The shots of schools continue to make people talk. In the program “And now who can help us?” (Radio Con Vos) Ernesto Tenembaun contrasted the testimony of two mothers of students: one of them in favor and the other against. Maria Pereza mother who supports the measures carried out in Lengüitas, charged against the internships that the City government made mandatory for students, the “Activities of Approximation to the world of work” (ACAP).
“My daughter gets her nails sculpted, you know why? Because at home there are no needs for my daughter to have to wash the dishes, then you are not going to wash them at the Marriot (Hotel). (…) My daughter doesn’t make the beds at home, she’s not going to be a maid at the Marriot. What teaching is that? The first thing you have to teach a boy is that he has rights, to charge, to protest, what are they teaching, to be a maid? if not in the situation of his daughter and the students. In addition, he said that the students “are abused by clients” in the hotel during their internships.
Likewise, Pérez defended the measures alleging that the takings “are not a crime”, since there is a formal protocol for them, and reported that the boys are cold at school because “the boiler does not work”. He also supported the main claims of the intakes: in addition to questioning the internships, the students complain about the quality of the school meals and the poor maintenance of the establishments.
Against the shots was Paola Galganimother of Constance (16), a student at Lengüitas, who stated that her daughter opposed the shots and that she even appeared in an article in Clarín, stating that he does not see the problems that the rest of his classmates say they suffer fromsince at school his classmates “do not go hungry”.
The mother stated that her daughter received harassment for expressing a position contrary to the occupations. “My daughter is an extremely supportive person, committed to a lot of things. They told her that she ‘doesn’t care about anything,’” Galgani explained.
Pérez replied that “he does not believe that there is such harassment” of those who speak out against the occupations. And when Tenembaum questioned him that it is “difficult to imagine a student from Lengüitas with malnutrition”, Pérez got angry: “I am not going to defend that the boys have to be poor to claim. As I told you before, at the Mariano Acosta the boiler doesn’t work and the kids are cold, Do you like to talk cold? They don’t like to study in the cold”, he sentenced.
by RN