Honoring and preserving children's access to cultural, historical, and ancestral knowledge while creating space for children to generate new wisdom.
Sor Juana drew deeply from classical knowledge while also creating entirely new insight through her work. She understood knowledge as both inherited and generative. For children's rights, intergenerational knowledge transmission means ensuring children have access to their cultural heritage, family histories, ancestral wisdom, and the accumulated insights of their communities—particularly knowledge that has been suppressed or erased. Simultaneously, children must have freedom to question inherited knowledge, to experiment with new ideas, and to create original understanding. This is especially critical for children from marginalized communities whose histories have been distorted, erased, or colonized. Children deserve education that honors their ancestry while refusing to trap them in it. They need access to counter-narratives that restore what has been hidden, alongside encouragement to imagine futures their ancestors could not envision. Sor Juana's work models this balance: she engaged deeply with inherited intellectual tradition while also breaking new ground. When children experience intergenerational knowledge transmission that includes truth-telling about injustice alongside celebration of resilience and wisdom, they develop rooted identity and imaginative capacity to create more just futures.
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