgetting our language, our customs and our religion.5 Today, we are going far beyond the model of assimilation. In our faith in the way of God, we have discovered that simply to assimilate would be a sell out, an insult to our ancestors and a betrayal of our faith. Our faith has led us to the discovery that precisely because we have suffered much, today we have much to offer in purifying and developing our country so that others will not have to suffer what we have suffered. Furthermore, convinced that God has graced each and every culture with some specific aspects of his goodness and that no one people has an exclusivity on God's gifts, we see ourselves as having much to offer to the human betterment of our country that is desperately needed at this moment of 5 Virgil Elizondo, Christianity and Culture, Sunday Visitor Press, (Huntington: 1975) especially chapter seven; and Mestizaje: The Dialectic of Cultural Birth, (San Antonio: 1978), MACC, especially part II. 264 A BICULTURAL APPROACH history. There is no denial that we have certainly been enriched by many of the cultural elements of the WASP-American way. For this we are grateful. Yet, there is equally no denial that there is much suffering and unidentified weakness within the WASPAmerican way that is leading to the ultimate inner destruction of Americanism if it is not critically questioned, purified and strengthened with new blood. 6 In our faith, we are convinced that the Hispanics are one of the specific groups among several others which at this moment of history have much to offer towards a significant phase in the build-up of God's Kingdom among us. We are well aware that many see our presence in the United States as a threat and even a curse. They wish we would go away, although some of us were already here long before some of these lands were taken over by the United States. We are a significant part of the United States, we are here to stay, and much more than that, we are here to take a significant part in the building of the U.S.A. of tomorrow, which must start today. We have much to learn, but we equally have much to contribute. For the Hispanic, life is basically a gift.7 It is to be lived to the fullest because it is a gift from him who gives life and who is God. Life is gradually unfolding. The people accept the totality of life, both joy and suffering, for to live is to know conflict and to experience the tension of being pulled in different directions by many forces. Life is a gift from God, and from this belief everything else follows and develops. The Hispanic people are profoundly religious in the sense of living out a personal relationship with their God who is the source of life and to whom they return. This conviction is found in the poorest of the poor in Latin America. Although materially they may have almost nothing, they will express an appreciation for life. Tenemos vida. Life is a beautiful gift. Fundamental happiness comes with being. I. The Family This conviction that life is a gift has a strong existential basis. It is not simply a philosophical acceptance or a truth that has been read in the catechism. The people have come to this appreciation 6 Ervin Laszio, "A real 'New Foundation'," inNewsweek, February 19,1979, p. 13; and Lance Morrow, "Rediscovering America" in Time, July 7, 1980. 7 Most of the following section is taken from this author's work: Christianity and Culture, Chapter Eight. VIRGIL ELIZONDO 265 through the strong sense of la familia, the family. This concept of the family as the basis of all society existed in the pre-Columbian cultures. For the Hispanic of today, the family remains the basis of society. It is in the family that one finds the meaning of life, and it is here that the Hispano finds himself realized; therefore he will have a family. For many reasons, the Spanish-speaking may be having smaller families today, but they will never accept the concept of zero population growth. The husband and wife will continue to have children, for to do so is part of the essence of life. The Mexican-American family will always find room for one more; hospitality is part of the tradition of la familia. Though the family may have very little to give, what they do have will be divided among family and visitors, for this is part of life. The concept of family includes more than just the mother, father, and children. When Mexican Americans speak about family, their concept goes beyond these immediate bounds to include the extended family. The family includes all the relatives, los parientes; anyone who is in any way related has a place in the home. The "American Way," which has broken down the extended family to the nuclear family has not yet destroyed this concept. The Spanish system of relatives includes more than just blood relatives. A system of in-laws exists, for in a marriage a full relationship of both families is established. Relationships include not only mothers-in-law (suegras) and fathers-in-law (suegros), but aunts (Has), uncles (tios), and even cousins-in-law (losprimos políticos). Since the entire family usually comes together only at marriages and funerals, an understandable confusion arises about who is related to whom. All these relatives begin to form part of the larger family. Los ancianos, the elderly, are another part of the family. An anciano is one who has advanced in wisdom and understanding. Thus the abuelitos, the grandparents, are ancianos for they have advanced far in wisdom and knowledge, and they have much to offer. The Spanish-speaking have a deep veneration for the elderly; the ancianos are not looked upon as a burden, although physically they might be, but as a personal blessing upon the home in which they live. They bring the wisdom of the family, of the tradición (tradition), of the costumbres (customs), of all those things that are an important part of the heritage of a people. The ancianos have maintained the tradition of oral history. 