02-24-2010, 02:56 PM
For some reason my browser is misbehaving at the moment and it's a pain trawling through for live but disappearing threads, so I'm starting this new one.
I came across these two articles this morning. They are both saying that the religious are gathering forces, by working on the minds of the world's children. Contrary to what might seem apparent I do understand why a subscriber to a particular belief system would want to send their child to a faith-promoting institution. There was a time in my life when I would have taken that route for my own children had such an option been available. I also seriously considered educating my kids "otherwise" (i.e. at home). As things turned out I am very relieved that my children had to attend state schools and mix with a range of people.
Under Labour, so called "faith-schools" have seen a greater expansion than during any other time I can recall. Even under Thatcher's most ideological Tory regime the number of faith-schools was apparently shrinking. We seem to have learned little from our experience of the last few decades of dissent and strife in the UK ... for better or worse Northern Ireland/Ulster is part of the United Kingdom. The established education system was a major way of perpetuating sectarian differences. The way forward was seen to lie in integrated schools. In the rush for votes Labour has conveniently forgotten where those educational divisions led. The terrorist bomb in Newry a couple of nights ago should serve to remind us, but the next day Ed Balls, Education Secretary, was justifying why faith schools should be allowed to put their own slant on the interpretation of equality and sex education legislation currently passing through Parliament. I sat in horror listening to a Muslim Head Teacher from Leicester speaking on the news last night explaining that he would comply with the law and teach the new requirements for sex education and then tell his pupils that being gay is wrong and against the teachings of the Qur'an. Then they would be free to make up their own minds ... whatever that means.
Anecdotes hardly amount to evidence, but in my family the children who served Mormon missions are the ones who seem to be unshakeably faithful now and are perpetuating the lies to the next generation. Those who did not go through the missionary hothouse have found their own ways in life, which do not require the certainties of that particular branch of belief. I know I have simplified this and have not discussed which might be the cause and which the effect.
In the USA the picture is different. Rather than being cloistered with others in same-faith schools, parents are keeping their children away from school in increasing numbers and educating them at home. It appears that this eduation amounts in part to religious indoctrination. Again I can see how this has come about and I see how I might have been tempted down this route had the conditions been in place for it to happen.
If a nation wants its children educated, does the state have a right to demand what form that education should take? If parents are moving their children into educational settings that teach loyalty to religion over freedom of choice and loyalty to a broader community how is the safety of minorities ever to be protected and the freedoms of all valued?
I came across these two articles this morning. They are both saying that the religious are gathering forces, by working on the minds of the world's children. Contrary to what might seem apparent I do understand why a subscriber to a particular belief system would want to send their child to a faith-promoting institution. There was a time in my life when I would have taken that route for my own children had such an option been available. I also seriously considered educating my kids "otherwise" (i.e. at home). As things turned out I am very relieved that my children had to attend state schools and mix with a range of people.
Under Labour, so called "faith-schools" have seen a greater expansion than during any other time I can recall. Even under Thatcher's most ideological Tory regime the number of faith-schools was apparently shrinking. We seem to have learned little from our experience of the last few decades of dissent and strife in the UK ... for better or worse Northern Ireland/Ulster is part of the United Kingdom. The established education system was a major way of perpetuating sectarian differences. The way forward was seen to lie in integrated schools. In the rush for votes Labour has conveniently forgotten where those educational divisions led. The terrorist bomb in Newry a couple of nights ago should serve to remind us, but the next day Ed Balls, Education Secretary, was justifying why faith schools should be allowed to put their own slant on the interpretation of equality and sex education legislation currently passing through Parliament. I sat in horror listening to a Muslim Head Teacher from Leicester speaking on the news last night explaining that he would comply with the law and teach the new requirements for sex education and then tell his pupils that being gay is wrong and against the teachings of the Qur'an. Then they would be free to make up their own minds ... whatever that means.
Anecdotes hardly amount to evidence, but in my family the children who served Mormon missions are the ones who seem to be unshakeably faithful now and are perpetuating the lies to the next generation. Those who did not go through the missionary hothouse have found their own ways in life, which do not require the certainties of that particular branch of belief. I know I have simplified this and have not discussed which might be the cause and which the effect.
In the USA the picture is different. Rather than being cloistered with others in same-faith schools, parents are keeping their children away from school in increasing numbers and educating them at home. It appears that this eduation amounts in part to religious indoctrination. Again I can see how this has come about and I see how I might have been tempted down this route had the conditions been in place for it to happen.
If a nation wants its children educated, does the state have a right to demand what form that education should take? If parents are moving their children into educational settings that teach loyalty to religion over freedom of choice and loyalty to a broader community how is the safety of minorities ever to be protected and the freedoms of all valued?
Quote:Religion is on all the Labour lips today. First children's secretary Ed Balls got a roasting for allowing faith schools an exemption from equality requirements in the curriculum. Then Jim Murphy, Scottish secretary, set up a speech tonight calling for religion to have a greater role in politics and for Labour to appeal to religious voters.
Despite all this, it's still too early to worry about a distinct shift towards religion in the British political culture. Labour just made a calculation. It realised it would upset religious groups more with the double-blow of the equality bill and the children, schools and families bill than it would upset equality activists by passing the amendment today.
For a long time, Labour was ruled by two men whose political senses were sharp enough to realise the folly of allowing religion into the political realm ... (more)
Quote:It is generally understood that today’s youth are more supportive of equality for gay and lesbian people. Faced with losing the next generation, fundamentalists are ferociously scrambling to capture the minds of youth through homeschooling and the subversion of public education. By sequestering students at home or creating public schools where the only drink served in the cafeteria is Kool-Aid, they hope to reprogram tomorrow’s leaders.
It appears America’s religious fanatics are modeling their efforts on the success of radical Islamists in the Middle East, who reversed the trend of secularization in the region by hijacking education. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman recently wrote about this phenomenon:
Beginning in the 1970s, the trend in Yemen, Morocco, Egypt and the Persian Gulf “was to Islamicize education as a way to fight the left…”
…Then, in 1979, after the Saudi ruling family was shaken by an attack in Mecca from its own Wahabi fundamentalists, the Saudi regime, to fend off the anger of its Wahabis, gave them free rein to Islamicize education and social life in Saudi Arabia and neighboring states.
The rest is a very sad and tragic history ... (more)