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Minnesota directs Tarik ibn Zayad Academy to `correct' two areas related to religion
StarTribune ^ | 5/19/08 | AP

Posted on 05/19/2008 11:43:15 AM PDT by ButThreeLeftsDo

The state Education Department on Monday directed a Minnesota charter school to "correct" two areas related to religion at the school.

Tarik ibn Zayad Academy, which focuses on Middle Eastern culture and shares a mosque with the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, came under fire after a teacher alleged that the school was offering religious instruction in Islam to its students.

Charter schools in Minnesota are publicly funded and must be nonsectarian.

The allegations first surfaced in an article by Star Tribune columnist Katherine Kersten. The Education Department subsequently began a review of the suburban Inver Grove Heights school and released its findings Monday.

(Excerpt) Read more at startribune.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: aclumia; dajjal; dhimmi; dhimmiwatch; doublestandard; educashun; education; iran; islam; islamicimperialism; mosqueandstate; muslimagenda; prayerinschools; publicschool; publicskrewels; publikskoolz; religion; rop; schoolprayer; taxdollarsatwork; youpayforthis
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Thank you Katherine Kersten.
1 posted on 05/19/2008 11:43:19 AM PDT by ButThreeLeftsDo
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To: ButThreeLeftsDo

Who the f is Tarik ibn Zayad?
What? Abraham Lincoln or George Washington aren’t good enough to name public schools after anymore?


2 posted on 05/19/2008 11:46:19 AM PDT by XR7
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To: XR7
Abraham Lincoln or George Washington aren’t good enough to name public schools after anymore?

The relentless creep of Turban Sprawl continues...

3 posted on 05/19/2008 11:48:22 AM PDT by ConservaTexan (February 6, 1911)
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To: ButThreeLeftsDo

And this was a surprise to the dtate’s education department? That a school called “Tarik ibn Zayad Academy” would be teaching Islam? It would have been more of a surprise if it WEREN’T teaching Islam.


4 posted on 05/19/2008 11:50:40 AM PDT by American Quilter (John McCain--today's Scoop Jackson democrat. He should change parties.)
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To: ConservaTexan
...Turban Sprawl...

LOL! Haven't seen that one before.

5 posted on 05/19/2008 11:52:18 AM PDT by American Quilter (John McCain--today's Scoop Jackson democrat. He should change parties.)
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To: XR7

Here is the WHO. The better question is WHY was he chosen for the name of a US school?

http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Tarikibn.html

Tarik ibn Ziyad , fl. 711, Berber leader of the Muslim invaders of Spain. When the heirs of the Visigothic king, Witiza, requested help from the Moors of N Africa against the usurper Roderick , Tarik, with his Moorish army, crossed (711) from Africa to Gibraltar (originally named for him, in Arabic, Jebel-al-Tarik; i.e., Tarik’s mountain). Tarik defeated Roderick in the same year in the battle of Guadalete, but he did not restore Witiza’s heirs. Instead, he sent for African reinforcements and conquered most of the Iberian Peninsula within a few years. Thus began the Moorish domination of Spain, which was not fully ended until 1492.


6 posted on 05/19/2008 11:52:46 AM PDT by weegee (We cant keep our homes on 72 at all times & just expect that other countries are going to say OK -BO)
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To: XR7

It appears he conquered Spain. (It is sometimes difficut searching for Arab names as they don’t use the Latin alphabet, but I think that’s who he is.)


7 posted on 05/19/2008 11:56:59 AM PDT by PghBaldy (Michelle O's handlers: "Get me white people...!!!")
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To: ButThreeLeftsDo
This MSM newspaper columnist is right on!
We should all mail her a nice letter and enclose a check.

And now, here is the rest of the story:

March 9: Are taxpayers footing bill for Islamic school in Minnesota?

By KATHERINE KERSTEN, Star Tribune

Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy (TIZA) -- named for the Muslim general who conquered medieval Spain -- is a K-8 charter school in Inver Grove Heights. Its approximately 300 students are mostly the children of low-income Muslim immigrant families, many of them Somalis.

The school is in huge demand, with a waiting list of 1,500. Last fall, it opened a second campus in Blaine. TIZA uses the language of culture rather than religion to describe its program in public documents. According to its mission statement, the school "recognizes and appreciates the traditions, histories, civilizations and accomplishments of the eastern world (Africa, Asia and Middle East)."

But the line between religion and culture is often blurry. There are strong indications that religion plays a central role at TIZA, which is a public school financed by Minnesota taxpayers. Under the U.S. and state constitutions, a public school can accommodate students' religious beliefs but cannot encourage or endorse religion.

