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Monday, June 04, 2007

No Problem w/ Cultural Education

I’m a little surprised by the uproar that a little cultural education brings.

For one night, on May 9, the quaint colonial town of Amherst, New Hampshire, was transformed into a Saudi Arabian Bedouin tent community, with the help of 80 seventh-graders at the Amherst Middle School. The weather cooperated, providing 85 degree temperatures to give an authentic Saudi feel to the evening.

More than 250 guests arrived at the open tent and were welcomed with an Arabic greeting of “Marhaba” by students at a Saudi customs desk.

During the check-in, guests selected a traditional Arabic name for their name badge and completed an actual Saudi customs form, which warned in bold letters “Death for Drug Trafficking “ at the top.

Once inside, guests were encouraged to circulate among 14 different stations created by the students.

The Arabic food-tasting station offered four entrées, curried chicken, lamb, tomato chicken with cardomom, and Moroccan chicken, served with pita breads, hummus, and couscous. Fresh fruits, cardomom coffees, and spice teas were also served.

Flowing fabrics hung from the ceiling separated the family and men-only dining sections. The tables were set on large rugs and lowered so that the diners sat on the floor.

Only the seventh-grade boys were allowed to host the food stations and the Arabic dancing, as the traditions of Saudi Arabia at this time prevent women from participating in these public roles.

Dressed in traditional Arabic wear--long plaid kilts, white shirts and turbans--the boys offered food and entertained guests. The Arabic dancers enthusiastically performed to music and encouraged male visitors to join their dance.

Seventh-grade girls hosted the hijab and veil stations, where other female guests learned how to wear the required head covering and veils. An antique trunk full of black abayas worn by women, and white thobes worn by the men, were available for guests to try on.

I’ve quoted the same section of the article that one of the detractors, Kim Priestap from Wizbang, quoted just to make sure we’re working from the same context. Here’s what she had to say:

How would you feel if your seventh graders participated in this?

I found this at LGF and I was stunned. I know middle schools teach about world religions, but this project is way over the top, particularly the photos of the little girls in hijabs.
[...]
There are several reasons why this picture makes my blood boil. To begin, this picture embodies al Qaeda’s goal to convert everyone, especially Americans, to Islam, and they will use force to do so. Adam Gadahn, al Qaeda’s English speaking servant, has issued a number of videos demanding that Americans convert or die. These kids’ parents most likely have no idea the horrible symbolism these images represent. Second, hijabs, along with burqas, represent the horrible oppression and abuse of women by a misogynistic culture and religion. For example, in Iran, women were horribly beaten in public for not wearing the correct head coverings. Third, this project is nothing more than a lesson in political correctness; Muslims are the new protected class. Would the school offer a project in which the kids were required to participate in a Jewish Seder? I seriously doubt it.

Actually, I wouldn’t mind at all if my seventh grader was given an opportunity to participate in this kind of a school activity. In fact, I would embrace the opportunity that it gave me to talk to my kid about Islam and the Middle East. I would enjoy that they were being introduced to new ideas and experiences, even though those ideas and experiences were probably watered down versions of the reality.

We might be involved in a war with radical Islamists, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t appreciate the beauty of Arab culture. Nor is it a bad thing to learn about another person’s culture and traditions--and I sure as hell don’t see how the school doing this translates into a recruitment drive for al Quaeda or Islam. That strikes me as bordering on the paranoid (and no few steps from xenophobia).

Quick story time: the g-phrase, as many know, is a school teacher. Some time ago, some of the teachers at her school were teaching the Pledge of Allegiance in Spanish. The parents were given an opportunity to have their kids opt out, but at least one parent wouldn’t let it go at that: he called the school, he ranted, he raved, and he angrily said that the exercise--part of a larger unit teaching about hispanic culture--shouldn’t even be taught in the school.

While we could argue the merits of teaching kids to say the Pledge in Spanish, what bugged me most was that this man was saying that his belief that it was wrong should trump all the teachers and parents who believed that it was, at worst, a harmless teaching exercise. It wasn’t enough that he could excuse his kid; he wanted to limit the opportunities of everyone else’s children.

My hunch--and it’s a very strong hunch--is that the parents of the children doing the Bedouin tent community night were aware of (and had given permission for their kids to participate in) the school activity. I would be shocked if the parents hadn’t had the opportunity to keep their kids out of the assignment.

So, what’s the problem?

