New report says Muslim activists 'succeeding' in expunging criticism
History textbooks being used by hundreds of thousands of public school
students across the U.S. are blatantly promoting Islam, according to a
new report by an independent organization that researches and reviews
textbooks.
WND has reported several times on issues involving the promotion of
Islam in public school texts, including a recent situation in which
California parents complained their children were being taught that
"jihad" to Muslims means "doing good works."
The new report is from the American Textbook Council, which was
established in 1989 as an independent national research organization to
review social studies textbooks and advance the quality of
instructional materials in history.
In the two-year project, whose report was authored by Gilbert T.
Sewall, the ATC reviewed five junior and five high school world and
American history texts, concluding:
"Many political and religious groups try to use the textbook process to
their advantage, but the deficiencies in Islam-related lessons are
uniquely disturbing. History textbooks present an incomplete and
confected view of Islam that misrepresents its foundations and
challenges to international security."
The report finds that the texts present "disputed definitions and
claims [regarding Islam] … as established facts."
"Islamic activists use multiculturalism and ready-made American-made
political movements, especially those on campus, to advance and justify
the makeover of Islam-related textbook content," the report continued.
"Particular fault rests with the publishing corporations, boards of
directors, and executives who decide what editorial policies their
companies will pursue," the report said.
Reviewed were:
Medieval and Early Modern Times by Jackson J. Spielvogal
Medieval to Early Modern Times by Stanley M. Bernstein and Richard Shek
World History: Medieval and Early Modern Times by Douglas Carnine,
Carlos Cortes, Kenneth R. Curtis and Anita T. Robinson
Medieval and Early Modern Times by Dianne Hart
History Alive! The Medieval World and Beyond by Bert Bower and Jim
Lobdell
World History: The Modern World by Elizabeth Gaynor Ellis and Anthony
Esler
World History: Modern Times by Jackson J. Spielvogel
America: Pathways to the Present by Andrew Cayton and others
The American Vision: Moder Times by Joyce Appelby and others and
The Americans: Reconstruction to the Twenty-first Century by Gerald A.
Danzer
The report noted that several of the textbooks have found harsh critics
among parents and others, and "History Alive! The Medieval World and
Beyond" published by the privately held Teachers Curriculum Institute
has been criticized repeatedly.
In Lodi, Calif., parents "were not objecting to a word or two that they
took out of context but to a textbook long on chapters filled with
adulatory lessons on Islam."
This was the same book cited by parents who contacted WND with their
concerns about such indoctrination.
A parent whose child has been handed the text in a Sacramento district
at that time accused the publisher of a pro-Muslim bias to the point
that Islamic theology has been incorporated into the public school
teachings.
"It makes an attempt to seem like an egalitarian world history book,
but on closer inspection you find that seven (not all are titled so) of
the chapters deal with Islam or Muslim subjects," wrote the parent,
whose name was being withheld, in a letter to WND.
"The upsetting part is not only do they go into the history (which
would be acceptable) but also the teaching of Islam," she said. "This
book does not really go into Christianity or the teachings of Christ,
nor does it address religious doctrine elsewhere to the degree it does
Islam."
She said the book's one page referencing Jews "is only to convey that
they were tortured by Crusaders to get them to convert to
'Christianity.' (It fails to mention that the biggest persecutors of
Jews throughout history and still today are Arab Muslims). It gives
four other one-liner references to the Jews being blamed for the
plagues and problems in the land. It does not talk about the Jews as
making a significant impact on the culture at large."
Bert Bower, founder of TCI, told WND at that time not only did his
company have experts review the book, but the state of California also
reviewed it, and has approved it for use in public schools.
"Keep in mind when looking at this particular book scholars from all
over California (reviewed it)," he said.
One of those experts who contributed to the text, according to the ATC,
which earlier released a scathing indictment of that specific project,
was Ayad Al-Qazzaz.
"Al-Qazzaz is a Muslim apologist, a frequent speaker in Northern
California school districts promoting Islam and Arab causes," the ATC
review said. "Al-Qazzaz also co-wrote AWAIR's 'Arab World Notebook.'
AWAIR stands for Arab World and Islamic Resources, an opaque,
proselytizing 'non-profit organization' that conducts teacher workshops
and sells supplementary materials to schools."
