Teacher Blows Whistle On Minnesota “Charter” School - It’s A Madrassa
A substitute teahcer has spilled the beans on a Minnesota charter school founded by the group Muslim American Society of Minnesota, whose mission is “establishing Islam in Minnesota.”
These guys have been exposed…more light on the subject, spread the word, spread this link.
They want to Islamisize America.
Not on my watch.
Katherine Kersten reports for the Star-Tribune:
Recently, I wrote about Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy (TIZA), a K-8 charter school in Inver Grove Heights. Charter schools are public schools and by law must not endorse or promote religion.
Evidence suggests, however, that TIZA is an Islamic school, funded by Minnesota taxpayers.
TIZA has many characteristics that suggest a religious school. It shares the headquarters building of the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, whose mission is “establishing Islam in Minnesota.” The building also houses a mosque. TIZA’s executive director, Asad Zaman, is a Muslim imam, or religious leader, and its sponsor is an organization called Islamic Relief.
Students pray daily, the cafeteria serves halal food - permissible under Islamic law — and “Islamic Studies” is offered at the end of the school day.
Zaman maintains that TIZA is not a religious school. He declined, however, to allow me to visit the school to see for myself, “due to the hectic schedule for statewide testing.” But after I e-mailed him that the Minnesota Department of Education had told me that testing would not begin for several weeks, Zaman did not respond — even to urgent calls and e-mails seeking comment before my first column on TIZA.
Now, however, an eyewitness has stepped forward. Amanda Getz of Bloomington is a substitute teacher. She worked as a substitute in two fifth-grade classrooms at TIZA on Friday, March 14. Her experience suggests that school-sponsored religious activity plays an integral role at TIZA.
Arriving on a Friday, the Muslim holy day, she says she was told that the day’s schedule included a “school assembly” in the gym after lunch.
Before the assembly, she says she was told, her duties would include taking her fifth-grade students to the bathroom, four at a time, to perform “their ritual washing.”
Afterward, Getz said, “teachers led the kids into the gym, where a man dressed in white with a white cap, who had been at the school all day,” was preparing to lead prayer. Beside him, another man “was prostrating himself in prayer on a carpet as the students entered.”
“The prayer I saw was not voluntary,” Getz said. “The kids were corralled by adults and required to go to the assembly where prayer occurred.”
Islamic Studies was also incorporated into the school day. “When I arrived, I was told ‘after school we have Islamic Studies,’ and I might have to stay for hall duty,” Getz said. “The teachers had written assignments on the blackboard for classes like math and social studies. Islamic Studies was the last one — the board said the kids were studying the Qu’ran. The students were told to copy it into their planner, along with everything else. That gave me the impression that Islamic Studies was a subject like any other.”
After school, Getz’s fifth-graders stayed in their classroom and the man in white who had led prayer in the gym came in to teach Islamic Studies. TIZA has in effect extended the school day — buses leave only after Islamic Studies is over. Getz did not see evidence of other extra-curricular activity, except for a group of small children playing outside. Significantly, 77 percent of TIZA parents say that their “main reason for choosing TIZA … was because of after-school programs conducted by various non-profit organizations at the end of the school period in the school building,” according to a TIZA report. TIZA may be the only school in Minnesota with this distinction.
Why does the Minnesota Department of Education allow this sort of religious activity at a public school? According to Zaman, the department inspects TIZA regularly — and has done so “numerous times” — to ensure that it is not a religious school.
But the department’s records document only three site visits to TIZA in five years — two in 2003-04 and one in 2007, according to Assistant Commissioner Morgan Brown. None of the visits focused specifically on religious practices.
The department is set up to operate on a “complaint basis,” and “since 2004, we haven’t gotten a single complaint about TIZA,” Brown said. In 2004, he sent two letters to the school inquiring about religious activity reported by visiting department staffers and in a news article. Brown was satisfied with Zaman’s assurance that prayer is “voluntary” and “student-led,” he said. The department did not attempt to confirm this independently, and did not ask how 5- to 11-year-olds could be initiating prayer. (At the time, TIZA was a K-5 school.)
Zaman agreed to respond by e-mail to concerns raised about the school’s practices. Student “prayer is not mandated by TIZA,” he wrote, and so is legal. On Friday afternoons, “students are released … to either join a parent-led service or for study hall.” Islamic Studies is provided by the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, and other “nonsectarian” after-school options are available, he added.
Yet prayer at TIZA does not appear to be spontaneously initiated by students, but rather scheduled, organized and promoted by school authorities.
Until recently, TIZA’s website included a request for volunteers to help with “Friday prayers.” In an e-mail, Zaman explained this as an attempt to ensure that “no TIZA staff members were involved in organizing the Friday prayers.”
But an end run of this kind cannot remove the fact of school sponsorship of prayer services, which take place in the school building during school hours. Zaman does not deny that “some” Muslim teachers “probably” attend. According to federal guidelines on prayer in schools, teachers at a public school cannot participate in prayer with students.
In addition, schools cannot favor one religion by offering services for only its adherents, or promote after-school religious instruction for only one group. The ACLU of Minnesota has launched an investigation of TIZA, and the Minnesota Department of Education has also begun a review.
TIZA’s operation as a public, taxpayer-funded school is troubling on several fronts. TIZA is skirting the law by operating what is essentially an Islamic school at taxpayer expense. The Department of Education has failed to provide the oversight necessary to catch these illegalities, and appears to lack the tools to do so. In addition, there’s a double standard at work here — if TIZA were a Christian school, it would likely be gone in a heartbeat.
