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Posts Tagged ‘khalil-gibran-academy’

EEOC Finds Bias in NYC Firing Arab School Principal, Almontaser

Saturday, March 13th, 2010
Debbie Almontaser

Debbie Almontaser pictured in 2007, before her removal as Khalil Gribran Academy principal (Liz O. Baylen/NYT)

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission found that the New York City Department of Education (DOC) discriminated against Debbie Almontaser, founding principal of the Khalil Gibran Academy, the City’s first Arab-language public school, when they removed her from her position. Readers of this blog may recall a ferocious campaign waged by Jewish neocons and Islamophobes like Daniel Pipes, David Yerushalmi, the N.Y. Post, and Stop the Madrasa against the school and Almontaser personally.

Matters came to a head when Almontaser was smeared over a T-shirt displaying the word “Intifada.”  Her opponents made her out to be a supporter of Islamism and armed resistance because she explained the Arabic meaning of the word to a reporter, while not denouncing it sufficiently.  When Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein dropped her like a hot potato, her days were numbered.  After her forced resignation, she sued and lost.  Then she filed a claim with EEOC for discrimination.  The N.Y. Times reports on the finding:

A federal commission has determined that New York City’s Department of Education discriminated against the founding principal of an Arabic-language public school by forcing her to resign in 2007 following a storm of controversy driven by opponents of the school.

Acting on a complaint filed last year by the principal, Debbie Almontaser, the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission found that the department “succumbed to the very bias that creation of the school was intended to dispel and a small segment of the public succeeded in imposing its prejudices on D.O.E. as an employer,” according to a letter issued by the commission on Tuesday.

The commission said that the department had discriminated against Ms. Almontaser, a Muslim of Yemeni descent, “on account of her race, religion and national origin.”

This is a great deal for civil rights in New York and in America. It is a day that Arab-Americans can be proud. It is a day when all Americans should be proud. Debbie Almontaser turned to the federal government for redress and it did what it could to make her whole.

This is a day when Muslim-haters like Norman Podhoretz and his friends I mentioned above should hide their heads in shame (though they will shake their fists in defiance instead). Their bullying has been shown for what it is: un-American, unfair, unjust. We are better than the haters in Stop the Madrasa. The democratic system worked.

My chief regret is that the political leadership of New York and the Jewish communal leadership were cowards and turned tail at the first sign of trouble. Instead of standing up to the ranters, Bloomberg folded at the earliest opportunity. The New York Jewish federation, after allowing Rabbi Michael Paley to represent it in the fight on behalf of the Academy, forced him to shut up. I was never able to determine who specifically made this decision–whether it was an executive decision by CEO Jon Ruskay or a lay decision influenced by a wealthy neocon board member like James Tisch. Whoever made the decision betrayed the courage necessary for true leadership. Instead of speaking out and doing the right thing, they let Daniel Pipes present the Jewish community’s position by default.

The EEOC called on New York City to do the right thing:

The commission asked the Department of Education to reach a “just resolution” with Ms. Almontaser and to consider her demands, which include reinstatement to her old job, back pay, damages of $300,000 and legal fees. Should the two sides fail to reach an agreement, the dispute will end up in court, her lawyer said.

Instead of hearing the message, the City’s attorney said his client would fight Ms. Almontaser every step of the way.  They still haven’t gotten the message.  I only hope that cooler heads will prevail.  The former principal was wronged and deserves her job back and the chance to lead this school.  That’s what’s fair.  That’s what’s American.

I do take issue with one statement in this report:

Despite Ms. Almontaser’s longstanding reputation as a moderate Muslim, her critics succeeded in recasting her as a “9/11 denier” and a “jihadist.”

This is very sloppy writing and editing.  Her critics did NOT succeed in recasting her as any of those things.  But the mud flung by the Islamophobes resonated in certain quarters (like the pages of the Post) and her employer hung her out to dry.  There was never ANY truth to any of the claims against Almontaser.  They were all lies.  So in that sense her critics could not have succeeded in any objective sense in labeling her.  But they waged a vitriolic racist campaign which the DOE and city refused to counteract.  Rather than fight, they folded.

In its criticism of the City’s actions, the Commission found that Almontaser had said nor done anything related to the T-shirt incident that warranted her removal:

It was The Post’s article, the commission wrote in its letter this week, that prompted the Department of Education to force Ms. Almontaser to resign. (City officials have said that she resigned voluntarily.)

“Significantly, it was not her actual remarks, but their elaboration by the reporter — creating waves of explicit anti-Muslim bias from several extremist sources — that caused D.O.E. to act,” the commission’s letter said.

I’m delighted that the EEOC pointedly noted the nasty role playing by Pipes and STM and labelled them “extremist.”

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Almontaser Sues NYC Department of Education for Violating Free Speech

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

The ongoing saga of Debbie Almontaser’s ritual immolation on the altar of Jewish wingnuttery continues as she filed a lawsuit in federal court today seeking reinstatement as principal of the Khalil Gibran Academy, the nation’s first public school dedicated to teaching Arab culture.

You’ll recall that the New York Post, New York Sun, Stop the Madrassa and Campus Watch crowd were all baying for Almontaser’s blood and succeeded in railroading her into resigning from her job as founding principal. Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Joel Klein were willing participants in this charade though they perhaps had to be coaxed into axing Debbie.

