Teaching Johnny about Islam
(from Camera Lucida as quoted by Father Raymond De Souza in his National Post editorial)
Faith does not require great intelligence, let alone academic credentials. It does require common sense, or better, a common wisdom. Indeed, the great liberating power of Judeo-Christian revelation was that it freed man’s transcendent character from the oppressive world of pagan religion, with its secret knowledge, godlike natural forces, arbitrary powers and fanciful myths and legends. The great innovation of biblical religion is that it is accessible to the common people
h/t Beamish They should be teaching this in a Political Science course in college, under the colonialism heading.
Education: In our brave new schools, Johnny can't say the pledge, but he can recite the Quran. Yup, the same court that found the phrase "under God" unconstitutional now endorses Islamic catechism in public school.
In a recent federal decision that got surprisingly little press, even from conservative talk radio, California's 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled it's OK to put public-school kids through Muslim role-playing exercises, including:
Parents of seventh-graders, who after 9-11 were taught the pro-Islamic lessons as part of California's world history curriculum, sued under the First Amendment ban on religious establishment. They argued, reasonably, that the government was promoting Islam.
But a federal judge appointed by President Clinton told them in so many words to get over it, that the state was merely teaching kids about another "culture."
So the parents appealed. Unfortunately, the most left-wing court in the land got their case. The 9th Circuit, which previously ruled in favor of an atheist who filed suit against the words "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance, upheld the lower court ruling.
The decision is a major victory for the multiculturalists and Islamic apologists in California and across the country who've never met a culture or religion they didn't like — with the exception of Western civilization and Christianity. They are legally in the clear to indoctrinate kids into the "peaceful" and "tolerant" religion of Islam, while continuing to denigrate Judeo-Christian values.
In the California course on world religions, Christianity is not presented equally. It's covered in just two days and doesn't involve kids in any role-playing activities. But kids do get a good dose of skepticism about the Christian faith, including a biting history of its persecution of other peoples. In contrast, Islam gets a pass from critical review. Even jihad is presented as an "internal personal struggle to do one's best to resist temptation," and not holy war.
The ed consultant's name is Susan L. Douglass. No, she's not a Christian scholar. She's a devout Muslim activist on the Saudi government payroll, according to an investigation by Paul Sperry, author of "Infiltration: How Muslim Spies and Subversives Have Penetrated Washington." He found that for years Douglass taught social studies at the Islamic Saudi Academy just outside Washington, D.C. Her husband still teaches there.
So what? By infiltrating our public school system, the Saudis hope to make Islam more widely accepted while converting impressionable American youth to their radical cause. Recall that John Walker Lindh, the "American Taliban," was a product of the California school system. What's next, field trips to Mecca?
This case is critical not just to our culture but our national security. It should be brought before the Supreme Court, which has outlawed prayer in school. Let's see what it says about practicing Islam in class. It will be a good test for the bench's two new conservative justices.
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Those converts are so spiritual aren't they?
Comment by MissingLink— 2006/05/29 @ 02:10 PM — (Reply)
Comment by Elmers Brother— 2006/05/29 @ 02:13 PM — (Reply)
This should definately go before the Supreme Court. Can you imagine if the students "became Christians" for two weeks?
Comment by Brooke— 2006/05/30 @ 01:15 PM — (Reply)
oh, i teach mine about islam and it ain't purty!
Comment by nanc— 2006/05/30 @ 02:24 PM — (Reply)
The South in the Seventies - it was a different world back then.
Comment by Cate— 2006/05/30 @ 04:41 PM — (Reply)
cate - living in the south has given our children a much better outlook on life. it appears most of their teachers are people of faith. they may even read and take tests on a couple of books of the bible. how much longer, i do not know.
Comment by nanc— 2006/05/30 @ 05:18 PM — (Reply)
Bye Bye Blue State - Hello Normal!
Comment by Cate— 2006/05/31 @ 03:37 AM — (Reply)
:\
Comment by Dayna— 2006/05/30 @ 05:56 PM — (Reply)
Comment by Brooke— 2006/05/31 @ 02:13 AM — (Reply)
i'm sorry, brooke. honestly, all you can do is give your child the very best information you can and never hope for the best in public education, 'cause it s'aint happening! that's why learning should begin at home.
Comment by nanc— 2006/05/31 @ 08:19 AM — (Reply)
Thanks Nanc. I hope that my values will rub off on her despite whatever garbage they push at her.
As my father used to say to me: Memorize whatever they want you to know to pass the test, but learn the truth!
Comment by Brooke— 2006/05/31 @ 08:25 AM — (Reply)
Comment by Elmers Brother— 2006/05/31 @ 08:34 AM — (Reply)
.
."the Saudis hope to make Isssssslam more widely accepted while converting impressionable American youth to their radical cause.."..all they hafta do is look no further than Angelina Jolie the Arab lover and all the toxic influence of Hollyweird...Public skools have become indocrination halls...what a joke..Praise be Alllllllllla..I dont think so hun.
Comment by Angel— 2006/05/31 @ 12:08 PM — (Reply)
Comment by Elmers Brother— 2006/05/31 @ 12:20 PM — (Reply)
Those who are using the PC environment to erase all moral judgements about faith, culture, and government, etc., are sadly naive. And dangerous to our democratic way of life.
Comment by Cate— 2006/05/31 @ 12:51 PM — (Reply)
Comment by aza spade— 2007/01/25 @ 04:49 PM — (Reply)