Don’t completely misunderstand: as I said, I would take the opportunity to talk to my son or daughter about Islam and Arab cultures. I would explain why I felt that, ordinarily, the wearing of the hidjab is a greater sign of how women are treated in most Islamic communities, about how homosexuality and apostasy are punished, and why our culture and political systems are clashing with some of the more radical and strict adherents of Islam. Talk about an opportunity to teach your kids.

Not only would it be a chance to explain my view of the Middle East (both the good and the bad), but it would be an opportunity to talk about what I think is great and what is flawed about America. I live for this shit.

I understand that a parent wouldn’t want their child to participate. So speak against it, keep your kids out of it, and then take a moment to respect the fact that some of us hold a very different view and it isn’t because we want to capitulate to the demands of the terrorists. For some of us, it is an opportunity to open up a much larger conversation.

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David, why do you hate America?

on Jun 04 2007 @ 06:23 PM

Unfortunatly, many parents are quite afraid of those larger conversations.  And, unfortunatly, some parents can’t see past the end of their nose.

I think it’s awesome to teach the kids the Pledge in Spanish.  My oldest is tutoring some of his fellow, spanish-only speaking schoolmates next year, and what he is most excited about is learning some of their language.  And he’s 9.

I also really like the exercise from the quote.  I get it that it’s a touchy culture, what with the war and all, but when people say things like Muslims are the new protected class, it affirms why we need to protect a class every now & then, doesn’t it?  Aren’t muslims born in America Americans, after all? Not all Southern white men are in the Klan.  Some of them are just plain old Americans. I hope my kids get to learn about all the cultures that make up their country.

on Jun 04 2007 @ 06:24 PM

David, why do you hate America?

Because of pork rinds.

And Paris Hilton.

I hope my kids get to learn about all the cultures that make up their country.

America is a phenomenally diverse country and I would hope that my kids--if I had any--would be curious about all of the differences, too. Consider that my “hell, yeah.”

on Jun 04 2007 @ 07:02 PM

From the Wiki on Pork Rinds:

“The consensus is that pork scratchings originated in the Black Country area of the West Midlands, in England. It would seem that pork scratchings were very much a food of the working classes which have their origin in the 1800s when it was produced as part of the tradition of families keeping their own pig at home and feeding it up for slaughter.”

Sorry, England is responsible for pork rinds, not us.

Heh...that was an interesting Google.

on Jun 05 2007 @ 12:10 PM

Wow.

One less thing America did to ruin the world.

I feel so much better right now.

on Jun 05 2007 @ 12:16 PM

You know who doesn’t like pork rinds?  Islamic terrorists.

on Jun 05 2007 @ 12:23 PM

Damnit.

This means the terrorists have won, doesn’t it?

on Jun 05 2007 @ 12:30 PM

I’m pretty sure that means that they’ve lost.

Mmmm, pork rinds.

on Jun 05 2007 @ 01:39 PM

Until Paris Hilton is free, nobody can win.

Free Paris!

on Jun 05 2007 @ 03:15 PM

Free her from what? Communicable diseases and a tremendous lack of class?

on Jun 05 2007 @ 03:16 PM

Since the rooms at the Paris Hilton start at 180 Euros per night (http://www.hilton-paris.com/paris/rooms.html), it could be a while before anybody wins.

Besides, do you think they run those huge buildings for free?  There must be profit to incent the investment of capital; how are you to make a profit if the hotel is free?

What are you—some sort of Marxist?

on Jun 05 2007 @ 03:40 PM

Re: language - by the third grade, I had taken introductory Spanish and French, all without once considering not speaking English the rest of the time. 

Re: other cultures - in school I learned all about the history of Christianity, the basic tenets of Islam, and then all that Eastern hocus-pocus too.  AND LOOK HOW I TURNED OUT!

wink

Hmmm, maybe that’s why they fear it - once the kids learn that every culture has its own religious beliefs, and that they often conflict, they might start to think it’s just a bunch of myths…

I say we need more!

on Jun 05 2007 @ 05:36 PM

Great post, David. I think its been a demostrated problem with the war that we (and especially the CIA and military) know little about muslim and middle eastern cultures. It’s a shame when learning is discouraged in the school system, isn’t it?

By the by, though, there was a guy I saw talking on the Bill Moyer Journal a couple of weeks ago about how the overly accepting Europeans are in danger of being ligitimately and governmentally subsumed (like, through elected positions, esp. in Holland) by a growing radical islamic movement within their own countries. He adequately scared me, but I also have a lot of faith in ‘the system,’ that is, Liberalism in the grand sense, democracy, and so on. Cultural relativism has its limits, but really I don’t think this 7th grade class was in any way crossing that line. but anyway…

on Jun 05 2007 @ 09:05 PM
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