Virginia: Teaching Children How to Defend Hate

In American schools, children discuss history, sometimes take mock roles on political issues, but recently one Arlington, Virginia school’s exaggerated relativist views led to plans to teach children how to represent hate.  The teachers involved apparently believe that hate groups that stand against universal human rights represent a “political” issue, and to offer all perspectives from the world at a mock United Nations exercise, the voices that hate human rights should also be expressed.  (It is no small irony that this was just days after the widely ignored Human Rights Day on December 10.)

According to reports in the Washington Post, Arlington, Virginia 8th grade teachers Eric Tarquinio and Christine Joy saw nothing wrong with this, until parents of students who were to represent the voices of hate complained to the school.  After that the event was canceled, with the Swanson Middle School Principal Chrystal Forrester and the teachers expressing their regrets on bringing up issues of a “sensitive nature.”

I have not yet been specific about the hate ideology that children were to represent.  In fact, it should not matter.  If children were being asked to represent a hate ideology of racial supremacy, misogyny, Nazism, anti-Semitism, anti-Christianity, Islamophobia, etc., the natural response should have been the same – why would any taxpayer-funded public school teachers be seeking to have children represent ANY ideology of hate – for a mock United Nations event?  What do children really learn when their teachers think it is legitimate exercise to represent ideologies of hate – as a legitimate expression of political views?

Too much of academia and too much of America consciously refuses to acknowledge some anti-human rights ideologies as ideologies of hate.  Some hate we just won’t talk about. We will even ignore that some hate is hate at all.  This is a dangerous and serious problem in America today.

The hate ideology that was to be defended by some Swanson Middle School children was the extremist hate of the Taliban.  The Washington Post describes the extremist Taliban hate group merely as an “Islamic fundamentalist group” indicating that children who were to represent the Taliban hate group’s views were to help “pose solutions to the conflict in Afghanistan.”  (Let’s not forget that this is the same Washington Post that gives editorial space to supporters of Hamas, Hezbollah, and most recently to wife-beating defender Sheik Ali Gomaa to speak on “modernity” and women’s rights in Islam.)  Washington Post reporter Valerie Strauss defended the calls for children to represent the views of extremist Taliban as “an intriguing and legitimate exercise.”

Can you imagine teachers asking children to represent other forms of hate to help “pose solutions” to conflicts?  How many teachers would still be employed in public schools if they instructed children to defend the views of the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan, for example? Can you imagine newspaper writers defending the idea of having children represent the racial supremacist hate of the Ku Klux Klan as a “legitimate exercise”?

Of course not, because Americans understand and recognize white supremacism as hate.  But extremism by those who hate both non-Muslims and other Muslims is something we won’t talk about, won’t recognize, won’t even acknowledge the existence of, even as our President calls for more of our young men and women to fight and possibly die in fighting against such advocates of hate, while at the same time, other parts of the administration seek to promote negotiations with such advocates of hate.  In every case, there is not an acknowledgment of the Taliban’s ideology as one of hate.  Some argue if there are many advocates of the Taliban’s ideology of hate, then it must be a legitimate political ideology, failing to remember that at one point in America’s history there were 4 million members of the Ku Klux Klan hate group.  All Americans should know that having quantities of adherents never rationalizes or legitimizes ideologies of hate.

Nor is this a partisan issue.  This has been a problem during much of the Bush administration, and on “The American Conservative” Philip Giraldi defends the Swanson school exercise in seeking to have children represent the Taliban’s views.  Philip Giraldi states that “I would think that teaching students that there might well be two sides (or more) to an argument is not intrinsically harmful and might actually result in some of those being educated realizing that bombing the natives does not always make for the best foreign policy.”

He is right about one thing – we need to understand the “argument” of the Taliban – but we need to understand it as one of hate against our universal human rights.  But what he, the Swanson school teachers, the Washington Post, and so many others fail to grasp is that there is a big difference between understanding the “argument” of hate and legitimizing hate as legitimate political dialogue and legitimate “cultural” difference.  We have one omni-culture of humanity based on our universal human rights and dignity for all.  Any “culture” that defies our universal human rights challenges the most basic truths inherent for all human beings.  That is no different what the ideology of hate is or where it is located.

This embarrassing incident to Swanson school demonstrates the depth of the denial on this ideology of hate that not only threatens the human rights of people in Afghanistan and our soldiers, but also threatens the human rights of people in America and around the world.

Our teachers, newspaper writers, and political pundits (on both sides) need to brush up on lessons of their own regarding the truths that we hold self-evidentfor all people.

Children should never be taught how to defend or rationalize hate.
Because we know that ultimately – Love Wins.

love-wins-lg

Canada: Alleged ‘honour killing’ trial won’t start until 2011 – Aqsa Parvez

Canada: Alleged ‘honour killing’ trial won’t start until 2011
Toronto Sun: A Mississauga father and his son charged in the 2007 ‘honour killing’ of Aqsa Parvez will stand trial in 2011.”
— “Aqsa’s brother Waqas Parvez and her father Mohammad Parvez are charged with first-degree murder in the strangulation slaying of the Grade 11 student.”
— “The four-week trial is expected to begin Jan. 10, 2011, with next year being used to deal with pre-trial motions.”

Aqsa Parvez - 16 year old victim of December 10, 2007 "honor killing"
Aqsa Parvez - 16 year old victim of December 10, 2007 "honor killing"

Chicago: Extremist Group Conspires Against Rights

In the Chicago suburbs on December 20, 2009, a group that has conspired to deny Americans their Constitutional and civil rights will be using a government-managed facility to recruit new members to their extremist cause. In this case it will be the extremist Hizb ut-Tahrir America organization, which will be using the Lombard Park District community building in the Village of Lombard.

