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Classroom Jihad: What our children's textbooks say about Islam
NRO ^ | 2/7/2003 | John J Miller

Posted on 02/07/2003 1:53:54 PM PST by Utah Girl

We're losing the war on terrorism in America's classrooms. That's the sobering conclusion of the American Textbook Council, which Friday releases a report on how our schools' most popular world-history books fail to grapple honestly with the problem of militant Islamism.

"History textbooks accommodate Islam on terms that Islamists demand," writes Gilbert T. Sewell in his 35-page analysis. "On controversial subjects, world history textbooks make an effort to circumvent unsavory facts that might cast Islam past or present in anything but a positive light. Islamic achievements are reported with robust enthusiasm. When any dark side surfaces, textbooks run and hide."

Textbook content is especially important because the Muslim world is so alien to many Americans. "Few teachers have at their disposal anything more than a faint knowledge of Islam," writes Sewell. "But state mandates expect or require them to teach something about Islam." Teachers need books they can trust; unfortunately, many of their textbooks are not trustworthy on the subject of Islam.

Take the concept of jihad, which Bernard Lewis, our most gifted interpreter of Arab culture, defines this way: "The object of jihad is to bring the whole world under Islamic law." Throughout history, of course, many Muslims have sought to achieve this goal with swords, guns, and bombs. Students reading Across the Centuries, a seventh-grade textbook published by Houghton Mifflin, however, receive a sanitized version of this reality. Jihad, according to this book, is merely a struggle "to do one's best to resist temptation and overcome evil." There's an element of truth in this definition, insofar as militant Islamists think anybody or anything not subscribing to their strict theology is "evil." But the book gives students no way of appreciating this larger context. To them, jihad must seem like a useful tool to suppress their urges to pass notes in class, run in the hallways, and stick chewing gum under their desks.

One popular textbook, Prentice Hall's Connections to Today, also whitewashes jihad: "Some Muslims took on jihad, or effort in God's service, as another duty. Jihad has often been mistakenly translated simply as 'holy war.' In fact, it may include acts of charity or an inner struggle to achieve spiritual peace, as well as any battle in defense of Islam." This is basically a dodge, and lays the onus for mistaken translations upon the presumed cultural insensitivities of Westerners — without acknowledging that the West, for perfectly understandable reasons, sometimes has difficulty understanding how the religion of peace distinguishes between "holy wars" and "any battle in defense of Islam." Another favored textbook, Houghton Mifflin's Patterns of Interaction, sidesteps this uncomfortable subject altogether; it doesn't even mention the word jihad. Like Connections to Today, it was recently approved for use in Texas, whose statewide textbook-adoption policies influence the textbook market all over the country and drive much of its content.

The ATC's report discusses similar problems with other concepts. The slave trade is an especially touchy subject for the modern multiculturalist, because it requires taking one of the great sins of the West and minimizing its role elsewhere. Patterns of Interaction, for instance, claims that the Muslim world exported fewer than 5 million slaves from Africa between 650 and 1600. This is much smaller than historian Raymond Mauvy's estimate that 14 million blacks slaves have been sold to Muslims since the 7th century. (For comparison's sake, 10 to 11 million Africans were shipped in chains to the New World between 1650 and 1900; the vast majority traveled to Latin America and the Caribbean, and only about half a million went to British North America and the United States.)

The status of women is also a tricky topic for multiculturalists, because nowhere are women more oppressed than in the societies they want to celebrate. Connections to Today engages is what can only be called a lie: "Conditions for women vary greatly from country to country in the modern Middle East. Since the 1950s, women in most countries have won voting rights." That's right: the freedom to vote for Saddam Hussein as president. Textbooks are dotted with references to obscure proto-feminists, who are held up as the fruits of Islamic culture. "Textbook editors' relentless search to find such historical figures deforms and cheapens world history," writes Sewell.

A chief culprit in all this is the Council on Islamic Education, a group that consults with publishing companies on how textbooks portray Islam. Anything that strays from the Islamist line is denounced as xenophobic, ethnocentric, and racist — labels which, if broadcast widely, are sure to depress book sales.

The ATC study concludes with positive suggestions on how to teach about Islam in ways that "take Muslims' justified sensitivities into account, without capitulating to them and rewriting the historical record in a misguided attempt to compensate for past inaccuracies."

It's a dose of commonsense that won't be found in many of the books our children are reading.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
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1 posted on 02/07/2003 1:53:55 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Heuristic Hiker
Ping
2 posted on 02/07/2003 1:54:21 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
America's Epitaph: "They Were A TOLERANT People"
3 posted on 02/07/2003 2:06:21 PM PST by Captainpaintball (Drop Oprah over Iraq--fat ass first!)
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To: Utah Girl
Can you imagine the howling by the publishers if Christians put as much pressure on them as have the Muslims?
4 posted on 02/07/2003 2:12:16 PM PST by Paul Atreides
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To: Utah Girl
Did they have any kind words to say about the misunderstood Austrian painter who was a survivor of a poison gas attack and worked on improving German national self-esteem?
5 posted on 02/07/2003 2:12:28 PM PST by KarlInOhio (Tagline.txt not found. Abort, Retry, Fail?)
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To: Paul Atreides
I know a friend's kid (a 10-year-old) who was assigned an extra credit project to build a miniature mosque. We're all waiting for the follow-up assignment to build a miniature cathedral....NOT.

