http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewCulture.asp?Page=/Culture/archive/200709/CUL20070
905a.html
 
NYC Arab School Opens Amid Firestorm
By Fred Lucas
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
September 05, 2007

(CNSNews.com) - On the day a controversial Arab culture school opened in
Brooklyn, a coalition gathered on the steps of New York City Hall to voice
their opposition, expressing concerns about Islamic indoctrination and
demanding more transparency from city officials.

The Khalil Gibran International Academy (KGIA) opened to about 60 sixth
graders in Brooklyn on Tuesday. It plans to expand its classrooms for grades
6-12 over the next several years, but opponents don't want to even see the
school open for another year.

Stop the Madrassa, a group of parents and teachers opposed to the school,
called for its immediate closing. They also announced the creation of a new
national organization to pressure New York City to respond to a Freedom of
Information Act request to provide information to the public regarding the
textbooks, curriculum, lesson plans and other material for the school.

Pamela Hall, a member of Stop the Madrassa, considered the rally a major
success based upon the media attention it received. 

"We are going national with a new group, Citizens Form American Values in
Public Education," Hall told Cybercast News Service. "We have a booklet that
we introduced today to be used as a tool for parents and schools across the
country to see what is in their children's textbooks."

A madrassa is a Muslim school. New York City Schools Chancellor Joe Klein
stressed that the KGIA is a secular public school, and he would shut it down
if it became a religious school.

Controversy and questions about the religious ties of the school already
prompted the resignation of founder and Principal Debbie Almontaser last
month. 

It was discovered then that she shared office space with an Islamist group
that sells T-shirts encouraging New York Muslims to join an "intifada" and
defended the group's sentiments, saying the term means only "shaking off." 

The term intifada is most typically associated with the attacks on Israeli
Jews by Islamic radicals between 1987 and 1993, in some of the territories
gained by the Israelis after the Six Day War in 1967.

Klein named Danielle Salzberg as the interim principal. Salzberg had helped
in the development of the school. "Khalil Gibran will add a new, important
option for our students who are interested in a rigorous academic program
with an international and Arab language theme," Klein said in a statement,
after naming Salzberg. 

The teachers and parents group was joined by three national organizations:
the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, the Thomas More Law
Center and the Center for Security Policy.

"The Catholic League is not making accusations, but it's raising serious
questions," said Catholic League President Bill Donohue in a statement. "We
will continue to do so until our concerns have been alleviated."

Among the problems Donohue found was the "stonewalling by the New York City
Department of Education whenever we have sought information about the
curriculum, textbooks and school advisors."

According to the city's Department of Education, the KGIA will have the same
standards that every New York City public school is required to meet. 

The Arab language curriculum was developed by teachers trained at a
federally funded Arabic-language instruction program, and the
Arabic-translated books will be from English children's books published by
Scholastics, a department press release said.

However, in lieu of specific information available to the public, opponents
want more answers. Brian Rooney, communications director for the Thomas More
Law Center, questioned why the Freedom of Information Law requests filed in
July have yet to be answered. 

"This lack of response strongly suggests that the school cannot meet state
education standards," he said. "Moreover, it continues to raise suspicions
that KGIA is an anti-American, anti-Christian, and anti-Jewish propaganda
center operating as a public school."

It's this stonewalling by the city that has prompted the continued
controversy, Hall said, adding, "the story will not go away as long as they
continue to stall."

The executive summary
<http://www.pipelinenews.org/images/KGIAexecsummary.pdf>  of the school
describes a day in the life of a student as passing through the hallway
adorned with portraits of Arab philosophers, inventors and poets. In the
cafeteria, a retired, Arab-speaking community member will come daily to
converse with students to strengthen their Arab fluency, according to the
summary.

The school also caused controversy because of its heavily religious advisory
board, which includes three Islamic imams, as well as Christian and Jewish
clergy. One of the imams named to the board was Talib Abdul-Rashid, who
preaches at the Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood in Harlem. 

The mosque's Web site
<http://www.mosqueofislamicbrotherhoodinc.org/aboutus.html>  proclaims,
"Allah is our goal. The prophet Muhammad is our leader. The Quran is our
constitution. Jihad is our way. And death in the way of Allah is our
promised end."


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