J Siddiqi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:            Sunday 11 March 2007

  The prince married a man, and lived happily ever after
  The Observer
  http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,2031223,00.html
  A pilot scheme introducing books dealing with gay issues to children from the 
ages of four to 11 has just been launched in England's schools. 
  It is being argued that the books, one of which is a fairytale featuring a 
prince who turns down three princesses before falling in love and marrying a 
man, are necessary to make homosexuality seem normal to children. Fourteen 
schools and one local authority, backed by teaching unions and a 
government-funded organisation, are running the controversial scheme, which has 
been attacked by Christian groups.
  Twenty years ago the publication of Jenny Lives With Eric And Martin for use 
in schools led to an angry public debate. In response the government passed 
Section 28, an amendment to the Local Government Act 1988, that prevented local 
authorities and, by extension, schools from 'promoting homosexuality' or its 
acceptability as a 'pretended family relationship'. The amendment was repealed 
in 2003 and this is the first large-scale attempt to put similar books back 
into the curriculum. Other books on the list of recommended texts for the 
schools, which have not been named, include a story about a spacegirl with two 
mothers and a baby penguin with two fathers. If successful, the scheme will be 
extended nationwide. 
  'The most important thing these books do is reflect reality for young 
children,' said Elizabeth Atkinson, director of the No Outsiders project that 
is being run by Sunderland and Exeter universities and the Institute of 
Education (IoE) in London. 'My background is in children's literature and I 
know how powerful it is in shaping social values and emotional development. 
What books do not say is as important as what they do.' Atkinson argued that 
leaving images of gay relationships out of children's books was 'silencing a 
social message', and could end up with children being bullied later in their 
school lives if they were gay or were perceived as gay. Atkinson and 
co-director Renee DePalma have received nearly £600,000 in funding from the 
Economic and Social Research Council and backing from the National Union of 
Teachers and General Teaching Council. 
  Waterstone's last week alerted its chain of shops to the titles that include 
King & King, Asha's Mums and Spacegirl Pukes and says it will start stocking 
them if the pilot is successful. 
  'Lots of fairy tales are about princes and princesses - why not two princes?' 
said Mark Jennett, who is training staff involved in the pilot from 14 schools 
and one local authority. 'King & King is nothing to do with sex, it is about 
falling in love. Cinderella is not about sex - the problem comes not from kids 
but the nervousness of adults.' Jennett who wrote Stand Up For Us, a government 
document on homophobia, said the work was 'cutting edge' and teachers were now 
more likely to challenge children if they used the word 'gay' in a negative 
way. 
  Critics say that the launch of the scheme shows that there is still a need 
for Section 28 type legislation. 'The predictions of those who said the repeal 
of Section 28 would result in the active promotion of homosexuality in schools 
are coming true,' said Simon Calvert, spokesman for the Christian Institute. 
'Let's arrange a series of meetings around the country where parents of primary 
school children can look at these books. The majority would be aghast.' 
  Tahir Alam, education spokesman for the Muslim Council of Britain, agreed: 
'This is not consistent with Islamic teachings and from our point of view many 
parents would be concerned.' 
  Other parents felt that children aged four and five were too young for the 
books. 'I don't know of many younger primary school children who would really 
understand what homosexuality is,' said Andy Hibberd, co-founder of the support 
group, the Parent Organisation, who has sons aged seven and nine. 'I don't have 
a problem with what happens between consenting adults, but I don't believe it 
needs to be forced on young children.' 
  'And they lived happily ever after ...' 
  King & King 
  A queen wants her son to get married and become king. She arranges for a 
string of princesses to meet her son but he does not fall in love with any of 
them. 
  In the end it is one of the princesses' brothers who catches his eye. The 
princes get married and become two kings. 
  Spacegirl Pukes 
  A little girl who is about to set off on a space mission falls ill. Her two 
parents, mummy Loula and mummy Neenee take her home to look after her but then 
they fall ill too. When she recovers, the spacegirl puts back on her suit and 
goes on an adventure to space. 
  And Tango Makes Three 
Two male penguins, Roy and Silo, live in a New York zoo but feel left out when 
all their friends pair up. They spend all their time together until the 
zoo-keeper realises they must be in love. The zoo-keeper gives the couple an 
egg and Tango is born, the first penguin in the zoo with two daddies.   

         

 
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