Academy's goal to 'appreciate traditions, histories of Asia, Middle
East'
A charter school for kindergarten through eighth-grade students in
Inver Grove Heights, Minn., is named after a Muslim warlord, shares the
address of the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, is led by two
imams, is composed almost exclusively (99 percent) of blacks, many
Somalis, and has as its top goal to preserve "our values."
And it uses funds from taxpayers of Minnesota.
The school's agenda was revealed by Minneapolis Star-Tribune columnist
Katherine Kersten, who noted that she asked for permission to visit the
school and interview officials for her report, but was denied. The
school also declined to return a WND telephone request for an interview.
But it has been drawing objections from a number of people, including
Robert Spencer, the expert who monitors such developments at Jihad
Watch.
"Can you imagine a public school founded by two Christian ministers,
and housed in the same building as a church? Add to that – in the same
building – a prominent chapel. And let's say the students are required
to fast during Lent, and attend Bible studies right after school. All
with your tax dollars," he wrote. "Inconceivable? Sure. If such a place
existed, the ACLU lawyers would descend on it like locusts. It would be
shut down before you could say 'separation of church and state,' to the
accompaniment of New York Times and Washington Post editorials full of
indignant foreboding, warning darkly about the growing influence of the
Religious Right in America."
But the Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy, which was named after the Muslim
warlord who invaded and conquered Spain a millennium ago, has drawn no
such protests, Spencer wrote.
He called the academy "yet another manifestation of the witless
multiculturalism that grants protected victim status to Muslim groups
in view of the 'racism' and 'Islamophobia' from which they supposedly
suffer. Latitude that would never be granted to other faith groups,
particularly Christians, is readily given here."
Kersten revealed there actually were many more links between the
tax-supported school and Islam. The academy features a carpeted space
for prayer, serves halal food in the cafeteria, has all students fast
during Ramadan, features after-school classes for students on the Quran
and Sunnah, and the program for the 2007 MAS-Minnesota convention,
under the motto "Establishing Islam in Minnesota" asked the question,
"Did you know that MAS-MN … houses a full-time elementary school?"
On the adjacent page was an ad for Tarek ibn Ziyad.
The Minnesota Department of Education confirmed the academy pocketed
more than $65,000 in state money for the 2006-2007 year under one
program alone.
WND has reported earlier when in Idaho, the Five Pillars of Islam were
taught under the guise of history, after the "religion guidelines' used
in public schools were assembled with help from a terror suspect, and
when U.S. courts upheld mandatory Islamic training in schools.
Kersten said the school's principal is Asad Zaman, and the school's
co-founder is Hesham Hussein, both imams and leaders of the
MAS-Minnesota.
After the academy was launched in 2003, they "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," she reported.
Reporters who earlier visited the school had a number of reports:
"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 report also included school
officials' denials that there were any inappropriate religious
activities at the school.
Kersten reported the academy was, in fact, originally proposed as a
private Islamic school. It was converted when Islamic Relief, a
California organization, agreed to sponsor a publicly funded charter
school.
She wrote she visited a booth for the academy at the MAS-Minnesota 2007
convention, and was told students go directly from class to "Islamic
studies" at 3:30 p.m.
"There, they learn 'Quranic recitation, the Sunnah of the Prophet' and
other religious subjects, he said," according to Kersten.
She noted that beyond the issue of religious influences in a publicly
funded school, Islamic Relief Worldwide, the parent of Islamic
Relief-USA, has been accused by Israel of supporting Hamas, which is
designated by the U.S. as a terrorist group.
"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," Kersten wrote.
"Am I the only one that read this article and found it appalling that
my tax dollars are being used by a school that is thinly veiling its
attempt to be a public institution?" asked "ali0056" on the newspaper's
forum. "I find it alarming that this place of public education is
appearing to be so secretive about its intentions …"
"aklemz," however, accused Kersten of failing to do adequate reporting,
noting that Keith Ellison, a Muslim elected from Minnesota to Congress,
describes Zaman as a "bridge-builder."
The school's own website explains that it tries to provide students a
"learning environment that recognizes and appreciates the traditions,
histories, civilizations and accomplishments of Africa, Asia and the
Middle East."
It boasts of a "rigorous Arabic language program" as well as "an
environment that fosters your cultural values and heritage."
"Arabic is the language of culture that holds together the peoples of
the middle East, South Asia, North Africa, and East Africa. By
immersing our students in this world language, we equip them with a
vital tool to communicate with the peoples in a strategic part of the
world. … By the time students finish the program, they will be able to
understand, read, write, and converse in Arabic."
The school says it is named after Tarek ibn Ziyad, the "Ummayad
administrator of medieval Spain. Thirteen hundred years ago, serving in
the multifaceted roles of activist, leader, explorer, teacher,
administrator and peacemaker, he inspired his fellow citizens to the
same striving for human greatness that we hope to instill in our
students today."
Even Islamic websites, however, explain that he invaded Spain from
Africa in a bloody battle after ordering the boats that had carried his
soldiers burned so they could not retreat.
"This marked the beginning of the Muslim conquest of Spain. Muslims
ruled the country for hundreds of years so gloriously and well that
Spain became afterwards the fountain-head of culture and civilization
for the whole continent of Europe," the Islamists boast.
Spencer, however, raised a question:
"Does the Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy represent the same idea for those who
founded it and now operate it – the burning of boats, representing the
determination of Muslim immigrants to stay in the U.S., followed by
conquest? …. It is not an illegitimate question."
Original
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Imams promote 'our values' on taxpayer dime
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