TIZA raises troubling issues about taxpayer funding of schools that cross that line.

Asad Zaman, TIZA's principal, declined to allow me to visit the school or grant me an interview. He did not respond to e-mails seeking written replies.

TIZA's strong religious connections date from its founding in 2003. Its co-founders, Zaman and Hesham Hussein, were both imams, or Muslim religious leaders, as well as leaders of the Muslim American Society of Minnesota (MAS-MN).

Since then, they have played dual roles: Zaman as TIZA's principal and the current vice-president of MAS-MN, and Hussein as TIZA's school board chair and president of MAS-MN until his death in a car accident in Saudi Arabia in January.

TIZA shares MAS-MN's headquarters building, along with a mosque.

MAS-MN came to Minnesotans' attention in 2006, when it issued a "fatwa," warning Muslim taxi drivers at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport that transporting passengers with alcohol in their baggage is a violation of Islamic law.

Journalists whom Zaman has permitted to visit TIZA have described the school's Islamic atmosphere and practices. "A visitor might well mistake Tarek ibn Ziyad for an Islamic school," reported Minnesota Monthly in 2007. "Head scarves are voluntary, but virtually all the girls wear them." The school has a central carpeted prayer space, and "vaguely religious-sounding language" is used.

According to the Pioneer Press, TIZA's student body prays daily and the school's cafeteria serves halal food (permissible under Islamic law). During Ramadan, all students fast from dawn to dusk, according to a parent quoted in the article.

In fact, TIZA was originally envisioned as a private Islamic school. In 2001, MAS-MN negotiated to buy the current TIZA/MAS-MN building for Al-Amal School, a private religious institution in Fridley, according to Bruce Rimstad of the Inver Grove Heights School District. But many immigrant families can't afford Al-Amal. In 2002, Islamic Relief -- headquartered in California -- agreed to sponsor a publicly funded charter school, TIZA, at the same location.

TIZA claims to be non-sectarian, as Minnesota law requires charters to be. But "after-school Islamic learning" takes place on weekdays in the same building under MAS-MN's auspices, according to the program for MAS-MN's 2007 convention. At that convention, a TIZA representative at the school's booth told me that students go directly to "Islamic studies" classes at 3:30, when TIZA's day ends. There, they learn "Qur'anic recitation, the Sunnah of the Prophet" and other religious subjects, he said.

TIZA's 2006 Contract Performance Review Report states that students engage in unspecified "electives" after school or do homework.

Publicly, TIZA emphasizes that it uses standard curricular materials like those found in other public schools. But when addressing Muslim audiences, school officials make the link to Islam clear. At MAS-MN's 2007 convention, for example, the program featured an advertisement for the "Muslim American Society of Minnesota," superimposed on a picture of a mosque. Under the motto "Establishing Islam in Minnesota," it asked: "Did you know that MAS-MN ... houses a full-time elementary school"? On the adjacent page was an application for TIZA.

In addition to the issues raised by TIZA's religious elements, there are reasons to be concerned about the organizations with which it is connected.

Group linked to Hamas

Islamic Relief-USA, the school's sponsor, is compared to the Red Cross in several TIZA documents. In 2006, however, the Israeli government announced that Islamic Relief Worldwide, the organization's parent group, "provides support and assistance" to Hamas, designated by the U.S. government as a terrorist group.

Meanwhile, MAS-MN offers on its web site "beneficial and enlightening information" about Islam, which includes statements like "Regularly make the intention to go on jihad with the ambition to die as a martyr."

At its 2007 convention, MAS-MN featured the notorious Shayk Khalid Yasin, who is well-known in Britain and Australia for teaching that husbands can beat disobedient wives, that gays should be executed and that the United States spreads the AIDS virus in Africa through vaccines for tropical diseases.

Yasin's topic? "Building a Successful Muslim Community in Minnesota."

TIZA has improved the reading and math performance of its mostly low-income students. That's commendable, but should Minnesota taxpayers be funding an Islamic public school?

Katherine Kersten • kkersten@startribune.com Join the conversation at my blog, Think Again, which can be found at www.startribune.com/thinkagain.

MORE...
Teacher questions Muslim practices at charter school

By KATHERINE KERSTEN, Star Tribune

May 19, 2008

Recently, I wrote about Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy (TIZA), a K-8 charter school in Inver Grove Heights. Charter schools are public schools and by law must not endorse or promote religion.

Evidence suggests, however, that TIZA is an Islamic school, funded by Minnesota taxpayers.

