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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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September 18, 2018
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'Muslim
UN' Highlights San Diego Lawsuit Against Islamophobia Curriculum
by John Rossomando
IPT News
September 18, 2018
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A recent report on
Islamophobia published by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)
appears to affirm its common cause with a Council on American Islamic
Relations (CAIR) effort to change public school curricula and staff
training in the name of stopping Islamophobia. The OIC also is known at the "Muslim U.N." Its 11th Annual
Report on Islamophobia report released in July discussed the still pending lawsuit challenging the San Diego Unified School District's
(SDUSD) cooperation with the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR).
Almost all of the OIC's Islamophobia reports cite CAIR data.
The OIC's annual report mentions the lawsuit against the SDUSD, saying it was
brought "by several parents who believed the district was unfairly
favoring Muslim students." It claims the school district has seen a
dramatic increase in bullying and discrimination.
It also referenced a CAIR Islamophobia report that claimed over half of
California's Muslim students had been bullied. This paper influenced the
SDUSD's April 2017 decision to enter into a formal partnership
with CAIR. Yet the SDUSD's internal statistics showed only two reported incidents of anti-Muslim
bullying in 2015-16 among the entire 130,000 student school district.
The OIC's interest is unsurprising. The 57-nation organization that touts itself as "the collective voice of the
Muslim world" has urged Western educational curriculum be rewritten for
the past decade. It also hoped to use "trade and cultural
relations" between Muslim and Western countries to influence
curriculum changes.
CAIR entered into a formal partnership in 2010 with the OIC's Islamic Educational Scientific and Cultural
Organization (ISESCO) to "redress the image of Islam and Muslims in
textbooks."
OIC officials regard Islamophobia as the "worst form of terrorism." Like CAIR, they consider
terms like "Islamic extremists" and connections between Islam and terrorism to be bigoted.
However, an OIC wing devoted to Islamic law ruled in 2003 that Palestinian suicide
bombings against Israelis were not terrorism. OIC representatives decided in 2002 that Hamas and similar groups weren't
terrorists.
CAIR representatives attended ISESCO's 2015 conference and met with its
director general, who briefed them on ISESCO's activities in the field of
education, among other issues.
ISESCO's General Conference called for partnering with civil-society organizations
in 2015 to alter the portrayal of Islam and Muslims in Western curricula.
That's part of what CAIR is trying to do in San Diego. It suggested the school district implement an
anti-Islamophobia curriculum in the name of fighting bullying that included
textbooks including:
CAIR provided the SDUSD board with training materials entitled Teaching
against Islamophobia. Among other things, it taught that 9/11 reflected the "the rage toward
the U.S. pulsing through the veins of many Muslims."
The federal lawsuit filed by the Freedom of Conscience Defense Fund
(FCDF) on behalf of local parents argued that, by creating a program
specifically for Muslim students, the school district is discriminating
against all other students. The school board formally
withdrew three months later, after the lawsuit claimed that CAIR
co-founder and Executive Director Nihad Awad acknowledged CAIR is a religious organization
fulfilling a religious mission. That admission made formal partnership with
CAIR a potential violation of the First Amendment's Establishment Clause
dividing church and state.
School district emails, however, show
that work to implement a CAIR-sponsored anti-Islamophobia curriculum
continued. An FCDF motion for an injunction blocking the school district
from working with CAIR remains pending.
CAIR Shops Its School Program Nationwide
CAIR's effort to influence public schools now extends beyond California.
It also includes schools in Washington state, Minnesota, Pennsylvania and
Illinois. In a July letter, FCDF warned Seattle schools that collaborating with CAIR to
"address Islamophobia" could violate the Constitution.
"After facing a huge setback for its pilot program in San Diego,
CAIR is doubling down on its 'anti-Islamophobia' school agenda
nationwide," FCDF Executive Director Dan Piedra said. "Any school
district that opens its doors to CAIR is empowering a radical sectarian
syndicate that seeks elevate Muslim students as a protected class."
CAIR Washington representatives delivered a workshop at a Seattle high
school in May, where they spoke about accommodating fasting Muslim students and their
families during Ramadan and confronting bullying.
