British children read gay fairytales
Reuters
  Posted Wednesday, March 14, 2007 at 12:06
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[image: PROPOGANDA? Religious groups say administrating fairytales to kids
amounts to homosexual propaganda.]
PROPOGANDA? Religious groups say administrating fairytales to kids amounts
to homosexual propaganda.

*Other stories in the section*

*London:* British children as young as four are being taught about same-sex
relationships through fairytales and storybooks with gay and lesbian
characters.

A pilot scheme to introduce children to gay issues is running in several
schools across England with stories such as "King and King", about a gay
prince, or "And Tango Makes Three", about gay penguins who fall in love and
raise an adopted child.

The £6,00,000 ($1.16 million) scheme, called the "No Outsiders" project, has
the backing of the Department for Education and is designed to help schools
adjust to new rules on promoting homosexuality as a lifestyle.

But it has sparked anger among some religious groups who say it is
homosexual propaganda. "This is tantamount to child abuse," said Stephen
Green, director of the religious campaign group Christian Voice.

"The whole project is nothing more than propaganda aimed at primary school
children to make them sympathetic to homosexuality."

According to those heading the "No Outsiders" project, children in one
participating school used the "King & King" fairytale — which tells of a
prince who rejects the love of three princesses before falling in love with
and "marrying" another prince — as a basis for writing "alternative
Cinderella" stories.

In another participating school in London, children aged between 4 and 11
are rehearsing for a performance of an opera called "The Sissy Duckling"
about a male duckling who loves cooking, cleaning and art.

*Inspired by Tutu*
Britain repealed a law in 2003 which had banned local authorities from
promoting homosexuality as a lifestyle and the "No Outsiders" pilot is
regarded as the first effort to make gay issues part of modern primary
school life.

The government's school inspectors have also identified homophobic bullying
as a problem in classrooms and playgrounds.

Those leading the project say it is inspired by the words of South African
Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who said in February 2004: "Everyone
is an insider, there are no outsiders — whatever their beliefs, whatever
their colour, gender or sexuality."

They reject suggestions they are peddling propaganda and say that stories
such as "King & King" are no more propaganda than is Cinderella or other
traditional fairytales.

"These books are presenting one aspect of the spectrum of daily life,"
Elizabeth Atkinson, director of the project, told *BBC* radio.

"What we are doing is representing reality ... Many, many children in this
country have this as part of their everyday experience."

She said one of the main aims was to prevent bullying of children who have
homosexual parents or who are perceived as gay or lesbian by their peers.

"The life experience of all children will be profoundly affected by the
ethos of their school, and this means creating a school environment where no
one is an outsider," the project's leaders say in a statement on their
website.

But Tahir Alam, a spokesman on education for the Muslim Council of Britain,
told Reuters the project was promoting notions of family life which were
contrary to the teachings of Islam and many other religions.

"Why are we introducing these ideas to such young children?" he said in a
telephone interview. "A lot of parents will be very concerned about the
exposure of their children to such books, which are contrary to their
religious beliefs and values."

Green warned the project could expose children to sexual predators by making
them think "that two boys fiddling with each other ... is perfectly normal".

"Parents should be able to have the peace of mind of knowing that school is
a safe place," he told Reuters. "And to have their children indoctrinated
with pro-homosexual propaganda is an abuse of the trust parents place in
schools."

--
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