266 A BICULTURAL APPROACH The Hispanic in this country and in Latin America have not had, for the most part, the opportunity for formal education. Therefore the abuelitos have kept the stories and traditions alive, passing them on from old to young. They can quote dates, figures, names and incidents from the time of their grandparents and before; they are living history and have a marvelous wealth of knowledge about the past. This is not the entire family relationship. Another aspect is the compadres. In English they are called godparents, but in Spanish they are called com-padres, the co-parents of the children. This idea of compradazgo is a deeply held tradition in the Spanishspeaking community. The complete origins of how the early missioners were able to instill this notion so strongly in the people is not known. Often the obligation of godparents is spoken of in the Church, but in the Latino community this seems to be almost an innate idea. Two aspects of the padrino are important. One is the spiritual relationship that it forms between the parents and those who are asked to be co-parents of the child. Relatives are inherited, and that cannot be changed. A person is born into a family and may like them or hate them, but padrinos are freely chosen and they freely accept the relationship. The padrinos are related in something which is much deeper than blood — the spirit. It is through the spirit that people become co-parents and enter into a profound relationship. A strong bond exists between the two families; a second strong bond also is formed between the child who is baptized and his compadres. Most children will tell you spontaneously who their compadres are. They may not know the names of their aunts and uncles, but they will know their compadres, because it is part of the duty of the god-parents to provide for the child throughout life, especially at Christmas, Epiphany, birthdays, and graduations. The child loves the padrino because he is an extra father, who brings him special gifts at special times. Therefore sometimes the padrino is chosen not because of the spiritual bond but because of the financial status of the friends who will be able to provide for the child. The compadres become a very intimate part of the family because of the freely chosen and freely accepted spiritual relationship. The greatest compliment a family can pay to someone is to ask them to be the compadres or compadre of their child. These are some of the aspects of la familia. Together they are a reflection of the Hispanic concept of life as a gift, and together VIRGIL ELIZONDO 267 these relationships make up the barrios. Today, when people speak of the barrio, they usually refer to a slum area, but barrio is not necessarily a bad word. A barrio could be a slum area, but basically it is a geographical one in which all of these relationships constitute the community. All the people are interrelated through compradazgo, viejitos, and intermarriage. In the barrio, even in the poorest areas, children grow up with a certain security because they are wanted and cared for by the adults of the barrio; because of the personal concern, a certain security and beauty exist in the midst of poverty, an idea of living community. In large urban centers today much of this no longer appears, but the traditions continue in the rural areas. Thus, the home truly becomes the first and most important school of human relationships. In the familia the art of human dynamics is taught through the many cultural dynamics of everyday life. II. Suffering and Death As part of the totality of life, suffering is accepted by the LatinAmerican people. It is seen as a way to final happiness. To accept life is to accept death, for death is the supreme moment of life. In their vocabulary Latinos will even play with death. They will laugh and joke about death and do not mind giving their lives for an ideal they believe in, because they know they will not die. They live on not just in memory, but in h memoria, which has a much richer meaning than the English word. La memoria is a dynamic force through which the person continues to be alive. The person lives on in la memoria; thus, death is not the end, but the passage into the fullness of life. To die is to live forever in la memoria of those who stay behind, in communion with those who have gone before, in communion with the cosmos, and in communion with the giver and source of life, God Himself. Death is sometimes hard and painful, but it is not the pain of failure, only the pain of separation for a new birth. III. Time Because they accept all limitations, Hispanics accept time. Many people have misunderstood this concept of mariana. It is not laziness as outsiders have often seen it. To watch the farmworkers in the fields or to see the labor of a carpenter or worker is to know that Hispanics are not lazy. They are willing to do the hardest and often most dangerous job. 268 A BICULTURAL APPROACH A realistic acceptance of limitations exists, so that even though one does one's best, no one person will be able to do it all. If Jesus himself, the Son of God, did not finish the work of salvation in three years, much less will another finish it. Perhaps it could be said that the Latin-American people take themselves so seriously that they take themselves lightly. Persons who do not take themselves seriously enough are the ones who take themselves too seriously; they confuse themselves with God and end up destroying themselves by self-imposed guilt about not being God. The truly serious person accepts limitations with the realization that not all will be accomplished. One is to live to the fullest today, and tomorrow will take care of tomorrow, for tomorrow exists only in the mind. The question, "Why do today what can wait until tomorrow?" is not a sign of laziness but a metaphysical understanding and acceptance of one's nature as a limited creature. The Hispanic is futuristic in an eschatalogical sense, living an eschatology already begun here and now. Eternity is the everlasting now; there is no need to rush. The realistic acceptance of fundamental limitations in space and time as expressed in the attitude of mañana is the source of great peace for Hispanics but of great tensions for the non-Hispanic. Paul Tillich calls the fear of accepting the limitation of time one of the greatest sources of suffering of North-Atlantic people. They feel that everything must be accomplished today by 5 o'clock, and they will work hard and save so that they may enjoy themselves tomorrow, in