[image: What Do American Schools Teach About Islam? PC Or Nothing]
<http://thefederalist.com/2016/08/16/what-do-american-schools-teach-about-islam-pc-or-nothing/>

   - BACK TO SCHOOL
   <http://thefederalist.com/category/education/back-to-school/>

What Do American Schools Teach About Islam? PC Or Nothing
<http://thefederalist.com/2016/08/16/what-do-american-schools-teach-about-islam-pc-or-nothing/>

*As militant Islam becomes more prominent in world affairs, it becomes less
prominent in American
classrooms.http://thefederalist.com/2016/08/16/what-do-american-schools-teach-about-islam-pc-or-nothing/
<http://thefederalist.com/2016/08/16/what-do-american-schools-teach-about-islam-pc-or-nothing/>*

[image: Joy Pullmann]

By Joy Pullmann <http://thefederalist.com/author/joy-pullmann/>

AUGUST 16, 2016

Jenny McKeigue’s youngest child enters seventh grade this fall, and she
plans to excuse him from a world history class requirement to recite a
Muslim conversion prayer called the *shahada*. McKeigue spent four years
attempting to convince her school board in Olmsted Falls, Ohio, to alter
some lessons and replace history textbooks after her oldest son in 2012
showed her a reality TV episode his teacher had played in class.

In “30 Days: Muslims and America,” an imam tells a Christian man attempting
to live as a Muslim for 30 days that Muslims and Christians worship the
same god. The Christian struggles with that idea but ultimately accepts it.

Independent reviewers McKeigue requested also found errors in the
district’s textbooks such as listing eleven biblical commandments and
stating Muslims historically “practiced religious tolerance” by requiring
Christians and Jews to pay extra taxes—not mentioning the alternative was
often death. McKeigue said comparative class time and materials were not
devoted to other major world religions such as Judaism and Christianity.

The district recently did buy new textbooks—a newer version of the one
McKeigue had objected to, which contains many of the same errors.
*Take and Read*

Textbook errors are so common that several independent organizations review
textbooks full-time. The Florida-based Citizens for National Security has
issued the most comprehensive reviews about how textbooks treat Islam, and
Chairman William Saxton says he fields about six related inquiries per day.

CFNS reports chronicle sins of omission and commission—such as saying “war
broke out” between Palestinians and Israelis although one side was the
aggressor, glossing over historical realities such as Muslims holding
slaves and proselytizing by the sword, and inaccuracies such as stating
Jesus was a Palestinian when Palestine did not exist during his recorded
earthly life.

One of CFNS’s YouTube videos points out that the high school history
textbook used in the Boston bombers’ public school, Cambridge Latin School,
makes straightforward religious claims about Islam no textbook would mimic
in a description of any other religion: “Muhammad’s teachings, which are
the revealed word of God…” An unbiased textbook would say something like
“Muslims believe Muhammad’s teachings are the revealed word of God.”

Saxton is a retired U.S. intelligence officer with a Harvard University
doctorate who volunteers for CFNS. He won’t say which agencies he’s worked
for besides the Department of Defense, but will say he has investigated
jihadist propaganda professionally. He began going through all the
textbooks he could find after visiting a grandson in California in 2009 and
looking up the sections on Middle Eastern history.

“That’s when the light lit,” he said. “I said ‘Whoa, we have a problem.’
This is a cultural jihad. It’s a dangerous form because no one is going to
know about this.”

He quotes Shabir Mansuri, the founder of the Muslim-Brotherhood-connected
Council on Islamic Education, who said
<http://www.meforum.org/559/islam-and-the-textbooks#_ftn10> their work
reviewing textbooks for major publishers is intended to produce a
“bloodless” cultural revolution. Reaction to such statements prompted CIE
to change its name <http://www.ircv.org/who-we-are/> to the Institute for
Religion and Civic Values, where Mansuri continues to review history
textbooks for major publishers, write lesson plans, and give seminars to
teachers.
*Follow the Money*

Taxpayers often fund these activities through government grants and
contracts, and IRCV claims a “significant working partnership” with the
U.S. State Department. It reviewed the textbook McKeigue objected to
<http://www.ircv.org/what-we-do/academic-reviews/> in her kids’ schools
(Holt 2006).

Former CIE senior researcher Susan Douglass
<https://georgetown.app.box.com/s/q36ufhlnduro7ie66pkr6o0z7ebfyp4j/1/7752668313/63792981781/1>
now
runs a education outreach program for an influential Georgetown University
center endowed in 2005 by a $20 million gift from Saudi prince Alwaleed Bin
Talal. Recently declassified documents suggest links
<https://twitter.com/davereaboi/status/754022130606493698> between the
Saudi Arabian government, al-Qaeda, and the perpetrators of the 9/11
attacks.

