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Warrior-Mentor
04-28-2009, 14:12
What are US students learning about Islam?
Politically correct textbooks are distorting key concepts and historical facts.
By Gary Bauer
April 22, 2009

WASHINGTON - "History is not history unless it is the truth." – Abraham Lincoln
Most Americans understand history as an objective accounting of past events. In recent years, however, textbook publishers have come under increasing criticism for rewriting history. Claims are presented as facts while controversial material is whitewashed or omitted.

Today these trends are quite apparent in the way public school history books address Islam. In his 2008 study "Islam in the Classroom: what the textbooks tell us," Gilbert Sewall, director of the American Textbook Council (ATC), reviewed 10 of the nation's most widely used junior and senior high school history textbooks. The results should disturb anyone interested in conveying to our children a truthful history of the religion whose extreme adherents drive so many of today's tragic headlines.

At a time when America is locked in a battle of ideas with Islamic extremists and other enemies of freedom, accurate knowledge is indispensable. Yet, Sewall's findings underscore how political correctness is distorting the next generation's understanding of this battle.

Let's be clear. Religion is by nature a sensitive topic to teach in the classroom. And in a world where stereotypes wrongly tar all Muslims as being prone to violence, it's understandable that schools would err on the side of caution. Indeed, they should affirm the piety and charity practiced by hundreds of millions of Muslims around the world, an acknowledgement that should be extended to Christians as well. At the same time, textbooks shouldn't cower from covering the violent periods of Muslim conquest or the Islamic beliefs that fundamentalists exploit for violent ends.

Sewall found that many textbooks gloss over or delete important facts. For example, in the 1990s, "jihad" – which has many meanings, among them "sacred" or "holy" struggle but also "holy war" – was defined in the Houghton Mifflin junior high school book only as a struggle "to do one's best to resist temptation and overcome evil."

The many acts of violence committed on behalf of Islam in the past decade have made that definition incomplete, to say the least. Yet, as ATC notes, "by 2005, Houghton Mifflin apparently had removed jihad from its entire series of social studies textbooks."

In discussing sharia law, the Islamic code that can be used to subjugate women and deal death to wayward believers, many textbooks are intentionally vague. Holt Rinehart Winston's 2006 "Medieval to Early Modern Times" junior high textbook states simply, "[Sharia] sets rewards for good behavior and punishments for crimes." Another popular history textbook states, "Muslim law requires that Muslim leaders offer religious toleration."

Descriptions of Islam since 9/11 are particularly disturbing. Though Islamic extremism has become a fact of life throughout much of the world, most of the reviewed textbooks suggest instead that poverty, ignorance, and the existence of Israel are at the root of terrorism. The closest that any textbook gets to suggesting a faith-based component to terrorism is Glencoe's "Modern Times," which states broadly that "Muslims have not accommodated their religious beliefs to the modern world."

The whitewashing of Islam becomes even more noticeable when contrasted with how history textbooks treat Christianity. One book describes the Crusades as "religious wars launched against Muslims by European Christians." But when Muslims attacked Christians and took their land, the process is referred to as "building" an empire.

A McDougal Littell volume claims that non-Muslims in Muslim-ruled territories converted to Islam because "they were attracted by Islam's message of equality and hope for salvation." A good history class should teach students to ask critical questions. Are students asking how much of that "conversion" was coerced by the sword? Sadly, most texts gloss over Muslim leaders' history of enslavement of "infidels" and their brutal treatment of women, which continues today in some countries.

In an interview, Sewall summed up the reactions of textbook publishers to his report. "In a word," he said, "hostile."

Sewall says the pressure tactics used by some Muslim groups on publishers to portray Islam in a favorable light amount to a kind of "cultural jihad." This essentially is what the founder of the Council on Islamic Education, the main Islamic group for vetting textbooks in America, was saying when he described his work as a "bloodless revolution … inside American junior high and high school classrooms."

Sewall understands that historical inaccuracies sometimes take decades to be written out of textbooks. "Once lies are written into textbooks," he says, "they tend to be perpetuated in new editions." Which is one reason why Sewall will continue to make his case to publishers.

I hope Sewall has better success than I had. When I served as undersecretary of the Education Department under President Reagan, I discovered that a "values neutralism" was saturating school textbooks, seriously misleading our children about the nature of Soviet governance by, for instance, stating that women enjoyed the same rights as men and severely downplaying the suppression of basic human rights inherent in communist political systems.

