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What Parents Can Do
1) Review textbooks for any anti-Christian bias.
2) If bias is present, write to your local school
board, citing biased section or sections.
Please visit the National
Schoolboards Association Web site.
Our Christian Heritage: A
Refresher Course
Historian David Barton, founder of Wallbuilders, a
national pro-family organization which distributes
historical, legal, and statistical information, can
show you the Christian history, heritage, and traditions
that have shaped our great nation.
Visit www.wallbuilders.com
to find out more.
To learn more on the American Textbook Council's
position on Islam in textbooks please visit their
Web
site.
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POLITICAL CORRECTNESS
A Seat at the Table:
Islam Makes Inroads in Education
By David Brody
Congressional Correspondent
CBN.com
WASHINGTON -- If you look closely, what is inside your
child's textbooks may shock you. They are full of evolution theories,
and many liberal historians are rewriting American history as
well. But there is even more. How Islam is portrayed in today's
textbooks is a subject of concern also.
The familiar images of Islam include praying at Mecca, and the
prophet Muhammad, a man Muslims say is the messenger of God. But
this is not the whole story.
When all is said and done, the story of Islam is being told and
taught to our nation's school kids in their textbooks. But are they
getting the whole story, or just part of it?
Since the early 1990's, teaching Islam to kids has taken on a new
dimension. As our society moved into the era of political correctness
where it became taboo to offend any one group, many educational
analysts say that the controversial nature of Islam started to not
only be downplayed, but to be totally ignored.
One of the leading critics is the American Textbook Council, which
came out with a scathing report a year ago. It is called "Islam
in the Textbooks," and in it are numerous examples of how Muslim
scholars are simply not telling kids the full truth.
For example, take the word Jihad. It is believed to represent a
holy war, and the object is to bring the whole world under Islamic
rule and law. But in the textbooks, that is not what kids are reading.
In the World History Book, "across the centuries," Jihad
is called a struggle "to do one's best to resist temptation
and overcome evil."
The president of the American Textbook Council, Gil Sewell, recently
spoke about his concerns at a roundtable discussion on Capitol Hill.
Sewell said, "When it comes to Holy War, to Islamic law, to
slavery, to the treatment of women, the textbooks fudge, hedge -
and it's not accidental."
And the report says, when it comes to women, most textbooks do
not mention how many men in the Islamic world look at women as just
another possession. Many times, it just ignores that aspect altogether.
One textbook says, "Although men had most of the power in Arab
society, women had some freedom. For example, women could own and
inherit property. Women contributed to the group through such activities
as spinning and weaving."
When it comes to putting a positive spin on the teachings of Islam,
one of the most influential organizations out there is the Council
on Islamic Education, based in California. It is a research institute
that gives guidance to publishers when it comes to what they say
about Islam.
The founder, Shabbir Mansuri, came to the CBN News studios in Washington,
and we asked him if the textbooks today are really giving students
a complete and true picture.
Mansuri answered, "I think that is a valid point. I don't
think it's a point we shouldn't put on the table for us to discuss.
I think it's a valid point."
But, Mansuri says, with just a few pages devoted to Islam in the
textbooks, you can only include so much. And, he says, kids in grade
school may not be ready to comprehend it all, anyway.
Mansuri added, "You can make an argument that we want them
to know the good and bad of it. Valid argument. [But] are they equipped
to understand the good and bad of it?"
Which brings us to Whahabbism, an extremist fundamentalist brand
of Islam. Whahabbism is being taught to school children in Saudi
Arabia, and its most infamous follower is Osama bin Laden himself.
This is not being mentioned in American textbooks.
Mansuri remarked, "It's put in some sort of large way that,
as a Muslim, I'm scratching my head and saying what are they talking
about?
We said we surmised that it was prevalent in the Islamic world.
Mansuri replied, "It is not. That is what I am saying. It
is in the mind of those who are deniers."
Mansuri said that all his group is trying to do, is to make sure
that what is written about Islam comforms to the textbook standards
in each state. In California, the standards say, "When ethnic
or cultural groups are portrayed, portrayals must not depict differences
in customs or lifestyles as undesirable, and must not reflect adversely
on such differences."
So, Mansuri says that he strives to make that happen.
But Historian David Barton says that all the facts must be put
on the table. Barton remarked, "They [Muslims] may want to
be presented well today, but historically there are some footprints
that have to be looked at."
And he says those footprints are not always so flattering. Barton
said, "There was a Barbary Powers war that went on for 16 years
in America, where America was dealing with Muslim terrorists for
16 years back, from 1790 through 1806. That is the reason we have
the Marine Corps hymn. 'From the Halls of Montezuma to the shores
of Tripoli' was because the American Marines went inland in the
same area where they are now, to release enslaved Americans [who]
had been taken prisoner by Muslim terrorists. And for 16 years,
for four presidents, we fought a war against Muslim terrorists."
Barton says that history should not be edited to make a faith look
good. "As a Christian," Barton said, "I can't say
we're not going to teach the witch trials because that would make
me look bad as a Christian."
But in today's textbooks, Muhammad is not made to look bad at all.
He is mentioned numerous times in a positive light, but critics
are curious as to why there is no mention of the controversy in
which he supposedly had multiple wives, and one of them was a very
young girl. Instead, you find role-playing exercises for students,
like reading the Koran in class or dressing up as Muslim pilgrims
on their way to Mecca.
Jordan Rubio in Virginia Beach knows the feeling. At his public
school, one of his classmates was asked to go in front of his class
and pretend to be an Egyptian pharaoh. Then Jordan and the rest
of his classmates had to bow down to him. His mother could not believe
it.
Teresa Rubio said, "I asked him how he felt when he did that,
and to my surprise, he responded that he immediately went to praying,
and asked for forgiveness."
Jordan was not the only one in her family who had a problem. Her
daughter Emily was asked to do an English grammar assignment, and
the book used was the Koran. Theresa says, why not the Bible?
Teresa Rubio remarked, "I can understand that we need to understand
other cultures and other traditions, but when Jesus is not given
equal time in the classroom, I just feel that I have to oppose that."
All of Theresa's experiences have led her to a strong conclusion.
"We really just need to pay very close attention to where we're
sending our children, and what they are learning when they go there."
Mansuri says that the way Islam is taught is not the problem. Instead,
he says, Christians simply do not have a seat at the table when
it comes to reviewing textbooks at the state level.
He said, "Every committee that I'm invited to sit [on], if
there are religious institutions that are brought in, I never see
conservative Christians, for example."
That is a problem. And until that happens, the textbooks remain
in their current state. It can be debated whether the violent images
kids see on TV should be represented in the pages of their textbooks.
What is not up for debate is that only some of the facts are being
taught to kids in America's classrooms.
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