Talal, one of the world’s richest men, has suggested America’s foreign
policy deserved some blame for 9/11 and donated to
<http://www.meforum.org/pipes/3437/cair-islamists-fooling-the-establishment>
 the terrorist-linked
<http://www.nationalreview.com/article/393614/cair-terror-group-daniel-pipes>
 Council for American-Islamic Relations. John Esposito, the founding
director of Talal’s Georgetown center, has raised money for CAIR and
publicly promoted organizations the U.S. government later designated
terrorist organizations.

The center also receives federal Title VI funds for developing K-12
curriculum materials. Like Mansuri, Douglass travels the country giving
seminars at museums, school districts, and conferences. Teacher resources
she has written
<https://georgetown.app.box.com/s/q36ufhlnduro7ie66pkr6o0z7ebfyp4j/1/7752668313/63792985753/1>
read
like Muslim apologetics, including claims such as: “Customs such as honor
killing are not part of Islam”; “Of the many current misperceptions about
Islam, perhaps the most widespread is that women in Islamic law and Muslim
society are oppressed and lack rights”; and “Jihad may not be conducted
either to force people to convert or to annihilate or subdue people of
other faiths.”

Talal also gave $20 million in 2005 to Harvard University for a similar,
federally funded center of resources for K-12 teachers. Many U.S. campuses
host such centers, whose employees present themselves as experts to
textbook publishers, school teachers, and the media, said Winfield Myers,
the director of academic affairs at the Middle Eastern Forum.

“You can see the actual genocide carried against the Christians in the
Middle East with very little protest from these departments, because of so
many years of Arab supremacism,” Myers said. “In the main, the Middle East
studies departments are anti-Western and anti-Israel.”
*Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell*

The prevalence of Saudi money in American higher education “gives
incentives for not asking critical questions,” Myers said. Exacerbating
this tendency is that asking questions about Islam quickly sparks
accusations of racism, said Shireen Qudosi, an American Sufi Muslim who
lives in California.

“Because we’re limited our ability to have these conversations it leads to
this entitled attitude of ‘Because I’m Muslim I deserve something extra,’”
she said from her cell phone in the car as her five-year-old son, Reagan,
fussed in the back seat. She excused herself to hand him a snack.

School administrators and social workers often sideline Muslim-related
conflicts, leaving families to fend for themselves.

Her frustrations with Islam in American schools are largely social: “Arabs
see themselves as superior and their culture as the only authentic Islamic
culture. And since they’re the ones with the money, what they say gets put
into play.” Since they fear losing jobs and reputation if accused of
racism, school administrators and social workers often sideline
Muslim-related conflicts, leaving families to fend for themselves.

This also affects curriculum, because it motivates curriculum companies to
similarly downplay religious and racial conflict, at the expense of
accuracy and substance. High school teacher Elizabeth Altman, for example,
spent eight weeks last summer with materials all over her dining room
table, “tearing my hair out” to rewrite her Advanced Placement European
history class to fit new guidelines: “I tried to take Sundays off. Tried.”

College Board’s AP tests can earn students college credit in high school.
In 2015, 110,000 students took the AP European history exam, and for most
it will be their last world history class.

“I was thinking ‘I hope I die before graduation so I don’t have to do
this’” because the new material is so tedious and vague, said Altman, who
is also the assistant principal at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Academy in
Rockford, Illinois, before diving into a detailed explanation of what the
College Board left out of its new, 237-page course description.
*Goodbye, Religion*

Islam is almost completely absent, but it’s not just Islam. Religion,
period, has been relegated to a few glancing mentions, notes an extensive
review of the curriculum changes
<https://www.nas.org/articles/the_disappearing_continent> from the National
Association of Scholars. For example, it treats the Holocaust as a
political and racial episode, leaving aside the religious elements.

While ISIS is destroying Roman ruins in Syria, Western intellectuals are
performing an analogous intellectual exercise.

“To leave religion out as a motivation for war or for domestic policy
decisions is to leave out half of the human character,” Altham said. “To
treat religious belief as simply a convenient belief of the ruling class is
to ignore that the ruling class generally has genuine belief.”

So while ISIS is destroying Roman ruins in Syria because they consider them
pagan works of infidels not worth preserving, Western intellectuals are
performing an analogous intellectual exercise by erasing major human
motivations and pivotal historic events in ways that hamper young
Americans’ ability to understand historic and current world affairs, said
David Randall, the author of the NAS report.

“Islam is the great inheritor and great rival” to Christian civilization
throughout European history, Randall said. “You need to know that.” Since
“the war-torn edges between Islam and Christianity depend on the rivalry of
religious claims,” it’s impossible to understand European history without
understanding exactly what motivated people then—and today.

*An earlier version of this article stated Palestine did not exist until
100 years after Jesus’s death, but that can be misleading as the modern
political-cultural Palestine comprised largely of Muslim Arabs did not
exist until the twentieth century. This article has been changed to reflect
that. Until then it was largely a geographical term, not political or
ethnic.*
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