http://abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/DailyNews/saudi_teachers021210.html

In Praise of Bin Laden
Some Saudi Schools Teach Students to Hate the U.S., Love Osama

Reporter's Notebook
By Jim Sciutto

Dec. 10 � The Saudi government insists religious extremism is not
sanctioned in the kingdom, and that it's not taught in schools. But it is
easy to find teachers who speak out against the United States with a
surprisingly deep hatred � a sentiment many are passing on to their
students. 

Getting these teachers to speak on the record, and especially on camera,
is difficult. 
On a trip to Riyadh, ABCNEWS producer Hoda Abdel-Hamid and I met three
teachers who work at a private high school for boys just outside the
capital. And although we've frequently witnessed the depth of
anti-American feeling in this part of the world, both of us were amazed
at what we heard from these men during our interview.

All three teachers are personally connected to the terror war. Each has a
brother in U.S. custody at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, suspected of
supporting terrorism.

"I do not know if he was with al Qaeda or not," said Saad al-Shabbani,
whose 20-year-old brother, Fahad, is a detainee at Guantanamo. "He is a
young man, I don't think he was part of any group specifically. But with
the events unfolding he wanted to serve Islam." 

�If Someone Kills My Muslim Brother, I Can Kill Him�

Whether their brothers are actually tied to al Qaeda, all three teachers
are teaching their students � Saudi teenagers � that al Qaeda is a noble
cause. Here's an exchange with Mohammed Al-Osman, another teacher:

ABCNEWS' Jim Sciutto: Do you believe Osama bin Laden is a good man?

Mohammed Al-Osman: Undoubtedly.

Sciutto: He's a good man, even for planning these attacks on civilians in
the U.S., and the Koran says attacks on civilians are not justified? 

Al-Osman: Three thousand Americans were killed, but many Muslims also
died in Afghanistan. I tell my students the Koran allows self-defense, so
if the U.S. kills civilians, then sometimes we have to kill civilians.

Sciutto: What I'm hearing from you is that you're telling your students
they can kill people because they're angry. 

Al-Osman: If someone kills my Muslim brother, I can kill him.

Sciutto: The people in the World Trade Center, they didn't kill your
brothers. 

Al-Osman: If I can't target the enemy who did wrong, then I can sacrifice
other people.

Al-Shabbani echoed this sentiment.

Sciutto: "You have described to me a very sad future. If someone attacks
you, you attack them. They attack you, you attack them. What future are
you teaching your students � about violence, about killing, constant
killing?"

Al-Shabbani: I teach my students that sometimes you have to do injustice
to people who have done an injustice to you. 

Pointing Fingers at Israel

When confronted with statements like these, Saudi officials say they're
the views of a small minority. But they concede these views are being
promoted by extremist religious teachers, and even in some school
textbooks.

During a visit to Saudi Arabia this summer, ABCNEWS' 20/20 came across
one high school textbook with a passage reading: "Judgment Day will come
only when Muslims kill Jews in a great war."

Saudi officials say they've identified parts of the official school
curriculum that are inflammatory and that they're changing them. But they
also say that the root of anti-American feeling here is not in the
schools, but in U.S. Mideast policy. Specifically, says Foreign Minister
Saud al-Faisal, the Bush administration's unflagging support for Israel
and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

"The schools are teaching the same subjects that they did 10 years ago,
20 years ago, 30 years ago," said al-Faisal. "What has changed is
American policy. It is perceived that America is standing unjustly with
Mr. Sharon."

The teachers we met, like many people in the Arab world, hold the United
States responsible for Palestinian civilian deaths in the Israeli
conflict, because Israel buys its weapons from the United States and also
receives financial support from Washington.

Many here also frequently point out that the U.S. military campaign in
Afghanistan left civilians dead � justification, they say, for al Qaeda's
attacks on American civilians.

Al-Osman attempted to justify the World Trade Center attacks in the
following exchange:

Sciutto: There were civilian casualties in Afghanistan. But the American
goal was not to kill civilians. They wanted to go after soldiers and
accidently killed civilians. Osama bin Laden's goal was to kill
civilians. His plan was to kill civilians. Isn't that a difference? 

Al-Osman: Bin Laden wanted to hit a building, the World Trade Center,
that represented the American economy.

Sciutto: Yes, but that building happened to be filled by civilians. He
drove the plane into the building to kill civilians. Do you deny that?

Al-Osman: Al Qaeda was going after a symbol. 

Sciutto: But that building, that symbol, happened to be full of people.
Is that right?

Al-Osman: It's not necessary to give a warning of the attack so that
people could flee the building that day.

Sciutto: So you're saying that it's OK to surprise civilians in the
building.

Al-Osman: In this case, yes.

As for the men ABCNEWS interviewed, we were told privately many times
that a crackdown on teachers like them would anger powerful religious
extremists here. And so many Saudi students are still being taught to
hate Americans, and even to kill them.   

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