retirement, doing then all that they have been saving money for. While the Latino lives in the futuristic eschatology which has already begun today, the North American generally lives in the hope of a pragmatic eschatology that will begin in retirement. IV. Prophetic-Festive Life for the Hispanic has always been a struggle for justice because oppressive injustice has been our daily way of life. The concrete struggles as exemplified by Cesar Chavez, Archbishop Romero, the four martyred women of El Salvador and many others, are the prophetic roads we have been travelling to Jerusalem. Through it all we continue to celebrate. We celebrate because we have a sense of the tragic, accepting the many forces of life and yet realizing we live in the ultimate happiness which has already begun. Through our celebrations, we are able to affirm 269 VIRGIL ELIZONDO our Christian hope: hope against all human hope. We celebrate the end which is already the beginning. This prophetic way is the basis of our fiesta. Hispanics do not allow themselves to be swallowed up by the many tensions and problems, the moments of sickness and death that are part of life, but rise above them in celebration. This is why fiesta is such a symbol of the Hispanic world. The Hispanic sees the world in movement; views the many difficulties and yet knows that he/she is on the road to the final end which has already begun. Already we are partakers of the ultimate victory. The Hispanic accepts life realistically but works toward the future and celebrates the gift of life in fiesta. The Hispanic cannot be understood without understanding fiesta. The world cannot be entered until the world of fiesta is entered. It is not an escape from the world of problems but a bringing of the whole day into the celebration of life as a gift. This fiesta is the celebration of God's unlimited and transforming love; for there can be no fiesta without bringing God into it.8 Conclusion The task of the religious education is to take the stuff of everyday life and reread it through the eyes of the gospel. In doing this we unveil the real concrete, historical and cultural roots of sin in our society and announce the alternatives of the gospel. It is not the task of religious education simply to make people comfortable, falling prey to Marx's evaluation of religion. Giving people a superficial good feeling with a few religious terms is not the way of Jesus. Religious education leads the people into a new way of seeing — with the eyes of the gospel — thus being in a new way. It creates new attitudes and releases a new spirit. It leads people to see the other, the cultural other, with the heart and thus understand with the mind. When this takes place we cease to see cultural differences as threats and begin to see them as gifts. We begin to see the threat of the other as an invitation to die to ghettoism so that we may resurrect to a greater life. This dying relativizes one's own unsuspected cultural absolutes which had functioned as idols blocking the way to a greater life.9 We do not 8 Mestizaje, chapter Nine. For a brief study of the how of the universalizing process of Christianity, consult this author's work "Culture, Church and" in the New Catholic Encyclopedia, volume 17, pp. 168-169. 9 270 A BICULTURAL APPROACH cease to be who we are, but we are who we are in a radically new way. The segregating and limiting barriers of the Human City of man are destroyed as a more universal and cosmopolitan society — the City of God — emerges wherein each person and each culture is recognized as the glory of God.10 Finally, nowhere will this awakening to the other be more richly experienced than in the festive celebrations, those key moments of each cultural group. It is there that we experience one another and otherness at its deepest level. These celebrations, in the midst of chaos, slavery, death, and division are where we celebrate and experience the presence of God, incarnate and one with us, journeying to the heavenly Jerusalem where differences will be celebrated while divisions will be annihilated for we will all truly experience the innermost unity of the one family of God. 10 Irenaeus, ADVERSUS HAERESES, III 20, 1-3. BRIEFLY NOTED THEOLOGY ENCOUNTERS REVOLUTION, by J. Andrew Kirk. Leicester, England: Inter-Varsity Press, 1980. paper. 188 pp. (no price listed) Varied forms of liberation theology are surveyed in this book which offers "a guide to the debate about theology and revolution". The author hopes to challenge evangelicals into applying biblical teachings to social justice concerns. C.C.C. WHAT DO I DO NOW? By Alan Hofmeister, Charles Atkinson and Hester Henderson. Niles, Illinois: Argus, 1978.104 pages. Paper, $1.95. Practical advice on dealing with the problems of child misbehavior (ages 3-11) through behaviour modification and reinforcement techniques. To be assumed, of course, is that children have to learn that adults have limits, too—including false guilt feelings. — J.J.D. LA COMMUNAUTE LIEU DU PARDON ET DE LA FETE. By Jean Vanier. Paris: Editions Fleurus, 1979. The author has devoted himself to ministry with the handicapped, having founded the Community of the Ark (referring to the Ark of the Covenant) in France. The community has since spread elsewhere in Europe, to North America, Asia, the Caribbean, and Africa. The book consists of reflections on his ministry and makes its purpose, method, and spirit clear. - D.C.W. DATING HABITS OF YOUNG BLACK AMERICANS: AND ALMOST EVERYBODY ELSE'S TOO. By John R. Porter. Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt Pub. Co., 1979. 253 pages, pb. The sub-title says it all. This is a useful general guide to dating in the United States today with some helpful insights into the special jargon and customs of Black youth. Helen A. Archibald. ^ s Copyright and Use: As an ATLAS user, you may print, download, or send articles for individual use according to fair use as defined by U.S. and international copyright law and as otherwise authorized under your respective ATLAS subscriber agreement. No content may be copied or emailed to multiple sites or publicly posted without the copyright holder(s)' express written permission. 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