In the same way, students today are being taught a distorted view of Islam. Having been on the front lines in the struggle to achieve the best education for our children, I understand that change will come only when teachers' and parents' voices are heard. Teachers need courage in overcoming political correctness by talking candidly about controversial topics like Islam. Parents must be engaged in their children's education by participating on curriculum committees and communicating with teachers. Parents also should communicate with their members of Congress to ensure that textbook publishers are not being pressured to present a false account of history. Feel-good distortions of history don't help our kids; they just help those who wish to do us harm.

Gary Bauer is a former undersecretary of the Department of Education under President Reagan. He is president of American Values and chairman of Campaign for Working Families.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0422/p09s01-coop.html

echoes
04-28-2009, 14:27
"History is not history unless it is the truth." – Abraham Lincoln

It is a shame to all Real American Educators, past or present, that this type of propaganda is being published, and forced down their collective lesson plans to administer.:(

"Honest Abe" was quoted throughout time for his wisdom...for a reason, IMHO.

Thank You WM, for posting this!

Clicking heels together...

Holly

greenberetTFS
04-28-2009, 16:13
It is a shame to all Real American Educators, past or present, that this type of propaganda is being published, and forced down their collective lesson plans to administer.:(

"Honest Abe" was quoted throughout time for his wisdom...for a reason, IMHO.

Thank You WM, for posting this!

Clicking heels together...

Holly

Holly,W-M,

Excellent posts,both of you...................:) I would like to hear from Dozer and Richard on what they know about this teaching................

GB TFS :munchin

echoes
04-28-2009, 17:13
Holly,W-M,

Excellent posts,both of you...................:) I would like to hear from Dozer and Richard on what they know about this teaching................

GB TFS :munchin

Rock On GB!!!

Holly

Warrior-Mentor
04-28-2009, 17:25
"Muslim law requires that Muslim leaders offer religious toleration."


"slay them whereever you find them."
(Koran 4:89)

"I have been commanded to fight people
until they testify that there is no god but allah
and that muhammad is the messenger of allah
and perform the prayer and pay the zakat..."
- Reliance of the Traveller: A Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred Law
Nuh Ha Mim Keller
o9.0
page 599

"Fight those who do not believe in allah and the last day and who forbid not what allah and his messenger have forbidden- who do not practice the religion of truth..."
(Koran 9:29)


Doesn't sound very tollerant to me.

zauber1
04-28-2009, 17:55
I agree with Warrior Mentor and Gary Bauer about the lack of quality in current textbooks regarding Islam. Revisionist history is the mainstay because it sells textbooks. Textbook writers and publishers are in business to do one thing: sell textbooks. Given that perspective, they have and will alter whatever they have to so that the purchaser (school districts) and mostly liberal educators will but their product.

On the other hand, I am an educator in a district that allows me tremendous latitude in curriculum and choice of textbooks. I regularly teach about Islam, terrorism, hostage negotiation , geopolitics and the impact of religion on law enforcement and related topics. Is there a good text available? I value the opinion and experience of the QPs on this forum.

In the past three years I have used only the Qu'ran and Hadith as my basic text when teaching the ramifications of sharia law. I would rather not have to reinvent the wheel anymore.

Saoirse
04-28-2009, 18:18
This has been talked about a lot the past few weeks, especially on Fox. Glenn Beck covered it as well as Hannity. And it's not just in our junior and senior high schools, Islamization is being forced down the throats of our college students. The distortions are enormous. A friend of mine is attending the university in Nebraska and she was forced fed erroneous information about Islam. "But........., Islam is a religion of religious tolerance and peace. They believe the same things we Christians do." I asked her if she had read all the suras in the koran about how its ok to cheat infidels, enslave them, murder them, subjugation of women....etc etc. She said those things weren't in there, OR....it was a misunderstanding when the translation was done from Arabic to English. I almost fell off my chair. She asked me to "SHOW" her all those suras (all of a sudden she is from Missouri <shrug>). So I told her to stand by, I would email her the wonderful reading material....good enough to "help ya sleep!" I also asked her to NOT listen to all the lies and propaganda and to please go research for herself!
She has not spoken to me since. Tht was a couple months ago. Now she is in town visiting other friends and she is very careful in what she says around me. I asked her the other night..."did you go research?" She blushed and looked away.
The author of the article suggests that parents talk to their kids about this. However, I wonder how many of them will have even read this article or heard about the historical distortions; better yet, how many of them will really care or are intelligent enough to discuss. The schools are raising kids nowadays so that parents don't have to do that icky thing called "parenting"! They won't discuss sex education with their kids, so why would they talk about islam and the truth about it?

