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Fury over plan to let imams teach the Koran in state schools

Last updated at 23:07pm on 25.03.08

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The NUT says state schools must allow children to practise their faith

State schools must allow children to practise their faith by inviting in preachers such as imams and introducing prayer rooms and religious holidays, the country's biggest teaching union said yesterday.

They should make arrangements for pupils to be given "instruction" in their own religion during the normal school day and rights to pray and worship instead of attending regular assemblies, the National Union of Teachers said.

Schools should also allow different uniform rules, serve meals that meet religious requirements such as halal and kosher, plan holidays around festivals and special days and provide private prayer rooms.

The call comes as new research today shows the numbers attending mosques in England and Wales will outstrip Roman Catholic churchgoers by 2020.

Christian Research expects Catholic worshippers at Sunday Mass to fall to 679,000 but Muslims at Friday prayer to increase to 683,000. The figures also suggest the number of Muslims at mosques will overtake Church of England members at Sunday services.

Under today's radical plan from teachers' leaders, designed to overhaul faith-based education, the NUT called on ministers to abandon the historic daily act of Christian worship in favour of "inclusive" school assemblies.

Existing faith schools should be stripped of rights to select pupils on the basis of the religion they practise to prevent them "discriminating" against others and fuelling community tensions, the document said.

The blueprint, from the most left-wing of the three main teaching unions, is aimed at undermining faith schools by encouraging religious parents to consider non-faith community schools instead.

NUT leaders argued that requiring schools to cater for all religions would limit demand for faith schools and bring children of different backgrounds together.

However the proposal, effectively creating a rival system to faith schools, sparked a furore last night over the extent to which schools should be required to accommodate different religious beliefs.

The Church of England, head teachers' leaders and campaigners for a secular education system condemned the plan.

The Muslim Council of Britain welcomed calls for imams to provide religious instruction in schools and moves to accommodate Islamic beliefs but said many parents would still prefer a faith school.

Tory MP Douglas Carswell, a member of the Commons Children, Schools and Families Committee, said the plan amounted to "social engineering" and accused the NUT of attempting to impose an "aggressive multi-cultural agenda".

Launching the paper, NUT general secretary Steve Sinnott said the dominance of England's Christian schools was "unjust and unsustainable" amid growing demands from Muslim families who want their own religious state schools.

There was now "every argument for the curriculum and staffing to respond positively both to the diversity of faiths within schools".

The plan meant "more than simply religious education" but "religious instruction", Mr Sinnott said.

"I believe that there will be real benefits to all our communities and youngsters if we could find space within schools for pupils who are Roman Catholics, Anglican, Methodist, Jewish, Sikh and Muslim to have space for more religious instruction in schools," he said.

"You could have imams coming in, you could have the local rabbi coming in and the local Roman Catholic priest.

"If there were opportunities where they all talked together to the youngsters, what a fantastic example that would be."

The policy paper went on to call for "reasonable accommodations" including "provision of adequate private prayer space within schools" and "recognising religious holidays which embrace all faiths".

It added: "Inclusive school assemblies must replace 'collective worship' with separate optional prayers and worship for those that require them."

Schools are still required by law to stage a daily act of worship of a mainly Christian character, although it is not widely enforced.

But a spokesman for the Church of England said: "Religious instruction belongs with the religious institutions, the churches, the mosques, the temples.

"It is for religions to teach their faith to people; it is for schools to teach about religion."

John Dunford, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: "This plan could compound the problem if the people coming into schools were offering extreme views.

"How would you have any control over what was being taught in your school?"

The NUT document was formally adopted by delegates at the union's annual conference in Manchester yesterday but there was ignorance among some as to its content.

A scheduled debate on faith schools, on a motion calling for an entirely secular education system, will no longer take place due to time constraints.

Mr Carswell said it ran against the grain of attempts to tackle segregation by promoting common values.

"This is social engineering. Ideologues in the NUT whose ideas belong to the 1960s and 1970s want to impose an aggressively multi-cultural agenda.

"In case the NUT hasn't heard, multi-culturalism is generally regarded as a failure and even central government is abandoning it."