On July 19, 2009, the Hizb ut-Tahrir America organization held a recruitment meeting in another Chicago suburb of Oak Lawn, Illinois, in the Hilton Hotel.  The self-defined extremist organization Hizb ut-Tahrir America at the July 19 event distributed brochures to the public calling for the “death penalty” for those who committed the “treason” of leaving Islam; this is found on page 62 of Hizb ut-Tahrir’s brochure titled “Islamic reformation.”  An electronic form of such public death threats by Hizb ut-Tahrir against “apostates” is on the “official Hizb ut-Tahrir” web site Khilafah.com, linked to the Hizb ut-Tahrir America web page promoting the Lombard, Illinois event.  Hizb ut-Tahrir rejects democracy and rejects secular nations, seeking only to promote an international “Khilafah” of Muslims, with its own set of laws.

Hizb ut-Tahrir America has sought to intimidate those who would exercise their Constitutionally-protected religious freedom by stating that in the global “Khilafah” of Muslims those who “publicly abandon Islam” should know “that they will be killed for it.” According to Hizb ut-Tahrir America’s handouts in the Chicago suburbs, those who choose such religious freedom are committing “an open attack on the basis of the state which is Islam, essentially it is viewed as treason and a political attack on the Khilafah in order to undermine it”… which according to Hizb ut-Tahrir America deserves “the death penalty.” On July 19, 2009, in full view of local law enforcement (and reportedly federal law enforcement) in Oak Lawn, Illinois, Hizb ut-Tahrir handed out this brochure calling for “the death penalty” against “apostates” from Islam to a reported 700 attendees at this conference.

Emboldened, Hizb ut-Tahrir America’s latest recruitment activity on December 20 will now be using a government-managed community building in the village of Lombard.  There is no public denunciation by government officials.  There is no public condemnation of this anti-democracy international Hizb ut-Tahrir organization, with a long history of making death threats both in the U.S. and around the world.  There is no public call for Hizb ut-Tahrir to retract its continuing promotion in the United States of a document calling for “the death penalty” against “apostates.”

Wouldn’t we be outraged if white supremacists were using a government-managed community building to hold meetings?  Wouldn’t we be more than outraged if such a white supremacist group had been calling for the “death penalty” for white Americans who disagreed with their supremacist views?  Wouldn’t we be demanding legal and law enforcement action to end such a conspiracy to violate others’ civil rights through intimidation?

At what point are open and public death threats (in writing no less) by extremist roups to specific identity groups recognized by our government and law enforcement as nothing less than conspiracies to violate protected American civil rights?  At what point is the use of public facilities to call for the “death” of identity groups recognized as a hate crime?

In America and around the world, we have seen the consequences of failing to take action against extremist groups inciting hatred against others with death threats.  Hizb ut-Tahrir and similar groups’ calls for “death” against others is considered a call to action for those who share this philosophy of hate.  Just last month, on November 2, in Arizona, a 20 year old girl Noor Almaleki died from an attack by her father for not adhering to what his family told the Arizona Republic were “Muslim values.” We are certain that the majority of Muslim Americans would reject such views, but we have also seen similar killings in Ohio, Indianapolis, Texas, and Georgia.  Who is next to die as a result because of such jate?

Death threats by extremist organizations have very real, very deadly consequences.  It is past time for Illinois and the federal government to act on the conspiracy by Hizb ut-Tahrir America to deny Americans’ freedom of religion, by its publicly calling for the death of those who seek such freedoms. It is not only an outrage; it is also a growing conspiracy to use intimidation tactics of death threats to violate our rights as American citizens.

Hizb ut-Tahrir Logo with the Black Flag of Extremism
The logo of the Hizb ut-Tahrir extremistt organization with its Black Flag of Extremism

Turkey: Plot Targeting Turkey’s Religious Minorities Allegedly Discovered

Turkey: Plot Targeting Turkey’s Religious Minorities Allegedly Discovered
— CDN reports
: “Chilling allegations emerged last month of a detailed plot by Turkish naval officers to perpetrate threats and violence against the nation’s non-Muslims in an effort to implicate and unseat Turkey’s pro-Islamic government.”
— “Evidence put forth for the plot appeared on an encrypted compact disc discovered last April but was only recently deciphered; the daily Taraf newspaper first leaked details of the CD’s contents on Nov. 19.”
— “Entitled the ‘Operation Cage Action Plan,’ the plot outlines a plethora of planned threat campaigns, bomb attacks, kidnappings and assassinations targeting the nation’s tiny religious minority communities — an apparent effort by military brass to discredit the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). The scheme ultimately called for bombings of homes and buildings owned by non-Muslims, setting fire to homes, vehicles and businesses of Christian and Jewish citizens, and murdering prominent leaders among the religious minorities.”
— “Dated March 2009, the CD containing details of the plot was discovered in a raid on the office of a retired major implicated in a large illegal cache of military arms uncovered near Istanbul last April. Once deciphered, it revealed the full names of 41 naval officials assigned to carry out a four-phase campaign exploiting the vulnerability of Turkey’s non-Muslim religious minorities, who constitute less than 1 percent of the population.”
— “A map that Taraf published on its front page — headlined ‘The Targeted Missionaries’ — was based on the controversial CD documents. Color-coded to show all the Turkish provinces where non-Muslims lived or had meetings for worship, the map showed only 13 of Turkey’s 81 provinces had no known non-Muslim residents or religious meetings.”
— “The plan identified 939 non-Muslim representatives in Turkey as possible targets.”