Prologue
About 2 millennia ago a woman named Lynnia Ingle got tired of seeing and hearing religions being bashed. She wrote letters to world leaders and trustworthy news sources. Eventually many were published. People who read the letters eventually started sending their own. These letters called for a reform in how their religions were viewed.
The world leaders saw that this wouldn't die down and started to exchange letters with Miss Ingle. The more letters that were exchanged, the more of how much she had thought of this was revealed. The newest letters called for a large, really enormous, reformation of the education systems of the world.
Miss Ingle wrote that students between the ages 4 and 15 should attend a nonreligious public school, where they would be taught the history and differences of religions in a nonbiased form. She also wrote that once a year, the students who had turned 16 should take a test that would show which religion, if any, they connected to the best. It would still be their choice in the long run, but the test would be to help those who were not sure.
After choosing their religion, they would attend a private finishing school in their chosen religion that would last five to six years. During their last two years, they would start deciding upon what they would like their profession to be. For those aspiring to be doctors, scientist or the like, they would go through further schooling. Those who wished to go into journalism, teaching or writing would go through a training program instead.
Miss Ingle had not only gave the world a way to fight against the religious ignorance but also gave them a way to stop the educational malpractice. Every country around the world was striving to achieve the educational standard that she had outlined. There were a few who had to finish their education in the old style but the were glad that they would be the last of them.
This is what we are told at the beginning of each school year, how the school system was reformed. How the world was changed by a woman who had a great idea. We honor Lynnia Inge's work at at the beginning of each school year with an opening fair. The fair show what jobs there are in certain religions. They even gave us basic outlines of training for different jobs.
This was just the beginning of the new world.