Lundi 30 janvier 2012 1 30 /01 /Jan /2012 11:28

The Muslims Next Door

Posted by

 

Now celebrating its tenth anniversary, Silicon Valley Reads is a program that encourages everyone in northern California’s Santa Clara County “to read the same book, at the same time, and talk about it.” If you think this sounds like a program ripe for abuse by progressives in our educational system promoting groupthink about a social agenda, go to the head of the class.

The program is presented by the Santa Clara County Office of Education, Santa Clara County Library and the San Jose Public Library Foundation, with funding from foundations, nonprofits, corporations, and private donors. Each year it offers several dozen free public events at libraries, schools, and other community locations. Speakers and panels, a film festival, book discussion groups, essay contests, teen book groups and children’s story times are all part of a concerted effort to focus the community on a given theme. According to their website,

between 4,000-5,000 individuals attend these events and thousands more read the featured books on their own, for high school and college assignments, and with their book clubs…

And of course, no progressive indoctrination is complete unless it targets children:

Silicon Valley Reads has also recommended companion books for children with themes similar to the featured book for adults. This allows families to read together and to discuss contemporary issues and themes.

The themes of past book selections have included illegal immigration, WWII Japanese internment, racism, and censorship. Now we come to the theme for 2012, kicking off on January 25: “Muslim and American – Two Perspectives.” If you suspect that the program will consist of the usual disinformation about Islam and whitewashing of its darker aspects, then you get a gold star.

One of the program’s two book selections is The Muslim Next Door, sporting the cutesy subtitle The Qur’an, the Media, and That Veil Thing and a disarming cover photo of author Sumbul Ali-Karamali smiling warmly. As she writes on the program’s website,

I hope this is only one step in many that will serve to erase misconceptions and build intercultural understanding.

 

The panelists include playwright Wajahat Ali, lead author of “Fear Inc., The Roots of the Islamophobia Network in America,” a leftist propaganda bludgeon from the Soros-funded Center for American Progress which numerous FrontPage writers have exposed and discredited.

There’s more. In addition to an exhibit of Islamic art called “Invoking Peace,” there will be screenings of films in conjunction with the project. Among them are the disingenuous fluff bio-pic Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet, which, as Robert Spencer notes, “studiously avoid[s] any mention of the more unsavory elements of the Prophet of Islam’s enduring example”; Inside Islam: What a Billion Muslims Really Think, based on the manipulated work of Saudi-funded academic apologist John Esposito and Obama Muslim adviser Dahlia Mogahed; and Prince Among Slaves, the true story of an African prince sold into slavery in the American South. Who knows? Perhaps the latter will spark discussion about the slavery still being carried on by some Muslims today.

“Muslim and American – Two Perspectives” is a perfectly valid topic for community discussion and study – but only if interfaith dialogue stops being a monologue that runs in one direction only: from Muslim to non-Muslim. Only if Muslims stop slapping a smiley face on Islamic theology, and stop blaming the media and non-Muslim ignorance/prejudice for Islam’s bad reputation. Only if the voices of Muslim apostates like Ibn Warraq and Nonie Darwish are heard, and their books shared and discussed. Only if it includes panel discussions and documentaries on the tsunami of Islamic Jew-hatred swelling in the wake of the “Arab Spring,” or on the genocide being intensified against Christians anywhere that Muslim fundamentalists hold sway, or on the war being waged on freedom of speech by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in collusion with Hillary Clinton and the Obama administration.

Then we could begin to have a more honest and productive program than the whitewashed pap being served up this year by the Silicon Valley Reads propagandists.

Par La Libellule - Publié dans : FrontPage Magazine
Ecrire un commentaire - Voir les 0 commentaires
Retour à l'accueil

Présentation

Profil

  • La Libellule
  • THERESE ZRIHEN-DVIR, Regard d'un Ecrivain sur le Monde
  • Femme
  • ecrivain un jet de lumière une flamme
  • Thérèse Zrihen-Dvir, écrivain, née à Marrakech, Maroc, petite-fille du président de la communauté juive de Marrakech, Rabbi Moché Zrihen, Rabbin-juge. Elle cherche une voie pour rapprocher les coeurs et les ames.

Recherche

Calendrier

Mai 2012
L M M J V S D
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      
<< < > >>

Créer un Blog

Texte Libre

Créer un blog gratuit sur over-blog.com - Contact - C.G.U. - Rémunération en droits d'auteur - Signaler un abus - Articles les plus commentés