About 7,000 state schools in England are faith schools - roughly one in three of the total - educating 1.7 million pupils.

The large majority are either Church of England or Roman Catholic schools which have control over their own admissions arrangements.

A spokesman for the Department for Children said: "There is no policy to increase the number of faith schools – it is up to local communities to decide the kind of schools they want."


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Reader views (11)

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This is ridiculous. Religion is a PERSONAL CHOICE and nothing to do with schools. If you want your children to be educated then send them to school. If you want them to learn religion then send them to your church/mosque/place of worship.

It's about time religion was kicked out of schools altogether. If you are so narrow minded that you want your beliefs forces on everyone elses children and expect them to make way for you this is not tolerance of any kind. It is invasion of other peoples right to do as they want as well.

The mealy mouthed liberalism of this issue simply sickens me as it tries to appease religions that don't preach tolerance themselves, but expects everyone else to tolerate them.

If it was the other way around it would be called hypocrisy but because it is religion people think it has special status and provision should be made.

If you want your child to be indoctrinated into your belief system then that is choice but why the hell should I as a tax payer have to fund that indoctrination?

Do any of you fund my lack of belief or make special provision for that? No you don't and neither do I expect you to, but you are quick to want it for yourself and your religion.

We live in a modern world and if you want to teach your children to follow iron age and medieval value systems then do it in your own time and pay for it out of your own pockets. Don't expect every tax-payer to fund your beliefs when they do not support or follow those beliefs.

- Paul Davis, Hertford, Herts

Excellent, well done NUT for standing up for what is common sense!

There are 2 options:

1) Force students of other religions to sit through 'Christian' assemblies, withhold their freedom to pray in schools, send a message to them that we are not excepting of their religions and that it has no place in this society. Allow them to carry on having 'split identities' torn between their religion at home/ mosque and their school. Allow them to grow up with a feeling of animosity for society for not being accepting of their faith and withstricting their human rights. Give them an impression that we are hypocrites by boasting to the world about freedom and human rights while their are being quashed.

2) The other option is to allow students of other faiths to practice their religions i.e. praying, assemblies, study of their scriptures e.t.c. in state schools. This sends them a signal that we live in a tolerant, fair and just society, that we are excepting of people from all colours or religion.

I'm sure men from this land were supposed to have fought for values I mentioned in option 2?

- Adam, London

So, England continues to surrender its cultural and religious heritage to Islam. Why do the citizens of England allow this to continue?

- John Johnson, New York, USA

It concerns me massively that these NUT people teach our children. Why don't they get on with teaching instead of poking their left-wing noses into politics? These teachers are the very people responsible for thousands of children leaving the education system every year without the ability to read or count. Teach or become politicians; but you cannot do both!

- Anthony, London

Schools should be simply places of education - and not opportunities for the infiltration of religions.

- Alan Eaves, Buckhurst Hill, Essex

This is a very slippery slope. Keep education separate and teach them the 3 r's first.

- Charlie, London

Why don't the NUT just get on with representing there members, and keep out of politics, no one listens to there hair brain schemes.

- Brian, Wiltshire, UK

As a teacher I think this is crazy - what next, Hindus and Sikhs having time off on their religious holidays and people coming in to teach them about their religion? Schools should be secular (and yes if this means calling the holidays Winter and Spring breaks instead of Christmas and Easter so be it), with religion being completely separate from education. There is not enough time to teach the basics as it is!

- Emma, Nunhead, London

If you want to practice your faith go to a faith school. All other school are for the whole community and don't favour one faith over another.

- Cassandra, London, UK

A simple solution. If any parent feels their child should be informed about various religions, go to the mosque, synagogue or wherever and ask them to explain their 'religion'. Don't lumber the school curriculum with extra work that is non-meaning to many.

- Roy G, Solihull, England

Is this the same NUT which is seeking to ban visits by our Armed Forces to our schools? Religious indoctrination in, international peace-keeping responsibilities out. National Union of Teachers, beyond parody.

- Craig Menzies, London


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