Washington Free Beacon
 
 
Revisionist History
Education consultants working to  whitewash history of Islam in public 
schools 

 
 
BY: _Bill  McMorris_ (http://freebeacon.com/author/bill-mcmorris/)  - April 
11, 2012 
 
Under pressure from a well-funded Muslim education group, the nation’s 
public  school textbooks increasingly present a politically correct portrait of 
Islam,  according to a new report. 
_ACT for American  Education_ 
(http://www.actforamericaeducation.com/welcome/) , a non-profit organization 
dedicated to raising awareness of  Islamic 
fundamentalism, said it _found_ 
(http://www.actforamericaeducation.com/textbook-research)   examples of 
historical revisionism in 38 of the most popular 
history textbooks  used in public schools. 
ACT traced the new approach to Islam to a non-profit group that employs  
education consultants with links to political Islam, draws money from  
controversial donors, and has promoted glaring inaccuracies about the 
religion’s  
history. 
The Institution on Religion and Civic Values—which recently changed its 
name  from the _Council on Islamic Education_ (http://www.cie.org/) —is  
working to conduct a “_bloodless_ 
(http://www.ocweekly.com/2001-11-01/news/pulling-his-cheney/) ”  revolution in 
the school system according to founder 
Shabbir Mansuri. 
One of the IRCV’s former leading scholars has been associated with groups  
that have raised questions in the past for their ties to radicalism. 
Susan Douglass, who served as IRCV’s curriculum specialist for more than 10 
 years, taught social studies at the Islamic Saudi Academy in Alexandria, 
Va., a  school funded by Saudi Arabia. The class of 1999’s _valedictorian_ 
(http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A00E7DF153DF934A15751C0A9639C8
B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all)   was convicted of plotting to assassinate 
former President George W. Bush in  2005. 
At the time, liberal Sen. Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) _questioned_ 
(http://schumer.senate.gov/new_website/record.cfm?id=260754)   whether the 
school is “
another example of the Saudi government turning a blind  eye to terrorism.” 
“I hope that the ISA is not another madrassa in the United States,” he  
said. 
Douglass has also worked for an Islamic think tank—the International  
Institute of Islamic Thought—that was raided by federal officials in 2002. The  
group was founded with the backing of former Muslim Brotherhood members in 
the  1980s and had financial ties to _anti-Israel  terrorist groups_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A12823-2004Sep10_4.html)  in the 
early 
2000s. 
_Douglass_ (http://acmcu.georgetown.edu/113996.html)  now works as  an 
education consultant at Georgetown University’s Prince Alwaleed Center for  
Muslim-Christian Understanding, which was renamed in 2005 after Prince Alwaleed 
 
Bin Talal donated $20 million to the center. 
She did not return calls for comment. 
One of the IRCV’s patrons, California defense contractor Rahim Sabadia, has 
 funneled millions to Islamic organizations in the U.S. 
Sabadia sent more than $300,000 to IRCV from 2008 to 2010, according to  
documents obtained by the Washington Free Beacon. He also pumped more  than 
$300,000 to the radical Council on American Islamic Relations during that  
same time period, and gave a $300,000 check to the left-wing Rockefeller  
Philanthropy Advisors in 2009. 
His wife, Nafees El Batool, contributed nearly $60,000 to the Democratic  
National Senatorial Committee in the 2006 and 2008 cycles. Sabadia has split 
his  six figure political donations evenly between both parties. 
Sabadia lost his _security  clearance_ 
(http://www.ocregister.com/news/sabtech-303104-sabadia-miller.html)  in June, 
reportedly claiming in an email to 
a colleague that his  _charity  work_ 
(https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/96229-foia-emails-n0017805d2027.html)  
was to blame, according to the 
Orange County Register. 
Sabadia did not return calls for comment. 
The six figure donations are aimed at pushing an agenda, rather than good  
scholarship, according to ACT executive director Guy Rodgers. He said 
textbook  companies are eager to turn to groups like the IRCV in order to avoid 
 
accusations of racism. 
“The IRCV gives a faulty picture, a rosy picture of Islam,” he said. “The  
textbooks are responding to this politically correct concern that we’re 
being  intolerant to Muslims—they’re rewriting history to suit those concerns.”
 
