Updated:  Tue., Aug. 24, 2010, 5:07 AM 

HS test 'slams'  Christianity, lauds Islam 

By YOAV GONEN Education Reporter  

Last Updated:  5:07 AM, August 24, 2010 

Posted: 2:33 AM, August 24, 2010  

State testmakers played favorites when quizzing high-schoolers on world  
religions -- giving Islam and Buddhism the kid-gloves treatment while socking 
it  to Christianity, critics say. 

Teachers complain that the reading  selections from the Regents exam in 
global history and geography given last week  featured glowing passages 
pertaining to Muslim society but much more critical  essay excerpts on the 
subject 
of Christianity. 

"There should have been a  little balance in there," said one Brooklyn 
teacher who administered the exam  but did not want to be identified. 

"To me, this was offensive because  it's just so inappropriate and the 
timing of it was piss-poor," he added,  referring to the debate over the plan 
to 
build a mosque near Ground Zero.  

The most troubling passage came from Daniel Roselle's "A World History:  A 
Cultural Approach," observers said. 

The passage reads: "Wherever they  went, the Moslems [sic] brought with 
them their love of art, beauty and  learning. From about the eighth to the 
eleventh century, their culture was  superior in many ways to that of western 
Christendom." 

Meanwhile, an  excerpt listing the common procedures used by Christian 
friars to introduce the  religion in Latin America stated that "idols, temples 
and other material  evidences of paganism [were] destroyed," and "Christian 
buildings [were] often  constructed on sites of destroyed native temples" -- 
and built with free Indian  labor, to boot. 

"I can see why some people might see these questions as  skewed," said Mark 
MacWilliams, a religious-studies professor at St. Lawrence  University in 
upstate Canton. "Why does the exam seem to have only documents  that portray 
Islam as a religion of peace, civilization and refinement, while it  
includes documents about Christianity that show it was anything but peaceful in 
 
the Spanish conquest of the Americas?" 

At the same time, MacWilliams  criticized the presentation of Hernando 
Cortes' conquest of Mexico -- which he  said portrayed him as a "choirboy" 
rather than a "conquistador." 

"It's  quite a whitewash," he said. 

Some other religious-studies experts  contacted by The Post said they 
didn't see what the fuss was all about.  

"[The] selections seem about equal in terms of being  
historically/culturally focused, all relatively positive about the 
contributions  made by each 
religion as it was introduced into various societies," wrote  Barbara Sproul, 
an associate professor of religion at Hunter College in  Manhattan. 

Yet Michael Dobkowski, chair of Religious Studies at Hobart  and William 
Smith Colleges in upstate Geneva, asserted that it was only  Christianity for 
which both positive and negative aspects were highlighted.  

"Some [essays] suggest a kind of Christian triumphalism and the desire  to 
convert the other that is not present in the treatment of Islam," he said.  
"My impression is that there is certainly a divergence of approaches and  
impressions that should not appear in a Regents exam of this caliber."  

State education officials said that every effort had been made to  present 
accurate historical information through the excerpts. 

They said  the questions had been developed over a four-year period and 
require students to  use their own knowledge of social studies to produce 
answers. 

They added  that they weren't aware of any complaints about the exam. 

The Muslim  reading: 

* “Wherever they went, the Moslems [sic] brought with them  their love of 
art, beauty and learning. From about the eighth to the eleventh  century, 
their culture was superior in many ways to that of western Christendom.  

* “Some of the finest centers of Moslem life were established in Spain.  In 
Cordova, the streets were solidly paved, while at the same time in Paris  
people waded ankle-deep in mud after a rain. Cordovan public lamps lighted 
roads  for as far as ten miles; yet seven hundred years later there was still 
not a  single public lamp in London!” 

Source: Daniel Roselle, A World  History: A Cultural Approach 

The Christian reading: 
Common Procedures used by  Friars in Converting Areas in Spanish America: 

* “Idols, temples and  other material evidences of paganism destroyed.” 

* “Christian buildings  often constructed on sites of destroyed native 
temples in order to symbolize and  emphasize the substitution of one religion 
by 
the other.” 

* “Indians  supplied construction labor without receiving payment.” 

* “In a  converted community, services and fiestas were regularly held in 
the church  building.” 

Source: Based on  information from Charles Gibson, Spain in America 

Additional reporting  by Chuck Bennett 

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