SOCIETY: HOW BAD ARE TOY GUNS FOR KIDS?
Three years ago, on Susan Road in Faisalabad, two teenage boys were taking pictures with a toy pistol to post them on Facebook when Faryad Husain, the station house officer of Peoples Colony, opened fire on them without any warning.
Both the boys were injured (one critically who died later) and they were taken to the district headquarters (DHQ) hospital by police who reportedly escaped after realising that they had made a mistake and that the boys were not armed robbers. (As reported in Dawn, June 23, 2015)
In February this year, Sindh banned the manufacture, sale, purchase, use and display of toy guns to protect children from becoming familiar with weapons that often leads to irresponsible behaviour with weapons and guns. (Express Tribune, February, 24, 2018)
The initiative by the Sindh government led to a series of debates and discussions on banning toy guns — whether it would be beneficial for children or would it hamper their learning? Studies conducted in the West, however, showed no link between playing with toy weapons in childhood and aggression in adulthood. Child psychologist Michael Thompson, author of It’s a Boy! Your Son’s Development From Birth To Age 18, says, “Everyone has an informal causation theory that playing with guns leads to the use of guns in adulthood. There’s no scientific evidence suggesting that playing war games in childhood leads to real-life aggression.”
It’s usually seen that by the age of two or three, clear gender preferences emerge when it comes to playtime — boys usually lean toward aggressive play, such as fighting monsters, while girls are more inclined to engage with dolls or games that involve family. Michael Thompson says, “We can’t tell if it’s wired in or social learning. As a little boy, you’re not very powerful; however, with a gun you feel powerful and heroic.”
Another study carried out by the London Metropolitan University in 2003, found that children who were reprimanded for playing with guns started believing they were doing something wrong. “They’ll still play, but this time secretly.” Researcher Penny Holland, author of We Don’t Play With Guns Here, found “the more children are allowed to play freely the more engaged they become and imagination thrives.”
To analyse the usefulness of the ban in keeping the children least affected in the local settings, where private security guards are hired to protect streets, intersections are decorated with fighter-jet and cannon models, and traffic constables wear bullet-proof vests, Eos spoke with people from different walks of life to gather their opinion on the issue.
Toy guns may not be physically harmful but they may cause immense psychological damage to children
“A little boy does not know what is negative or positive. For him, use of a gun is heroic,” says Shamim Mumtaz, Adviser to Sindh Chief Minister for Social Welfare. “It is necessary to stop him from playing with toy guns. Parents and teachers can play a more important role than the government. The media should also play its part in educating the masses.”
Prof Dr Anila Amber Malik, former chairperson, Department of Psychology, University of Karachi, disagrees with the blanket ban. “The more you suppress something, the more it will flourish,” she says. “The best solution is to give them guns that do not resemble real ones. A toy gun should look like a toy. Playing with toy guns as a child may not be harmful. It is actually teenage violence that is dangerous.”
Balancing the effects
“Water gun is the best solution,” says Prof Malik. “It not only suppresses the desire for a real gun in the child but also provides him with a toy which neither alters his psyche nor harms anybody.
“Parents should also give other toys to the child along with a toy gun to neutralise the influence of the latter,” she adds. “For instance, a football or a building toy would involve physical activity, express the child’s creativity and release energy and aggression. We call it sublimation in psychology. Parents have no control over what is happening outside their homes, but they can improve the inside environment that shapes the child’s personality. It is always sensible that parents give their children toys that help in their physical and mental growth.”
Little boys look up to fathers and subconsciously imitate them. “Fathers help children socialise, take them out and play with them. Similarly, girls follow their mothers,” Dr Malik says.