The school is in the Bay Area, of course.

6 posted on 02/07/2003 2:18:54 PM PST by vikingchick
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To: Utah Girl
Another reason to homeschool. A year and a half before 9/11, my homeschooled son and I studied Islam. We read the Koran, Hadiths and looked at Islamic history from many sources. What we learned scared us somewhat, but never did we believe that Muslims were a real danger to the West or to anyone who refused to believe that Islam is "a religion of peace," and "abhors" violence. 9/11, with it's ghoulish pictures of Muslims gleefully celebrating and dancing in the streets over the event changed my way of thinking forever. Islam spawned the terrorists and their millions of groupie admirers.

The concept of Islamic jihad and world-wide subjugation of citizens via barbaric, 7th Century sharia law is the ultimate goal of every "devout" Muslim. This baloney about jihad being a "personal struggle" is a damn LIE. Islamic rhetoric and LIES no longer fool me. I find it difficult to trust any practitioner of Islam. Not when their Koran exhorts the believers to DECEIVE, cheat, loot from, extort, rape, enslave and/or murder anyone who refuses to kow tow or convert to Islam...

7 posted on 02/07/2003 2:20:34 PM PST by demnomo
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To: vikingchick
For the NEA, Islam has the ABC appeal: Anything But Christianity. They love to go back centuries into the past and squawk about The Crusades, yet cannot criticize what Muslims do in the present.
8 posted on 02/07/2003 2:23:23 PM PST by Paul Atreides
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To: vikingchick
Make sure that little boy does his project with the utmost detail and includes a room for making explosives and miniature chemical suits.
9 posted on 02/07/2003 2:24:44 PM PST by KC_Conspirator
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To: KC_Conspirator
LOL! So true.
10 posted on 02/07/2003 2:31:56 PM PST by demnomo
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To: Utah Girl
Fox News is about to show a segment on this subject.
11 posted on 02/07/2003 2:32:58 PM PST by Paul Atreides
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To: Utah Girl
Homeschool.
12 posted on 02/07/2003 2:37:03 PM PST by savedbygrace
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To: Utah Girl
Liberals will put a stop to the "Classroom Jihad" if kids should start uttering anti-gay verses from the Quran.
13 posted on 02/07/2003 4:07:11 PM PST by Kuksool (Fight The Axis of Evil: ACLU, NEA, & NOW)
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To: Utah Girl
This isn't just a public school phenomenon. Calvert, a home school program based in Baltimore, MD, that's widely regarded among homeschoolers, uses Across the Centuries as its seventh grade history textbook. (click on "curriculum by grade," go to seventh grade, scroll down & look on the sidebar.)
14 posted on 02/07/2003 5:01:32 PM PST by valkyrieanne
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To: savedbygrace
See reply #14. Calvert Home Study program also uses this textbook (I think they use it in their day school as well.) Of course homeschoolers don't have to use Calvert, but caveat emptor.
15 posted on 02/07/2003 5:02:31 PM PST by valkyrieanne
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To: valkyrieanne
It boggles my mind that any homeschooler would choose to use the same distorted curriculum as the public schools they are purportedly trying to avoid.
16 posted on 02/07/2003 5:06:58 PM PST by B Knotts
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To: Utah Girl
Oh, don't panic, the US will soon learn what it's like to have their own Chechnya or Intafada....since they like so much to criticize other nations' responses to Islam....will be fun to watch the PC US reactions.
17 posted on 02/07/2003 5:07:34 PM PST by Stavka2 (Setting the record.)
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To: demnomo
the West or to anyone who refused to believe that Islam is "a religion of peace," and "abhors" violence. 9/11, with it's ghoulish pictures of Muslims gleefully celebrating and dancing in the streets over the event changed my way of thinking forever. Islam spawned the terrorists and their millions of groupie admirers

Only underscores what I said earlier. When the Chechins and Al Quids bombed 3 Russian apartment buildings and a parade, the US self righteously stepped forward and condemned the barbarians in Moscow for daring to make noises of bombing the loveable Tailban. I feel great pain for the people that died during 911 but no sympathy for the US government which was stupid and near sighted enough to ignore everythiing in it's self righteousness while killing Orthodox Christians and arming and training Islamocists the world over.

18 posted on 02/07/2003 5:11:27 PM PST by Stavka2 (Setting the record.)
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To: Utah Girl
These schools are teaching religion.....isn't that against the law?
19 posted on 02/07/2003 7:19:08 PM PST by Arpege92
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To: Arpege92
Only if its Christian religion.
20 posted on 02/07/2003 7:22:06 PM PST by Utah Girl
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