Ok

By continuing your visit to this site, you accept the use of cookies. These ensure the smooth running of our services. Learn more.

02 April 2008

DHIMMI NYC COUNCIL SPONSORS RESOLUTION TO OBSERVE MUSLIM HOLIDAYS

af4fdaaa5266945bff6b43dc652302fd.jpgLooks like New York City  - as well as New York State - are vying for the Dhimmi capital of the USA. In an effort to pander to muslims, the school calendar will likely make two


Islamic holidays - Eid Ul-Fitr and Eid Ul-Adha - as observed holidays in the city’s public school calendar.

It is ludicrous that any city would think that adding more time off is in the best interest of the students -American students have a shorter school year than those living in twelve of the world’s other wealthiest nations. Students in other information-age countries receive twice as much instruction as American students in core academic areas during their secondary school years."

Clearly the politicians are manipulating the children's school calendar to appease the politician's constituencies with little thought to what is right for New York's school-age children. These children do not need additional days off to appease religious groups and certainly should not be used as ploys to garner votes for self serving politicians.

One wonders how far political  pandering will go - with muslims greatly increasing in numbers in NYC  - will acceptance of regional Sharia Law be next?

NATIONAL NEWS

Muslims Push for Public School Holidays
by Saeed Shabazz
Special to the NNPA from the Final Call

NEW YORK (NNPA) - A New York City councilman and 12 colleagues have sponsored a resolution calling on the state to require the Department of Education to incorporate the Muslim holidays of Eid Ul-Fitr and Eid Ul-Adha as observed holidays in the city’s public school calendar.

Immediately Mayor Michael Bloomberg called Resolution 1281 a “slippery slope,” saying students cannot afford more days off. “When you have a city as diverse as we do, with virtually every religion known to man practiced, if we closed school for every single day there wouldn’t be any school,” news reports quoted the two-term mayor as saying.

“The mayor’s reaction is not a surprise to me,” Councilman Robert Jackson (D-Manhattan), a Muslim, told The Final Call. “This resolution is clearly important because it shows respect for Islam,” the councilman added. “It also says to those who say no, are you willing to change as the population of New York City has changed?”

The resolution quotes from data supplied by Columbia University’s Middle East Institute’s NYC Project, which says the estimated Muslim population in the city is 600,000 people. According to the Coalition for Muslim School Holidays, 12 percent of NYC school students are Muslim, with 95 percent of Muslim school-age children attending public schools.

Councilman Leroy Comrie (D-Queens) told The Final Call it was a “no-brainer” to support Resolution 1281. “I have at least seven mosques in my district. It is important to show that we will do whatever we can to work with all communities,” the deputy speaker of the council said. “If you are part of the city then you should be respected and acknowledged as everyone else is,” Councilman Comrie added.

A blogger, commenting in the New York Sun, the newspaper that broke the story, said, “school closings were old union negotiated holidays from back in the day when many of the teachers and students were Jewish; and that there is now a different demographic in the city.”

The state Department of Education’s website lists the following school closings: Rosh Hashanah (two days), Good Friday; non-religious holidays are Columbus Day, Presidents Day, Election Day, Memorial Day and Martin Luther King Day. Calls to education officials were not returned.

Councilman Jackson said the resolution has been reported back to the city council Education Committee, which he chairs. “Right now the ball really is in the state’s court,” he said, referring to a bill sponsored by State Sen. John Sabini (D-Queens) and Assemblyman Rueben Diaz Jr. (D-Bronx). If passed, it would smother the city’s opposition by forcing the schools to close on both days—as New Jersey schools already do in Atlantic City, Irvington and Trenton.

Sen. Sabini has said in the past that the size of the Muslim population in NYC means it’s time to talk about recognizing Islamic holidays.

Councilman Jackson said the success of the bills also depends on the proactive stance of the Coalition for Muslim School Holidays. “The coalition has to get out and communicate with legislators who aren’t aboard yet,” he said.

The coalition, which comprises some 50 labor, religious, community and advocacy groups flexed its collective muscle after a Jan. 2006 statewide test was scheduled on Eid Ul-Adha. Muslim reaction was fierce enough to force legislators to pass a law preventing mandatory state testing from occurring on any religious holidays.

POSTED BY /  http://theopinionator.typepad.com

Comments

american's people are stuiped with short memory

Posted by: zak | 03 April 2008

The comments are closed.