TIZA has many characteristics that suggest a religious school. It shares the headquarters building of the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, whose mission is "establishing Islam in Minnesota." The building also houses a mosque. TIZA's executive director, Asad Zaman, is a Muslim imam, or religious leader, and its sponsor is an organization called Islamic Relief.

Students pray daily, the cafeteria serves halal food - permissible under Islamic law -- and "Islamic Studies" is offered at the end of the school day.

Zaman maintains that TIZA is not a religious school. He declined, however, to allow me to visit the school to see for myself, "due to the hectic schedule for statewide testing." But after I e-mailed him that the Minnesota Department of Education had told me that testing would not begin for several weeks, Zaman did not respond -- even to urgent calls and e-mails seeking comment before my first column on TIZA.

Now, however, an eyewitness has stepped forward. Amanda Getz of Bloomington is a substitute teacher. She worked as a substitute in two fifth-grade classrooms at TIZA on Friday, March 14. Her experience suggests that school-sponsored religious activity plays an integral role at TIZA.

Arriving on a Friday, the Muslim holy day, she says she was told that the day's schedule included a "school assembly" in the gym after lunch.

Before the assembly, she says she was told, her duties would include taking her fifth-grade students to the bathroom, four at a time, to perform "their ritual washing."

Afterward, Getz said, "teachers led the kids into the gym, where a man dressed in white with a white cap, who had been at the school all day," was preparing to lead prayer. Beside him, another man "was prostrating himself in prayer on a carpet as the students entered."

"The prayer I saw was not voluntary," Getz said. "The kids were corralled by adults and required to go to the assembly where prayer occurred."

Islamic Studies was also incorporated into the school day. "When I arrived, I was told 'after school we have Islamic Studies,' and I might have to stay for hall duty," Getz said. "The teachers had written assignments on the blackboard for classes like math and social studies. Islamic Studies was the last one -- the board said the kids were studying the Qu'ran. The students were told to copy it into their planner, along with everything else. That gave me the impression that Islamic Studies was a subject like any other."

After school, Getz's fifth-graders stayed in their classroom and the man in white who had led prayer in the gym came in to teach Islamic Studies. TIZA has in effect extended the school day -- buses leave only after Islamic Studies is over. Getz did not see evidence of other extra-curricular activity, except for a group of small children playing outside. Significantly, 77 percent of TIZA parents say that their "main reason for choosing TIZA ... was because of after-school programs conducted by various non-profit organizations at the end of the school period in the school building," according to a TIZA report. TIZA may be the only school in Minnesota with this distinction.

Why does the Minnesota Department of Education allow this sort of religious activity at a public school? According to Zaman, the department inspects TIZA regularly -- and has done so "numerous times" -- to ensure that it is not a religious school.

But the department's records document only three site visits to TIZA in five years -- two in 2003-04 and one in 2007, according to Assistant Commissioner Morgan Brown. None of the visits focused specifically on religious practices.

The department is set up to operate on a "complaint basis," and "since 2004, we haven't gotten a single complaint about TIZA," Brown said. In 2004, he sent two letters to the school inquiring about religious activity reported by visiting department staffers and in a news article. Brown was satisfied with Zaman's assurance that prayer is "voluntary" and "student-led," he said. The department did not attempt to confirm this independently, and did not ask how 5- to 11-year-olds could be initiating prayer. (At the time, TIZA was a K-5 school.)

Zaman agreed to respond by e-mail to concerns raised about the school's practices. Student "prayer is not mandated by TIZA," he wrote, and so is legal. On Friday afternoons, "students are released ... to either join a parent-led service or for study hall." Islamic Studies is provided by the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, and other "nonsectarian" after-school options are available, he added.

Yet prayer at TIZA does not appear to be spontaneously initiated by students, but rather scheduled, organized and promoted by school authorities.

Request for volunteers

Until recently, TIZA's website included a request for volunteers to help with "Friday prayers." In an e-mail, Zaman explained this as an attempt to ensure that "no TIZA staff members were involved in organizing the Friday prayers."

But an end run of this kind cannot remove the fact of school sponsorship of prayer services, which take place in the school building during school hours. Zaman does not deny that "some" Muslim teachers "probably" attend. According to federal guidelines on prayer in schools, teachers at a public school cannot participate in prayer with students.

In addition, schools cannot favor one religion by offering services for only its adherents, or promote after-school religious instruction for only one group. The ACLU of Minnesota has launched an investigation of TIZA, and the Minnesota Department of Education has also begun a review.