Teachers in multiple Minneapolis-St. Paul area school districts participated in a CAIR
seminar last month called "Positive Interactions Training for
Teachers."
One participant said
that CAIR misidentified Christian Syrians living in Mankato, Minn. as
Muslims.
A separate PowerPoint used in a similar program last January
included slides that called for making restrooms available for Muslims to do ritual
washing before prayer; making potlucks halal by providing pork- and
alcohol-free options for adult staff; and providing rooms within schools where Muslims can pray.
Muslims can pack halal lunches and wait until afterschool to pray,
Piedra said, adding that the courts have not established an absolute right
to religious accommodation. Schools can deny religious accommodations if
they decide they "materially disrupt normal operations."
CAIR's Minnesota chapter also partnered last year with the Minneapolis Public Schools
(MPS) to offer advice about "immigrant and refugee families." MPS
also lists CAIR Minnesota on a separate page as a resource
on immigrants. Minneapolis is home to a large Muslim Somali-American
community.
Minnesota's state Department of Education recommends
CAIR under the category of "More Resources to Help Families and Others
Address Bullying." Its website provides links to CAIR-written guides
such as "An Educator's Guide to Understanding Islamic
Religious Practices" and "Know Your Rights."
"CAIR-MN's mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam,
encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and
build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding," the
Minnesota Department of Education said.
In Pennsylvania, CAIR performed sensitivity training in November 2016 in the
School District of Philadelphia in the wake of President Trump's election.
The Chicago Public Schools (CPS) recommends CAIR Chicago's Volunteer Activist (VA)
Program and Internship & Externship Program for high school students.
"Understanding that CPS requires service-learning to meet
graduation standards, our office host opportunities available throughout
the year for high school students to earn service-learning hours, or simply
enrich their experience and insight to advocacy and civil rights
efforts," the Chicago Public Schools wrote on a page on its website.
Parents should be concerned about letting CAIR "dictate what should
or shouldn't be taught about Islam," Piedra said.
CAIR's Long Relationship With the OIC
CAIR's cooperation with the OIC goes back decades. Awad spoke at a 1996 invitation-only OIC-sponsored
conference in Toronto. He called on Muslims to engage in an all-out public
relations campaign to educate the media, the Washington Report on Middle
East Affairs reported. "CAIR and the OIC are already in lockstep
on virtually all issues," IPT Executive Director Steven Emerson noted in 2007.
A 2007 CAIR press release stated that Awad met with then OIC Secretary-General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu
in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia to discuss "cooperation on future
projects."
"I'm pleased to meet with Ihsanoglu to discuss the situation of
Muslims in the United States and to work on future projects," the
press release said Awad told the Arab News.
Awad attended OIC sponsored conferences in 2008 and 2009.
He gave a presentation on Islamophobia in Western
societies at a 2010 OIC conference in Sao Paulo, Brazil and represented CAIR at an OIC conference in 2013.
"Education and engagement are key to challenging the growing
phenomenon of Islamophobia," Awad said at the 2010 conference.
He praised Ihsanoglu in 2013 when Ihsanoglu visited CAIR's Washington,
D.C. headquarters. This was after Ihsanoglu led the unsuccessful charge to get the United Nations
to criminalize blasphemy against Islam.
"We appreciate Secretary General Ihsanoglu's vision, leadership and
hard work to increase the effectiveness and profile of OIC's efforts
internationally, and we appreciate his support of our work at CAIR,"
Awad said.
CAIR serves as the "OIC's foot soldiers," said Zuhdi Jasser,
founder and president of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD).
"There doesn't have to be any proven evidence of coordination between
the two groups," Jasser said. "They are exactly on the same
ideological page."
Related Topics: Civil
suits, Education,
The
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) | John
Rossomando, Organization
of Islamic Cooperation, San
Diego schools, textbooks,
Freedom
of Conscience Defense Fund, Establishment
Clause, Dan
Piedra, Minneapolis
Public Schools, Ekmeleddin
Ihsanoglu, Nihad
Awad, Zuhdi
Jasser
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