TIZA is now being held up as a national model for a new kind of charter school. If it passes legal muster, Minnesota taxpayers may soon find themselves footing the bill for a separate system of education for Muslims.
The department is set up to operate on a “complaint basis,” and “since 2004, we haven’t gotten a single complaint about TIZA,” Brown said. In 2004, he sent two letters to the school inquiring about religious activity reported by visiting department staffers and in a news article. Brown was satisfied with Zaman’s assurance that prayer is “voluntary” and “student-led,” he said. The department did not attempt to confirm this independently, and did not ask how 5- to 11-year-olds could be initiating prayer. (At the time, TIZA was a K-5 school.)
Zaman agreed to respond by e-mail to concerns raised about the school’s practices. Student “prayer is not mandated by TIZA,” he wrote, and so is legal. On Friday afternoons, “students are released … to either join a parent-led service or for study hall.” Islamic Studies is provided by the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, and other “nonsectarian” after-school options are available, he added.
Yet prayer at TIZA does not appear to be spontaneously initiated by students, but rather scheduled, organized and promoted by school authorities.
Request for volunteers
Until recently, TIZA’s website included a request for volunteers to help with “Friday prayers.” In an e-mail, Zaman explained this as an attempt to ensure that “no TIZA staff members were involved in organizing the Friday prayers.”
But an end run of this kind cannot remove the fact of school sponsorship of prayer services, which take place in the school building during school hours. Zaman does not deny that “some” Muslim teachers “probably” attend. According to federal guidelines on prayer in schools, teachers at a public school cannot participate in prayer with students.
In addition, schools cannot favor one religion by offering services for only its adherents, or promote after-school religious instruction for only one group. The ACLU of Minnesota has launched an investigation of TIZA, and the Minnesota Department of Education has also begun a review.
TIZA’s operation as a public, taxpayer-funded school is troubling on several fronts. TIZA is skirting the law by operating what is essentially an Islamic school at taxpayer expense. The Department of Education has failed to provide the oversight necessary to catch these illegalities, and appears to lack the tools to do so. In addition, there’s a double standard at work here — if TIZA were a Christian school, it would likely be gone in a heartbeat.
TIZA is now being held up as a national model for a new kind of charter school. If it passes legal muster, Minnesota taxpayers may soon find themselves footing the bill for a separate system of education for Muslims.
(Star Tribune)
MAN OH MAN! I can’t wait for the ACLU to pounce on this!
(take a moment to enjoy the sound of the crickets)
How bad will it get before the masses awake?
April 9th, 2008 at 8:03 amThe enemy within.
Tax-payer funded jihadis!!! What is our country coming to?? I hope we dont end up like Europe.
April 9th, 2008 at 8:20 amJim Jam don’t worry, we won’t end up like Europe. Not on my watch and I am sure, not on your watch either.
April 9th, 2008 at 8:59 amInteresting that this is happening in a very liberal state like Minnesota. But the muzzies are so bold, I know that they would try to institute this crap anywhere in the U.S.
Where is the ACLU? In collusion with them perhaps? They are so bent on wiping out any and all Christian or Jewish values in our public schools that these jerks at the ACLU cannot see the forrest from the trees. They will not even bother to investigate this.
Smoke em in the nest now, 8 yrs from now these little muslim fucktards will be spreading out into this country causing shit.
April 9th, 2008 at 8:59 amSee thats the problem, by the time anything real is done to them they will be everywhere. just like illegal immigrants. then we’ll hear the same shit we’re hearing now, “what are we supposed to do? round them all up on buses and take them away?”
seriously i can see the see the same thing happening. mass deportation will never happen in this country. it may very turn out like the movie Red Dawn.
anyone care to join up with me and become a wolverine?
April 9th, 2008 at 9:24 amK (the infidel)
April 9th, 2008 at 9:53 amCount me in!
There is coming a time for some 25 million vets in this country to push back.
smoke em now is it, follow the wisdom of Barney Fife, and nip it in the bud.
My child’s life and liberty weighed against those little piggies? Easy choice and without guilt or shame.
The reality of what we are facing is so far from our little secure world that many are blind to it.
The crux of the biscuit is where the tipping point is.
April 9th, 2008 at 10:14 amThis is disgusting. Any children I may have in the future will definitely be attending private schools, the public system is beyond gone. Islamic-centered schools, LGBT schools, multicultural schools, what comes next? Anything that bashes America and the white man, I assume. I currently work for a large public school system, and I will verify that the administrators are insane, rabid, leftist political hacks. Thank God I’m moving to the South this summer, I think I’ll fit in much better. :gun:Islam
April 9th, 2008 at 11:07 amWith all due respect, to everybody chiming in with “Not on my watch!”…
Just what do YOU plan to do about it?
I am as disgusted as everyone else here, but what can we do individually apart from vote non-Muslim (as if that helps) when we go to the booths?
If you claim to be “on watch,” I would respectfully point out that THERE ARE MADRASSAS BEING BUILT IN THE US RIGHT NOW!”
On YOUR watch!
Your plans, folks?
April 9th, 2008 at 1:47 pmkurt-not as lean,twice as mean,always a Marine. I eat fear for breakfast and dine on (jihadi) death. Unleash the Devil Dogs of War. GET SOME!!!
April 9th, 2008 at 5:40 pm