The newest report cited the same issue raised by parents.
"In a passage meant to explain jihad, they encountered this: 'Muslims
should fulfill jihad with the heart, tongue, and hand. Muslims use the
heart in their struggle to resist evil. The tongue may convince others
to take up worthy causes, such as funding medical research. Hands may
perform good works and correct wrongs,'" the new report said.
The ATC report noted a complicating factor is a ban in California, to
whose standards most textbook publishers align their work, on "adverse
reflection" on religion in school.
"Whatever 'adverse reflection' is, such a mandate may be conceptually
at odds with historical and geopolitical actuality," the study said.
"None of this is accidental. Islamic organizations, willing to
[provide] misinformation, are active in curriculum politics. These
activists are eager to expunge any critical thought about Islam from
textbook and all public discourse. They are succeeding, assisted by
partisan scholars and associations… It is alarming that so many
individuals with the power to shape the curriculum are willfully blind
to or openly sympathetic to these efforts," the report said.
Regarding the TCI book, the report said its lessons contain "stilted
language that seem scripted or borrowed from devotional, not
historical, material." Also, the "Medieval to Early Modern Times" book
features a two-page prayer to Allah "the Merciful."
"Among the textbooks examined, the editorial caution that marks
coverage of Christian and Jewish beliefs vanishes in presenting Islam's
foundations. With materials laden with angels, revelations, miracles,
prayers, and sacred exclamations; the story of the Zamzam well; and the
titles 'Messenger of God' and 'Prophet of Islam' the seventh-grade
textbooks cross the line into something other than history, that is,
scripture or myth."
Among the lessons public school students must learn from the various
books:
Muhammad "taught equality"
Fasting reminds Muslims of people who struggle to get enough food
Muhammad told his followers to make sure guests never left a table
hungry
Arab traditions include being kind to strangers and helping needy
"These effusive formulations stop just short of invention and raise
questions about the sources of information," the report said.
The books' praises of Islam continues, the report said. "TCI devotes 13
text-heavy pages to textiles, calligraphy, design, books, city
building, architecture, mathematics, medicine, polo, and chess, some of
it spun like cotton candy," the report said.
For example, the book reports: "Singing was an essential part of Muslim
Spain's musical culture. … Although this music is lost today, it
undoubtedly influenced later musical forms in Europe and North Africa."
"Undoubtedly, the TCI volume declares. Yet the book acknowledges the
music is lost and the claims are speculative. Empty text dilates
Islamic achievements," the report said.
Glossing over the actual physical conquering of some peoples, the
"World History: Medieval and Early Modern Times" says people were
converted to Islam because they were "attracted by Islam's message of
equality and hope for salvation," the report said.
Another book teaches: "Q: How did the caliphs who expanded the Muslim
Empire treat those they conquered? A: They treated them with tolerance."
"At a time when intolerance marks Islamic cultures worldwide and
multiculturalism is a ruling idea in U.S. schools, these
'wonderland-of-tolerance' tropes constitute a major content
distortion," the report said.
The books teach the Crusades were "religious wars launched against
Muslims by European Christians."
"When … Muslims groups attack Christian peoples, kill them, and take
their lands, the process is referred to as 'building' an empire.
Christian attempts to restore those lands are labeled as 'violent
attacks' or 'massacres,'" the report said.
Some of the books are rife with other errors. In the TCI book, it says
the Crusaders wore red crosses. "No. Only Templars did," said the
report.
"While Christian belligerence is magnified, Islamic inequality,
subjugation, and enslavement get the airbrush," said the report, which
also found inaccuracies in teaching about sharia religious law, women's
rights and terrorism, especially the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in New
York, Washington and Pennsylvania, which killed nearly 3,000.
"The Modern World" says, "On the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, teams of
terrorists hijacked four airplanes on the East Coast. Passengers
challenged the hijackers on one flight, which they crashed on the way
to its target. But one plane plunged into the Pentagon in Virginia, and
two others slammed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in
New York…"
"The flatness and brevity of this passage are dismaying. In terms of
content, so much is left unanswered. Who were the teams of terrorists
and what did they want to do? What were their political ends? Since
'The Modern World' avoids any hint of the connection between this
unnamed terrorism and jihad, why September 11 happened is hard to
understand," the report said.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
History textbooks promoting Islam
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)