TIZA's operation as a public, taxpayer-funded school is troubling on several fronts. TIZA is skirting the law by operating what is essentially an Islamic school at taxpayer expense. The Department of Education has failed to provide the oversight necessary to catch these illegalities, and appears to lack the tools to do so. In addition, there's a double standard at work here -- if TIZA were a Christian school, it would likely be gone in a heartbeat.

TIZA is now being held up as a national model for a new kind of charter school. If it passes legal muster, Minnesota taxpayers may soon find themselves footing the bill for a separate system of education for Muslims.

Katherine Kersten • kkersten@startribune.com

Katherine Kersten deserves the highest praise and respect for "sticking her neck out" and serving as a watchdog of the public trust. Thank God there are still some newspaper columnists like her out there with the guts to "speak truth to power." http://www.startribune.com/local/18846129.html
8 posted on 05/19/2008 12:20:00 PM PDT by XR7
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To: ButThreeLeftsDo
From Wikipedia:

Students

As of the 2006-2007 school year, 302 students attended TIZA. The majority were Black, at 83%, with Asian, 41% and White, 2% being the other major ethnic groups. 77% of students qualify for Free and Reduced Price Lunch, a measure of poverty and the majority 81% have limited English proficiency. 4% of students qualify for special education. The school's math proficiency was 23% points higher than the state average and the school's reading proficiency was 3% points higher than the state average at 67%. However the school's participation in the tests was lower than Adequate Yearly Progress requires.[6]

9 posted on 05/19/2008 12:27:22 PM PDT by Zuben Elgenubi (In Memorium: Old Atlanta, 1945 - 2000, RIP)
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To: American Quilter

I’m sure the state knew something was up, but, in order to be all PC and all, they looked the other way, hoping that nobody would find out.

Thank goodness for Katherine, the only writer for the Strib with a genuine pair.


10 posted on 05/19/2008 12:34:29 PM PDT by ButThreeLeftsDo (Please pray for Jim Robinson. You know that he'd do it for you....)
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To: ConservaTexan

Got to agree with the Quilter. “Turban Sprawl” is excellent!


11 posted on 05/19/2008 12:36:08 PM PDT by agere_contra
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To: ButThreeLeftsDo

So our money is being used to teach little savages to become big headchoppers.


12 posted on 05/19/2008 12:58:28 PM PDT by Leftism is Mentally Deranged
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To: XR7

Check this out, but first take a blood pressure pill:

http://www.debbieschlussel.com/archives/003761print.html


13 posted on 05/19/2008 1:54:35 PM PDT by ExTexasRedhead
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To: ExTexasRedhead

I wish I had not read your link.
I am sikened.
How is it this stuff is happening?


14 posted on 05/19/2008 3:28:52 PM PDT by XR7
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To: XR7

Liberals are destroying our country and the Hussein Obama wants to turn America into a third-world toilet. Anyone that loves their freedom and cares about their children and grandchildren’s futures better wake up and take notice before we’re all in the toilet bowl together being flushed.


15 posted on 05/19/2008 3:59:56 PM PDT by ExTexasRedhead
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To: Leftism is Mentally Deranged

In case you missed this and please share with others:

http://www.debbieschlussel.com/archives/003761print.html


16 posted on 05/19/2008 4:02:45 PM PDT by ExTexasRedhead
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To: Zuben Elgenubi
The majority were Black, at 83%, with Asian, 41% and White, 2% being the other major ethnic groups.

Must be that new math I've heard about.

17 posted on 05/19/2008 4:14:21 PM PDT by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: XR7; Leftism is Mentally Deranged; American Quilter; Zuben Elgenubi; ConservaTexan; weegee; ...

Update on this story. The local ABC affiliate TV station, KSTP 5, sent a news crew to the school.....and got attacked....

“..........In an attempt to report about the new findings from the Department of Education, 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS went to TiZA. While on school grounds, our crew was attacked by school officials. The two men were able to grab our camera and kept it until police arrived.

Our photographer was treated by paramedics after suffering minor injuries.”

http://kstp.com/article/stories/S449649.shtml?cat=1

Video at link.


18 posted on 05/19/2008 4:53:22 PM PDT by ButThreeLeftsDo (Please pray for Jim Robinson. You know that he'd do it for you....)
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To: ButThreeLeftsDo

Typical reaction from the ROP. At least no one had their head lopped off.


19 posted on 05/19/2008 5:23:21 PM PDT by ConservaTexan (February 6, 1911)
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To: ConservaTexan; Admin Moderator
Typical reaction from the ROP.

BREAKING NEWS BUMP
The TOPIC should be reclassified as BREAKING.

20 posted on 05/19/2008 8:12:13 PM PDT by XR7
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