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From: Sword of Laban <[email protected]>
Date: Jan 24, 11:40 am
Subject: MUSLIM LEGACY = IGNORANCE

Poor schooling slows anti-terrorism effort in Pakistan

By Griff Witte
Washington Post
Sunday, January 17, 2010

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN -- With a curriculum that glorifies violence in
the name of Islam and ignores basic history, science and math,
Pakistan's public education system has become a major barrier to U.S.
efforts to defeat extremist groups here, U.S. and Pakistani officials
say.

Western officials tend to blame Islamic schools, known as madrassas,
for their role as feeders to militant groups, but Pakistani education
experts say the root of the problem is the public schools in a nation
in which half of adults cannot sign their own name. The United States
is hoping an infusion of cash -- part of a $7.5 billion civilian aid
package -- will begin to change that, and in the process alter the
widespread perception that Washington's only interest in Pakistan is
in bolstering its military.

But according to education reform advocates here, any effort to
improve the system faces the reality of intense institutional pressure
to keep the schools exactly the way they are. They say that for
different reasons, the most powerful forces in Pakistan, including the
army, the religious establishment and the feudal landlords who
dominate civilian politics, have worked against improving an education
system that for decades has been in marked decline.
"If the people get education, the elite would be threatened," said
Khadim Hussain, coordinator of the Aryana Institute for Regional
Research and Advocacy and a professor at Islamabad's Bahria
University. "If they make education available, the security
establishment's ideology may be at risk."

That ideology, Hussain said, involves the belief that non-Muslim
nations are out to destroy Pakistan and that the army is the only
protection Pakistanis have from certain annihilation. Those notions
are emphasized at every level in the schools, with students focused on
memorizing the names of Pakistan's military heroes and the sayings of
the prophet Muhammad, but not learning the basics of algebra or
biology, he said.

The nature of the education system is reflected in popular attitudes
toward the Taliban, al-Qaeda and other Islamic extremist groups that
in recent months have carried out dozens of suicide bombings in
Pakistan, many of them targeting civilians.

Although the groups in many cases have publicly asserted
responsibility for the attacks, a large percentage of the population
here refuses to believe that Muslims could be responsible for such
horrific crimes, choosing to believe that India, Israel or the United
States is behind the violence. When Hussain challenges graduate-level
students for proof, they accuse him of being part of the plot, he
said.

"Telling students they need to use evidence and logic means that you
are definitely an agent of India, Israel and the CIA," he said. "They
don't understand what evidence is."

The madrassas have multiplied in Pakistan as public education has
deteriorated. But madrassas still educate only about 1.5 million
students a year, compared with more than 20 million in public schools.
If Pakistan is to improve its dismal literacy rate and provide
marketable skills to more of the estimated 90 million Pakistanis under
the age of 18, it will have to start in the public schools.

The United States plans to spend $200 million here this year on
education, the U.S. Agency for International Development's largest
education program worldwide. The money comes from the Kerry-Lugar aid
bill, which was passed in late 2009 and promises Pakistan $7.5 billion
in civilian assistance over the next five years.

The funds are intended to signal a substantial shift from earlier
years, when U.S. assistance to Pakistan was overwhelmingly focused on
helping the military, which is battling the Taliban and al-Qaeda in
the nation's northwest.

U.S. officials say the money will be spent on a combination of
programs, including infrastructure improvements, teacher training and
updates to the curriculum. Unlike in past years, the money will not be
filtered through non-governmental organizations and contractors but
will be given directly to Pakistan's government, officials say.
The idea is to improve the capacity of the nation's fledgling
civilian-
led administration, and to promote trust between the two nations.

But there is also the risk that without adequate monitoring, much of
the money will go to waste.

Pakistan's current spending on education -- less than 3 percent of its
budget -- is anemic, and far lower on a relative basis than in India
or even Bangladesh. Much of it never reaches students.

Pakistan's public education system includes thousands of "ghost
schools," which exist on paper and receive state funding. But in
reality, the schools do not function: A local landlord gets the money,
and either pockets it or dispenses it to individuals who are on the
books as teachers, but in fact are associates or relatives who do
nothing to earn their salaries. School buildings are often used for
housing farmworkers or livestock, not for education.

Those buildings that do operate lack basic facilities -- a 2006
government study found that more than half do not have electricity and
40 percent have no bathrooms. About a third of students drop out by
the fifth grade. Teachers, meanwhile, earn as little as $50 a month,
less in many cases than that of a domestic servant. The low pay
mirrors teachers' perceived value in Pakistani society.

"The social status of teachers is low, compared with other
professions," said Rehana Masrur, dean of the education department at
Allama Iqbal Open University in Islamabad. "If someone is doing
nothing and has no future, people say, 'Why doesn't he become a
teacher?' "

Top government officials have little incentive to change that, experts
here say. Although the vast majority of Pakistanis must choose between
the public schools or madrassas for their children, Pakistan's well-
to-do can send their kids to private schools, many of which are
considered world-class.

Javed Ashraf Qazi, a former Pakistani education minister, said the
United States has not helped by frittering away much of its assistance
budget on poorly defined programs, such as conflict-resolution
training, which he said leave no enduring impact. What Pakistan really
needs, he said, is a network of vocational training institutes that
can prepare students for the workplace.

"What would help is something that is lasting," he said. "The U.S. is
spending more money, but spending it in a way that it does not leave
any impact."

But Pervez Hoodbhoy, a noted nuclear physicist at Islamabad's Quaid-i-
Azam University and a longtime proponent of education reform, said
Pakistan needs something more fundamental.

"I don't think it's a matter of money. The more you throw at the
system, the faster it leaks out," he said. "There has to be a desire
to improve. The U.S. can't create that desire. When Pakistanis feel
they need a different kind of education system, that's when it will
improve."

http://www.truthandgrace.com/ISLAM.htm



      

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