Students forced to recite 'Allah is the only god'
'Imagine the outcry if a study guide states Jesus is the Son of God'
Bob Unruh joined WND in 2006 after nearly three decades with the
Associated Press, as well as several Upper Midwest newspapers, where he
covered everything from legislative battles and sports to tornadoes and
homicidal survivalists. He is also a photographer whose scenic work has
been used commercially.
Amid a new report of Islamic
indoctrination in public schools, the American Center for Law and
Justice is fighting back with a petition drive that already has garnered
120,000 signatures.
Earlier this year, public-school students in
Madison, Wisconsin, were given an assignment to “pretend you are
Muslim,” while students in Florida were instructed to “recite the Five
Pillars of Islam as a prayer, make Islamic prayer rugs and perform other
Muslim rituals,” ACLJ said Monday.
Now, parents of public-school
students in Tennessee are protesting assignments that include writing a
declaration that Allah is supreme and textbooks that recount Islamic
doctrines as facts instead of beliefs.
Nearly 120,000 people have signed ACLJ’s petition demanding a halt to such teaching.
“What if your child or grandchild’s public school forced them to write
out the Shahada – the Islamic conversion creed – while having skipped
Christianity?” the organization asked.
In “Stop the Islamization
of America: A Practical Guide to the Resistance,” renowned activist
Pamela Geller provides the answer, offering proven, practical guidance
on how freedom lovers can stop jihadist initiatives in local
communities.
“What if your child’s study guide had a section
called ‘Origins of Islam’ that included statements such as, ‘Around the
age of 40, the angel Gabriel told Muhammad that he was to be a prophet
of Allah.’
“Stated as fact, not belief,” the ACLJ said.
The Columbia Daily Herald in Middle Tennessee reported details of the allegations.
In the Maury County school district, the paper reported parent Brandee
Porterfield said her daughter “brought home school materials containing
the Five Pillars of Islam.”
But the school skipped the textbook’s section on Christianity.
School officials explained, she told the Herald, that Christianity was not part of the state’s standards, so it wasn’t covered.
“I have a big problem with that. From a historical point of view,
that’s a lot of history these kids are missing,” Porterfield told the
newspaper. “Also, for them to spend three weeks on Islam after having
skipped Christianity, it seems to be that they are making a choice about
which religion to discuss.”
She said her concerns were about her seventh-grade daughter being taught the “Shahada,” the profession of Islamic faith.
“From a religion point of view, if the schools are going to be teaching
religion in history, they need to teach them all equally,” she said.
The ACLJ reported called it “Islamic indoctrination right here in our schools.”
The organization said Maury County school officials admitted they were
addressing “some sensitive topics” in class and there appeared to be
some “confusion.”
“That’s outrageous,” ACLJ said. “The
indoctrination of students with the precepts of converting to Islam and
forcing them to recite ‘Allah is the only god’ aren’t ‘sensitive
topics’; it’s unconstitutional.
“Imagine the outcry from the
ACLU, Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF), and other leftist and
angry atheist organizations if a study guide states, ‘Jesus is the Son
of God,’ and forced children to recite the Lord’s Prayer.”
Now, Sekulow’s organization said it is taking action.
“We’re in direct contact with a number of parents and concerned
citizens, we’re taking on new clients, and preparing critical demand
letters and open records requests to these schools and school
districts,” the group said.
“It is a clear constitutional
principle that public education may not indoctrinate young minds into a
religion. Teachers and schools may teach what different faith traditions
believe and how that has affected world history and geography. But a
school cannot censor Christianity and promote Islam.”
The Daily
Herald reported Jan Hanvey, a middle school supervisor for Maury County
Public Schools, said the curriculum has covered the subject for decades,
and Buddhism and Hinuism also are covered.
She told the newspaper the chapter on Christianity was not skipped but was being delayed.
The newspaper cited state advisories that called for seventh-grade
social studies to begin with the Islamic world and then move to Africa.
The “Age of Exploration” follows, which continues into eighth grade.
Hanvey told the newspaper Christianity is discussed in the “Age of
Exploration,” partly because religious persecution is one of the reasons
for a search for a new world.
Fox News reported Maury County
Director of Schools Chris Marczak said his teachers “work together to
make sure that our students are learning what is expected through the
Tennessee academic standards.”
“For this last section on the
Islamic World this past week, our educators had students complete an
assignment that had an emphasis on Islamic faith,” he said. “The
assignment covered some sensitive topics that are of importance to
Islamic religion and caused some confusion around whether we are asking
students to believe in or simply understand the religion.”
Earlier this year, teachers and administrators at a Pennsylvania school
district attended a training session on Islam and Arabic culture at
taxpayer expense.
The workshop in the town of Lebanon was led by a
former district Arabic translator, Mohamed Omar, who took time off from
his Department of Human Services job in Philadelphia “to share his
knowledge of Islam with the staff,” the Lebanon Daily News reported.
“I think this is the first time ever in the United States that a school
district goes to a mosque,” mosque founder Hamid Housni told the Daily
News. “Usually a representative of a mosque goes somewhere. We don’t
have words to explain to you how we appreciate that. This is very, very
special.”
In “Stop the Islamization of America: A Practical Guide
to the Resistance,” renowned activist Pamela Geller provides the
answer, offering proven, practical guidance on how freedom lovers can
stop jihadist initiatives in local communities.
In 2006, WND reported students in Nyssa, Oregon, were learning Muslim prayers and dressing as Muslims.
Another assignment was to learn the “Five Pillars” of Islam, study the
Muslim holiday of Ramadan and listen to guest speakers, including an
American Muslim who came dressed in her religious costume to talk about
her Quran.
A resulting lawsuit regarding the curriculum was
similar to a previous case in which the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals eventually ruled such indoctrination was permissible as
“cultural education.”
No comments:
Post a Comment