Richard
04-28-2009, 19:43
Textbooks here in Texas are submitted to the Texas Ed Agency for review by a panel of educators and - if approved - then available for use by the public school system's Independent School Districts (ISDs). The ISDs can choose whichever text they want to use from a number of offerings.

As an independent private school, we can choose whichever text we want to use from any book on the market. For example, our basic US History text is the college-level text, The American Nation: A History of the United States published by Longman.

Some schools/districts do a better job of researching and selecting their supporting materials than others.

Richard's $.02 :munchin

redleg99
04-28-2009, 20:18
I agree with Bauer’s sentiment that history should be told “warts and all.” Unfortunately, that has proven to be a tall order in western history: popular narratives are commonly either entirely triumphalist (fashionable 50 years ago) or entirely critical (fashionable since the 1970’s).*

In non-western history, it continues to irritate me that few scholars use the same critical approaches in non-western history that are used in western history. Thus, while western imperialism is deplored, other imperialisms, such as that of the Mongols, the Han Dynasty, the Umayyads, the Songhai or the Aztecs, seem to be ignored.

Admittedly, there are probably some good reasons for this: essentialism and ethnocentrism were fairly common in the middle eastern history written by westerners up until the 1970s or 1980s, ** and I think this might hold true in other non-western history fields as well. This has left many historians a little gun-shy about taking a critical approach to non-western history.

So, how should historians today tell the story of Islam? Is it a “religion of religious tolerance and peace” or is a religion that teaches its adherents to “cheat infidels, enslave them, murder them, and subjugate women?” Based on the little that I have seen and read, it is all of these things. Unfortunately, that is a narrative which satisfies few people: some will say it is unfairly critical, while others will say it doesn’t criticize enough. Thus, we are left with the somewhat vague treatment that we often find in textbooks.


* for more on this, see Peter Novick’s That Noble Dream
** for more on this, see Zachary Lockman’s Contending Visions of the Middle East. Be warned: the final two chapters are for the most part a polemic against the Iraq War.

Richard
04-28-2009, 20:32
So, how should historians today tell the story of Islam? Is it a “religion of religious tolerance and peace” or is a religion that teaches its adherents to “cheat infidels, enslave them, murder them, and subjugate women?” Based on the little that I have seen and read, it is all of these things.

And IMO that's how you teach it - alongside the Crusades, Inquisition, et al - as a point of interpolation (or misinterpolation) upon which clerics, scholars and others commonly disagree in theory and practice. ;)

Richard's $.02 :munchin

Warrior-Mentor
04-28-2009, 21:40
islam is a religion of peace.

Here's why:

Because AFTER the world has converted to islam,
or been killed or subordinated to islam and pays the jizah (submission tax),
THEN the world will be peaceful.

There are 5 pillars of islam. Jihad is not one of them.

Hence, it's a religion of peace and no need for permanent establishment of jihad as a pillar of islam.

Brilliant.

The question is one of their definition of peace vs. a typical western definition of peace. Simplistically, we want peace - the asence of fighting. They want "peace," the conversion of all of humanity to islam, which will create the absence of fighting.
____________________
FOOT NOTE: I'll be happy to footnote this if anyone wants to call me out on it.
I just don't have my copy of Reliance of the Traveller with me right now.

The Reaper
04-29-2009, 05:21
islam is a religion of peace.

Here's why:

Because AFTER the world has converted to islam,
or been killed or subordinated to islam and pays the jizah (submission tax),
THEN the world will be peaceful.

There are 5 pillars of islam. Jihad is not one of them.

Hence, it's a religion of peace and no need for permanent establishment of jihad as a pillar of islam.

Brilliant.

The question is one of their definition of peace vs. a typical western definition of peace. Simplistically, we want peace - the asence of fighting. They want "peace," the conversion of all of humanity to islam, which will create the absence of fighting.
____________________
FOOT NOTE: I'll be happy to footnote this if anyone wants to call me out on it.
I just don't have my copy of Reliance of the Traveller with me right now.


Do they mean like the Sunnis and Shias in Iraq live in peace with one another?

TR

charlietwo
04-29-2009, 08:21
Do they mean like the Sunnis and Shias in Iraq live in peace with one another?

TR

I don't think that's fair... the Jews instigated all the fights between the Sunni's and Shia's. Everyone knows that ;)