Quote of the day

Nothing is necessarily as you thought it was, and you should never believe what you're told until you've had a chance to study it for yourselves

Syndicate content

Login

Login or Register to be identified in your comments

Email & RSS

Sign up to oD's editorial summaries email:



Add oD to your Netvibes: Add to Netvibes

Why State Funded Muslim Schools


Posts: 41
Joined: 2003-03-06
London School of Islamics An Educational Trust 63 Margery Park Road London E7 9LD E-mail: info@londonschoolofislamics.org.uk www.londonschoolofislamics.org.uk Tel/Fax: 0208 555 2733 / 07817 112 667 Why State Funded Muslim Schools British schooling has been mis-educating and de-educating Muslim children for the last 50 years and for the first time the Muslim leadership openly declared that British school is a home of institutional racism where there is no place for foreign culture and languages. Institutional racism is depriving Muslim children of the chance to go to their own faith schools. It leads LEAs to reject or delay approval of Muslim schools. Policy makers like Mr. Graham Lane and others like him do not want to see even a single Muslim school in the United Kingdom. The British teachers have no respect for Islamic faith and Muslim community. Western education system can easily deprogram Muslim children and force them to adopt un-Islamic values. Let the Muslim parents decides how and where to educate their children. According to MORI social research institute on behalf of Bristol LEA, nine out of ten Muslim parents agreed with the model of an Islamic secondary school set up within the state system. I rejected British schooling for Muslim children in the early 70s. A child who has English as a second language is seen as having a special need – not as having a skill to be lauded from the rooftops. Bilingual children think in different way. Language has a profound effect in shaping the ways people think and act. Certain concepts are embedded in words that do not translate. There are repertoires of phrases which exist in Arabic or Urdu because there is no English equivalent. State schools are slaughter houses and are not suitable for bilingual Muslim children. Muslim children in the UK may lose out when they join reception classes because the school’s values and language reflect those of the dominant native culture, rather than those of their home. Almost all recent research literature agrees that if you want children whose home language is not English to excel in English –medium schools, it is important to nurture and acknowledge that first language along side their English development. Cultivating bilingualism could and should promote pupil’s linguistic development. Muslim children need bilingual Muslim teachers as role models. Taxpayers’ money spent on schools should be handed to parents as vouchers to be used for their children’s education as they wished. Funds to be given to parents to set up their own schools. Lady Uddin argues strongly for the benefits of faith-based schooling, rejecting claims made in reports on the 2001 riots in Oldham, Burnley and Bradford that polarised schooling contributed to community division. Culturally separate groups, communities and institutions do not have to be the causes of social instability. There are hundreds of state schools where Muslim pupils are in majority, all such schools may be designated as Muslim community schools to be managed and controlled by Muslim Educational Trust and Charities. Iftikhar Ahmad



Posts: 29
Joined: 2004-05-17
Re: Why State Funded Muslim Schools
I disagree with everything Iftikhar Ahmad says. These sorts of arguments make me really angry because they are divisive, racist and aim to perpetuate the lack of understanding between peoples of different ethnic origins. If I had my way, schools would be entirely secular institutions: I would ban all faith schools, regardless of whether they were publically or privately funded. If parents wish to indoctrinate their children into their own belief system, they have plenty of opportunity in the evenings, weekends and school holidays to do so. In the meantime, the children would have the opportunity, during school hours, to gain some understanding of the complexities of the broader society in which they live. We owe this to all our children -- to equip them for life. We need our children to be mixing with those from other faiths, classes and races to develop understanding and tolerance; not segregating them into educational ghettoes.



Posts: 10
Joined: 2004-12-20
Re: Why State Funded Muslim Schools
I don't understand this thread because I don't understand what the phrase "Muslim children" means. It's like saying "Tory children", "New Labour children", or "Liberal Democrat children". We don't allow children to vote because we know they're too young to have thought through the issues for themselves, and they're under too much home pressure to replicate their parents' opinions. As with politics, so with religion.


Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><b> <i> <br> <p> <div> <img>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may quote other posts using [quote] tags.
More information about formatting options

Remember to login to have your comments properly attributed

Login or Register to be identified in your comments