posted at Informed Comment
 
_In Iraqi Classrooms, Sunni Muslim Extremists Ban Evolution,  Patriotism 
And Literature_ 
(http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/juancole/ymbn/~3/4lCpJ_38wj0/extremists-patriotism-literature.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email)
 
  
Posted:  02 Oct 2014 09:28 PM PDT 
 
By Ahmad Mohammed | Kirkuk | via Niqash.org 
In areas under the control of Sunni Muslim extremists, teachers have been  
issued a special set of instructions. Among other things they say that males 
and  females are to be separated, all mentions of evolution are to be 
removed from  textbooks and anything that encourages patriotism –like the 
phrase, 
“Republic of  Iraq” – is banned.  
As the school year began in Iraq recently, schools in the areas in the  
northern province of Kirkuk that are under the control of Sunni Muslim  
extremists received their own special set of instructions. 
The Sunni Muslim extremists group known as the Islamic State, or IS, issued 
 most schools in west Kirkuk –including the areas of Zab, Riyadh, Abbasi 
and  Rashad in the Hawija district – a special document called Bushra Wa 
Tamim. 
One of local school teachers there, Abdullah al-Jibouri, told NIQASH: “This 
 means ‘good news from the commander of the faithful’ as he attempts to 
banish  ignorance and elevate Sharia sciences.” 
In fact this was the IS group’s set of new instructions for local schools.  
NIQASH sighted a copy of these instructions, which were signed by the 
so-called  Ministry of Education of the Islamic State. The most important part 
of 
the  document states that every student at every stage of school should be 
considered  to have passed the scholastic year of 2013-2014; Iraq’s school 
year starts in  October and ends in June. The only exceptions would be the 
sixth grade, as well  as any students who were failed because they cheated or 
because they were absent  or because they didn’t have the right to 
participate in exams. 
The IS group’s instructions also state the following: “Classes shall be  
resumed at the beginning of the current school year and will be conducted  
according to Sharia rules, males and females will be separated and this 
applies  to the teaching and administrative staff too”. 
Cancelled classes include art, music, philosophy and social studies 
classes.  Also banned are geography, history and literature lessons as well as 
any  
teaching about Christianity. Parts of Islamic education classes have also 
been  cancelled. A compulsory curriculum will be offered by the IS’ own “
education  experts”. Basic subjects such as physics, chemistry, mathematics, 
Arabic and  English will continue to be taught. 
Additionally the IS group wanted the phrases – “Republic of Iraq” or  “
Republic of Syria” deleted from use and “faithless” songs and poems would be  
banned, as well as any of the latter that had connotations of patriotism 
for  Iraq or Syria. 
In science books, any reference to Darwinism or to natural evolution was to 
 be deleted. This would be replaced by sentences that made it clear that 
God was  the creator of everything. However students would be allowed to study 
chemistry  and physics because these were laws used by God. 
Al-Jibouri says that most teachers are afraid that IS fighters might use  
force in order to guarantee that teachers respect this new curriculum and the 
 new school rules. The group had already made threats against teachers and 
their  families, saying they would destroy their houses and punish them if 
they did not  comply. 
On September 14, the IS’ education ministry had told teachers present in 
the  area to go to their schools and start work, says Farhan Hussein Saleh, 
the head  of Kirkuk’s Department of Education, confirming that there’s 
pressure on the  teachers to teach the subjects prescribed by the IS group and 
to 
show up at  their workplaces. 
“If these areas remain out of government control, then students’ grades 
will  be dependent on final exams rather than coursework or mid-term exams,” 
Saleh  says – he is assuming that final exams will be held when the IS group 
have been  driven out of Iraq. Saleh says he hopes this will happen before 
the end of the  school year for the students’ sake. 
Currently students who are living in areas under the control of the IS 
group  have been having to travel elsewhere to take official 
government-sanctioned  exams. They went to Kirkuk city or to areas not under 
the control of the 
IS  group to take the first round of exams. The second round of exams is 
scheduled  for October 12 and the Iraqi government decided exams would only be 
held in  areas under its control. 
Students in areas under IS group control will be allowed to take exams in  
government-controlled areas, says Barwin Mohammed, head of the Kirkuk 
provincial  council’s education committee. Additionally, she says, the local 
council is  helping them do this by helping them gain entry at checkpoints 
going 
into the  city and by helping bring them to halls where they can sit exams. 
Mohammed says her committee is also following up on school conditions in 
the  IS-controlled areas and that it has extended a helping hand to teachers 
in those  areas too. 
On the other hand, there are some educators in Kirkuk who don’t care what 
the  IS group has planned for schools under its control. The curriculum being 
 prepared by the IS group is of no interest to anybody but the IS group, 
states  Majid Izzat, another member of the Kirkuk provincial council’s 
education  committee. “Any curriculum that differs from the officially approved 
one 
should  not be acknowledged or accredited,” he told  NIQASH

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