The Stone Tower of Silent Letters: A Parable of Broken Learning

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Selasa, 15 Juli 2025 - 19:55 WIB

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Literary Essay | Malik Lingga | doc | insetgalusnews |

Literary Essay | Malik Lingga | doc | insetgalusnews |

EDUCATION | insetgalusnews.com |

In a land called “The Realm of Letters”, there once stood a tall tower built from the stones of books-silent and cold. Inside, children lined up neatly, taught to answer, not to question. From morning to dusk, they listened, memorized, and repeated. A ritual known as “learning,” declared sacred by the Elders of Knowledge who built the tower.

They believed exam scores were symbols of success, and degrees the throne of honor. In that world, curiosity was a threat, and doubt was seen as weakness. Children were not trained to think, but to obey. Not to understand, but to recite.

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Among them rose a bright student named “Pitur”. He was quick to grasp formulas, fluent in quoting definitions, and consistently earned perfect scores. He was praised as “The Future Leader,” even though he had never once spoken from his heart.

But Pitur hid a secret: he did not truly understand the world. He knew the periodic table, but not why the sky weeps when the earth is dry. He could recite the national ideology, but didn’t grasp what fairness meant to a hungry classmate. He could list the years of the industrial revolution, but did not know how to greet a lonely soul.

One day, a storm swept across the Realm of Letters. The great tower of education crumbled. Teachers panicked. Books scattered across the mud. The Elders turned to Pitur, saying, “You are the smartest among us. Lead the rebuilding!”

Pitur stood still. His eyes blank. His hands trembled. He knew how to fill out tests, but not how to carry responsibility. He had never built anything real.

Then came a girl from afar “Lana”, who never studied in the tower. She grew up with the wind, the fields, and her mother’s stories. She held no diploma, but carried a heart filled with courage and compassion. Lana gathered broken planks, pitched makeshift tents, and comforted crying children. She led without scores, without medals.

Pitur approached her and asked, “How do you know all this?”

Lana smiled gently. “Because I learned from life. You learned for exams. We are from different worlds.”

From that moment on, Pitur fell silent. For the first time in his life, he didn’t seek answers. He began asking, “Who am I really learning for?”


Editorial Reflection

This parable is both a satire and a solemn mirror of our educational reality—particularly in developing nations like Indonesia, where the pursuit of grades and prestige often overshadows purpose. We seem to forget that education is not about producing memorizers, but about nurturing thinking, compassionate human beings.


Contextual Sources

[^1]: Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, LP3ES, 2003. Freire critiques “banking education,” where students are treated as empty vessels rather than active participants in learning.

[^2]: H.A.R. Tilaar, National Education Management, Rineka Cipta, 2002. Highlights the need for reflective and dialogic spaces within national education systems.

[^3]: UNICEF Indonesia, Education Equity Profile, 2022. This report highlights educational access inequality in rural areas and its impact on children’s character development.


Editorial Note | insetgalusnews.com |

This story is presented as a shared reflection for educators, policymakers, and the public alike-that we are not lacking intelligent children, but too often lacking those who think and feel from their conscience.


 

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