Saudi School in Virginia Draws Criticism
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2004
ALEXANDRIA, Va. A school that caters to children
of Saudi diplomats is teaching first-graders that Judaism and
Christianity are false religions, according to a Muslim group
concerned that such teachings breed hatred.
Free Muslim Coalition Against Terrorism is calling on
Islamic Saudi Academy to remove the textbook used to teach
first-graders. The teachers' edition of the textbook outlines
several points of emphasis, including the statement, "All
religions other than Islam are false religions."
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The coalition's director, Kamal Nawash, a Muslim, said it would
be acceptable to teach that Islam is the only correct religion. But
to explicitly tell first-graders that Jews and Christians practice
a false religion could breed extremism, he said.
The school "must be sure to instruct students to have the
utmost respect for other religions," Nawash said.
Nawash's criticism follows a report last month by a nonprofit
group called Saudi Institute, also denouncing the school's
curriculum. The institute advocates extensive reforms in Saudi
Arabia.
Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for Council on American Islamic
Relations, said he did not believe it was a good idea to explicitly
criticize other religions to young children.
"Followers of most major faiths believe they have the correct
religious teachings, but an affirmative belief in the truth of
one's own faith should not lead to the disparagement of all
others," Hooper said.
Still, Hooper said, if only a small portion of a lesson plan
needed to be changed, it "hardly justifies sweeping charges of
extremism."
The school, which teaches more than 1,000 pupils at campuses
in Alexandria and Fairfax, did not return calls seeking comment.
The school's Web site says the academy "promotes respect and
mutual understanding between Muslims and non-Muslims, Arabs and
Americans while keeping within the Muslim faith."
Nail al-Jubeir, a spokesman for the Saudi Embassy in Washington,
also did not return calls. He told The Washington Times that
critics of the textbook "are making a big thing out of nothing."
The Saudi government provides money to the school.
The school's teachings have come under scrutiny since the Sept.
11 attacks. Federal court documents in a case against an academy
graduate indicate that pupils' discussions after the attacks took
an anti-American bent, and some pupils considered the attacks
"payback" for what they saw as American mistreatment of the
Muslim world.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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