UK students taught “most important people to look after” after Manchester jihad attack are Muslim pupils
A new Channel 4 documentary shows British teachers telling pupils there are “a lot of similarities between Hitler and Trump”, and suggesting the most important people to look after following the Manchester Arena terror bombing are Muslim pupils.As jihadists and Islamic supremacists continue to attack non-Muslims, authorities continue to behave as if Muslims were the victims of the attack. No matter what the tally of victims of any given jihad attack may be, there will be voices insisting that those who criticize such attacks are being bigoted against Muslims.
Some pupils at the school were at Manchester Arena when Salman Abedi… carried out a suicide bombing, killing 22 people and injuring many more…..The teachers then have an interesting discussion on what their priorities should be following the attack. “It’s the support we give to our Muslim community in here as well, isn’t it, because they will be the ones that will be feeling hypersensitive,” says the headteacher.This revelation in a new Channel 4 documentary is no surprise, as disgraceful as it sounds. In fact, it is the essence of the “Islamophobia” subterfuge: one must not criticize Islam, Islamic supremacism or jihad violence, because to do so renders one bigoted against Muslims. Infidels are being conditioned to accept an inferior position and be silent about any ills arising from Islam. As a Muslim Labor MP in the UK retweeted to the British girls who had been raped by Muslim rape gangs: “shut up for the good of diversity.”
“Channel 4 Doc Reveals British Teachers Telling Pupils: ‘There’s a Lot of Similarities Between Hitler and Trump’”, by Jack Montgomery, Breitbart, September 2, 2017:
A new Channel 4 documentary shows British teachers telling pupils there are “a lot of similarities between Hitler and Trump”, and suggesting the most important people to look after following the Manchester Arena terror bombing are Muslim pupils.
Harrop Fold School in Salford, Manchester, was formerly ranked one of the worst in Britain and is led by three brothers: Headteacher Drew Povey, Deputy Head Ross Povey, and Ben Povey on the Behaviour Team.
Channel 4 puts heavy emphasis on Middle Eastern migrant pupils in the film, particularly a Syrian boy named Rani, who is taken under the wing of a local boy named Jack.
Drew Povey notes that when he began working at the school 12 years ago, it was 99 per cent White British, but this is no longer the case — resulting in “challenges”.
Asked about the migrant influx, one young white pupil named Freya says: “They could be at war and they need to come over so they’ve got a safe place to be, but at the same time there’s not enough places to live in this part of the country for other people.”
One scene shows a woman who appears to be a teacher asking her class: “Hands up if you were born elsewhere?”
She goes on to say, “Just because some of us is an immigrant, I don’t get why people put a negative slant on it.”
Then after what appears to be an awkward cut in the film, she is shown telling the class: “There’s a lot of similarities between Hitler and Trump, yeah?”
“But Trump’s got better hair than him,” jokes a Czech pupil in response.
“Mmm, I don’t think he does,” huffs the teacher, unwilling to concede even this much to the U.S. president.
Some pupils at the school were at Manchester Arena when Salman Abedi, the son of a Libyan Islamist who came to Britain as a refugee, carried out a suicide bombing, killing 22 people and injuring many more.
One boy, who was there with his younger female cousin, breaks down in tears recounting how he escaped the blast.
The teachers then have an interesting discussion on what their priorities should be following the attack.
“It’s the support we give to our Muslim community in here as well, isn’t it, because they will be the ones that will be feeling hypersensitive,” says the headteacher.
“It’s about trying to get the kids to discuss people’s different cultural beliefs and backgrounds, and how these things are not directly linked to religions,” contributes an ethnic minority colleague.
The same colleague tells the filmmakers: “A lot of work needs to be done on how to deal with racial tension or people attacking other people’s religion since these bombings.”
He is not shown discussing the importance of watching out for signs of Islamic radicalisation.
Headteacher Povey appears to be on the same page: “We’ve got to deal with [Islamophobia] quickly as a school.”
The Muslim migrant pupils do not appear to be in much need of protection, however.
At a get together for foreign pupils, a Polish girl with relatively weak English is screamed at for being “a racist” by a Syrian asylum seeker who came to Britain by way of Cyprus, a safe country in the Mediterranean.
She is falsely accused of saying “they all look like terrorists” after questioning why Middle Eastern migrants have their fingerprints are taken by the Home Office.
She appears to receive no support from the teacher, who sides with the Middle Eastern pupils and privately advises her to watch what she says…..
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