SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : THE SLIGHTLY MODERATED BOXING RING -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lane3 who wrote (16766)7/7/2002 3:57:26 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21057
 
Interesting. VA is also one of the strongholds of the Religious Right. Seems like there's a church on every corner in that state.



To: Lane3 who wrote (16766)7/7/2002 5:07:30 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21057
 
University's Quran Reading Stirs Controversy

NEW YORK — What could be a better way to
start a college career than by reading from
a Good Book?

Plenty, if the book in question is the Quran and
your country has been attacked by Muslim terrorists, according to one
pro-family group.

Virginia-based Family Policy Network is taking aim at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill for requiring all incoming freshmen this fall to read a
book about the Quran, the holy book of Islam.

"Today I am ashamed to admit that I am a graduate of UNC," FPN chairman
and 1981 Chapel Hill graduate Terry Moffitt said in a statement earlier this
year. "The entire university system in North Carolina should be ashamed of
itself for forcing a religion on students that many will find not only offensive,
but totally opposed to their own religious views."

The book flap started when the university announced the 3,500 freshmen in
the Class of 2006 will be reading Approaching the Qur’an: The Early
Revelations. The book translates and discusses the earliest 35 suras, the
first words Muslims believe God revealed to the prophet Mohammed. The
students will read the book during orientation week in mid-August and
discuss it for "a couple of hours" in groups of 20 to 25 led by faculty
members, according to UNC Chancellor James Moeser.

"This was a book chosen in the wake of Sept. 11," Moeser said. "A fifth of the
world’s population subscribes to the Islamic religion and yet it’s not a
well-understood religion. This is a great opportunity to have a conversation
on the teachings of one of the world’s great religions."

The school selects a different book for the freshmen every year to introduce
them to college-level intellectual discourse. Last year, incoming freshmen
were required to read Confederates in the Attic, about the neo-Confederate
movement.

But Moffitt argued this year's selection amounts to state support for one
religion over another.

"I think the University of North Carolina would allow any religion to be studied
except for Christianity," Moffitt said in a telephone interview. "Why not make
Islamic students read from the Bible?"

Moffitt wants students to have an option to study other religions, and says
the school should drop its "pro-Islam stance." Moffitt said the group has also
sent a letter asking the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina to
help overturn the requirement.

Moffitt, who has not read Approaching the Qur’an, said he fears the students
will get an incomplete picture of Islam, a politically correct view formed from
only part of the entire holy book.

"It’s not going to show the good and the bad, it’s going to paint Islam just as
a peaceful, loving religion," he said.

That's not the case, according to the book’s author, Michael Sells, a
professor of comparative religion at Haverford College.

"The book is not called Islam. I think that (Moffitt is) misinterpreting what the
book is," Sells said. "The purpose of a book is to give a sense of why a billion
people belong to the tradition. It makes no judgment about Islam or
the Quran as a whole. … My premise is there’s more to Islam than
controversy and wars."

Moeser said reading passages of the Quran doesn’t mean students will be
taught the Islamic view of life is the correct one.

"We’ll read this just as we read the Communist Manifesto to study Marx or
The Little Red Book to study the Cultural Revolution," he said. "This is an
attempt to understand a religion, not to promulgate its beliefs."

Seth Jaffe, staff attorney for the ACLU of North Carolina, said there is no
prohibition against a state university requiring a class about religion, as long
as it doesn't promote one over the other. "We are keeping an eye on it, but so
far it does not seem to be problematic," he said.

Sells said he wasn’t surprised by the controversy. "I can’t think of any book in
creation that, if you required 3,000 first-year students to read, someone
wouldn’t object to," he said.
foxnews.com

Found on Jorj's thread:
Message 17702538