IRCV has consulted for dozens of textbooks and instructed thousands of  
teachers since 2000. Mansuri, who did not return calls for comment, _said_ 
(http://www.ocweekly.com/2001-11-01/news/pulling-his-cheney/)  he  founded the 
group because, “The U.S., like any other nation, is part of the  global 
community. We need to know about each other.” 
But the type of information IRCV has provided to textbook companies sheds 
an  overly positive light on Islam, according to ACT. 
For example, the group played a major role consulting on Houghton Mifflin  
Harcourt’s 2003 history book, Across the Centuries. 
In the textbook, ancient Islam is depicted in a very progressive manner: as 
 tolerant of non-Muslims, in favor of equal rights for women, and unwilling 
 participants in the fight for Jerusalem and the resulting Crusades. 
The textbook featured many of the talking points forwarded by IRCV, 
including  the assertion that “under Islam, Jews and Christians had full 
religious 
freedom.  They built churches and synagogues, and several were financed by 
the state.” 
The book failed to mention the scholarship of acclaimed Johns Hopkins  
University professor Majid Khadduri, who founded the school’s Middle East  
Studies Program. The Iraqi-born Khadduri combatted the revisionism embraced by  
many Muslim scholars, _pointing  out_ 
(http://books.google.com/books?id=UHWd6gLZsFIC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q=jizya&f
=false)  that Muslims barred the creation of new churches, taxed 
non-believers,  branded them with yellow badges, and barred them from 
testifying in 
court. 
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt stands by the book, as well as the publisher’s  
relationship with Mansuri, according to company spokesman Josef Blumenfeld. 
“We have 180 years of trusted content and we vet that content to other  
organizations because standards change and perceptions change,” he said. “
[IRCV]  helped, but we reach out to a lot of different interested parties to 
get 
their  input.” 
Guidelines that have since been _scrubbed  from the IRCV site_ 
(http://web.archive.org/web/20050209214554/http://www.cie.org/publishers/policies.asp)
  
stated that the group would not work with textbook makers  for academic 
review “unless a substantial and substantive revision is planned by  the 
publisher.” Although the policies prohibit textbook endorsements, the  policies 
also said IRCV would promote textbooks that embraced its message. 
“IRCV may on occasion recommend textbooks that contain balanced coverage of 
 Islam and Muslim history,” the policies read. 
IRCV’s relationship with HMH ended in 2003. Blumenfeld could not comment on 
 the nature of the split, but dismissed the notion that HMH bowed to any 
kind of  pressure from the Islamic group. 
“We’d never give anyone veto power over our work,” he said.
 
Rodgers pointed to the treatment of the term jihad, often cited by 
Islamists  as the driving force behind the 9/11 attacks and terrorist groups 
such as 
al  Qaeda. The term is defined simply as a personal spiritual struggle in 
many  leading textbooks. 
“The most respected and authoritative collection of hadith contains  199 
references to jihad, and every one uses the term to mean warfare against  
infidels,” according to the _ACT  report_ 
(http://www.act5280.org/PDF/Textbook_Analysis_Summary.pdf) . 
Blumenfeld said ACT is wasting its time. 
“Anyone who says (textbooks are pro-Islam) is just looking to make a name 
for  themselves and should focus on doing something more productive,” he 
said. 
Rodgers, a former public school teacher, said the revisions “skew” a  
student’s ability to put the realities of Islamic terrorism in the proper  
context. 
“What teachers do and what textbooks do has a big influence on young people,
”  he said. “You see kids who grew up in the post-9/11 era who don’t know 
what  jihad is. How can we understand our enemy in the War on Terror if we 
are fed  historical revisionism?” 
“That’s not just an educational problem—that’s a national security  
problem.”

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