Wednesday, June 18, 2008

The Protest at the Islamic Saudi Academy

I reported Monday night on the upcoming demonstration at the Islamic Saudi Academy in Alexandria. The event went off as planned early the yesterday morning. One of the protesters emailed me this afternoon with this brief account:

ISA demoThe demonstration made both The Washington Times and The Washington Post, and got a lot of TV coverage. This is the kind of thing — against the Saudis — that will get MSM coverage. Also, the sex abuse charges contributed to the media attention.

Gerald Connolly, the chairman of the Fairfax Board of Supervisors, is on the videotape, and he gets quite testy and silly — says we’re all bigots. All this has happened due to his support — the whole Islamization of Northern Virginia.

ISA demo

I didn’t look for the WaPo article — I stay away from that paper as much as I can — but here are some excerpts from the online version of the Times article :

Islamic school draws fire

Protest follows arrest of top official on obstruction charge

ISA demoThe arrest of a top official at a Saudi-financed school in Northern Virginia has fueled further criticism of the institution following findings released last week that say its textbooks contained violent and intolerant language.

“They’re free to come here and worship, but they are not free to come here and teach hate,” said Andrea Lafferty, executive director of the Traditional Values Coalition and one of about 15 protesters that gathered Tuesday morning outside the Islamic Saudi Academy’s main campus in Alexandria.

The academy — a 900-student private school with campuses in Alexandria and Fairfax — has been the subject of renewed scrutiny after an investigation by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom found that textbooks used in the school contained passages that blame Jews for “discord” and say it is sometimes permissible to kill non-Muslims.

The school’s director general, Abdalla Al-Shabnan, was arrested June 9 and charged with obstruction of justice — a misdemeanor count that follows accusations that he failed to report an allegation of child abuse made by a student at the school.

A 5-year-old girl at the academy’s campus in Fairfax said she had been sexually assaulted by a family member, according to court documents. Mr. Al-Shabnan, 52, met with the child’s parents, documents show, but did not notify authorities of the complaint within a 72-hour period required by Virginia law.

“At no time did [Mr. Al-Shabnan] report the allegations to any child protective agency or law enforcement agency,” an affidavit for a search warrant filed in Fairfax County Circuit Court says. “He further stated that he was not aware that he was required to make such a report.”
- - - - - - - - -
Court documents also say Mr. Al-Shabnan “stated he did not believe [the girl’s] complaint and felt she may be attempting to gain attention.” He ordered a written report of the incident deleted from a secretary’s computer at the Fairfax campus, documents say.

As part of the investigation, Fairfax County Police searched school offices last month and seized computers, notebooks, student files and disks.

[…]

Protesters on Tuesday said the director’s arrest was another sign of trouble at the academy. The textbook review conducted by the federal panel focused on 17 books used during the last school year and obtained from independent sources.

The passages found in the review include a 12th-grade Koranic interpretation textbook that states it is permissible for a Muslim to kill those who have left the faith and one that says “the Jews conspired against Islam and its people.”

[…]

“That’s absolutely not true,” said Rahima Abdullah, the school’s education department director. “What we teach here is love and tolerance.”

The school has since released a statement calling the panel’s report “erroneous” and saying it “contains mistranslated and misinterpreted texts.”

“We have new books now, and the ones the commission is talking about have been out of use for some time, and were misinterpreted then,” Ms. Abdullah said.

Ah, yes — misinterpreted again. Happens a lot, doesn’t it?

“Jihad” doesn’t mean “holy war”. It means “peace, love, and understanding”. Everyone knows that.

This school would not be attracting all the media attention if it hadn’t been for the child sex abuse charges. The Islamization of Northern Virginia isn’t news enough by itself — somebody had to hurt an innocent little kid before the TV and the newspapers could interest themselves in it.

But the spotlight is on the Islamic Saudi Academy now. We’ll see what happens next.

Several videos of the demonstration can be found here.


Credit for the first two photos: Pakay Media.

9 comments:

zabel said...

Propagators of religious indoctrination of children are supposed to be concerned about child abuse?

Zenster said...

“That’s absolutely not true,” said Rahima Abdullah, the school’s education department director. “What we teach here is love and tolerance.”

Sure thing. And monkeys shooting bottle rockets are going to fly outta my butt.

Rondo said...

Traditional Values Coalition---

christian taliban fighting the taliban.

another bunch of moralfags, one evil shouldn't be replaced by another evil.this is counterintuitive, this just hurts the cause.

and how is she/they sure they're teaching jihad? if it's true then she should be at the F.B.I or at a Police Station reporting it, instead of just standing there doing nothing.

Sir Henry Morgan said...

" ... sometimes permissible to kill non-Muslims. "

"Sometimes"?

In blunter language - it is permissible to kill non-Muslims. "Sometimes" as used here is what's known as a weasel word.

Henrik R Clausen said...

'Sometimes' just might mean "in retaliation for causing mischief in the land" (Sura 5:32) - that is, un-Islamic behaviour.

Not particular tolerant, I say.

Anonymous said...

Sure thing. And monkeys shooting bottle rockets are going to fly outta my butt.

But they do preach love and tolerance! It's only for Muslims, mind you, but that's only a minor detail.

Zenster said...

randian: It's only for Muslims, mind you, but that's only a minor detail.

Only if you're a Muslim. Otherwise it is a matter of life and death. Usually death if the Muslims have any say about it. I'd sooner bet on monkeys flying outta my butt than Islam ever having any good intentions.

Anonymous said...

Zenster, I hope my major dose of sarcasm wasn't lost on you.

Zenster said...

randian, not entirely but I'll confess to being on the receiving end of a near-total humorectomy with respect to Islam. Of far greater importance, however, was the singular opportunity to mention, not once but twice in one thread about monkeys flying outta my butt.