A journalist friend of mine who attended the rally for her in front of the courthouse wrote:

Jews, Muslims, blacks, unionists came out for her. The Jews included Rabbi Rollie Matalon of B’nai Jeshurun, Michael Feinberg of something called Interfaith-Labor Alliance.

The NY Times quotes Rabbi Matalon’s affadavit filed in Almontaser’s support:

It was … particularly gratifying that a group of my colleagues signed a letter to the mayor and to the chancellor expressing our view that those who had attacked Ms. Almontaser did not represent the views of the mainstream Jewish community. … There are regrettable antecedents to the litmus test to which the press and the DOE subjected Ms. Almontaser, most notably in the regularity with which African-Americans are asked to denounce outspoken members of their community. The idea that there is only one acceptable view on issues of public concern is not only at odds with our constitutional guarantees, but is a perversion of the Jewish tradition of vigorous debate and discussion on all questions of importance to our people. … I hope that this court will remedy the great wrong that has been done to [Ms. Almontaser].

It’s important to note what was lacking. In the past, I’ve derided the organized Jewish community for permitting whackjobs like Stop the Madrassa to fill the vacuum and represent the Jewish community’s voice on this issue. New York’s Jewish leadership (Abe Foxman, David Harris, John Ruskay, etc.) has been strangely silent. There WAS one such figure though who until now had spoken out on Almontaser’s behalf, Rabbi Michael Paley, rabbi in residence for the New York UJA-Federation. Paley was quoted in Jewish Week and other publications speaking on her behalf and signed a petition for her published online as recently as September 30th. My journalist friend notes that Rabbi Paley was strangely absent today. I wonder why. Did someone tell him not to come?

And does one begin to notice a pattern here with the recent withdrawal, purportedly under donor pressure, of UJA-Federation sponsorship of the Other Israel Film Festival, which was dedicated to Israeli Arab cinema? Why haven’t the Forward, Jewish Week or JTA covered that story? Is there the acrid smell of Islamophobia wafting over UJA-Federation? If so, where is its source? Staff? Donors? Which specific individuals? Best to air out this foul odor in a public setting and let in some fresh air. Then maybe the Islamophobes will retreat back to their fear-filled lairs where they belong.

Samuel Freedman on the Smearing of Debbie Almontaser

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

The NY Times’ Samuel Freedman weighs in on the smear campaign against Debbie Almontaser and the Khalil Gibran Academy by the Jewish neocon world. It’s a fine article which I wish could’ve been written a little earlier in the campaign so that it could’ve made more of a difference in defending Almontaser and her reputation. But no matter, it’s important that Freedman has documented for the world to see the overt racism of the school’s and Almontaser’s accusers. After quoting some especially pungent anti-Arab vitriol from right-wing blogs, Freedman notes:

Thus commenced the smear campaign against the Khalil Gibran International Academy and, specifically, Debbie Almontaser. For the next six months, from blogs to talk shows to cable networks to the right-wing press, the hysteria and hatred never ceased. Regrettably, it worked.

Ms. Almontaser resigned as principal earlier this month. Nominally, she quit to quell the controversy about her remarks to The New York Post insufficiently denouncing the term “intifada” on a T-shirt made by a local Arab-American organization. That episode, however, merely provided the pretext for her ouster, for the triumph of a concerted exercise in character assassination.

The Times columnist has come forward to draw a line in the sand and say: “This should not be acceptable discourse in our city.” I only wish more prominent figures like Joel Klein, Michael Bloomberg, Randi Weingarten (who sealed Almontaser’s fate by her betrayal), and even Abe Foxman would’ve done what Freedman did. Where are the leaders when you need them? Covering their asses and ducking down in their foxholes.

Who ever cared about Debbie Almontaser and what she went through in this ordeal?? Listen to a friend speak about it:

“She feels that she’s been violated, personally and professionally,” said Louis Cristillo, a research professor at Teachers College at Columbia University who has studied the experiences of Muslim children in the New York public schools. “To be painted as somebody who’s un-American, questioning her patriotism, is extremely hurtful for her. She’s really shocked at how devastatingly effective the defamation was.”

And here Freedman names names of those responsible for blackening Almontaser’s reputation:

In syndicated columns by Daniel Pipes, in articles and editorials in The New York Post and The New York Sun, on such Web sites as PipeLineNews and Militant Islam Monitor, both concerned with radical Islam, the Gibran school was repeatedly characterized as a “madrassa,” an Arabic term plainly meant to evoke images of indoctrination into terrorism and holy war.

Bella Rabinowitz, writing on March 9 in PipeLineNews, called Gibran “an Islamist public school whose curriculum shares the same ideology as the Sept. 11 terrorists.” Alicia Colon wrote in The Sun on May 1, “How delighted Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda must have been to hear the news” that New York “is bowing down in homage to accommodate and perhaps groom future radicals.”

Also important to me are the inclusion of two statements of support from local rabbis with whom the ex-Gibran principal worked in laying the groundwork for the school:

“There’s zero correspondence between the caricature and the actual person,” said Rabbi Andy Bachman of Beth Elohim, a Reform Jewish congregation in Park Slope, who was on the Gibran school’s advisory board. “The words that were used to describe her, the fears that were evoked, are absolutely unrelated to her and her life’s work. Not in any way, shape or form.”

Another rabbi who has worked with Ms. Almontaser on interfaith efforts, Michael Feinberg of the Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition, said: “It’s all about insinuation and innuendo and this formula of Arab equals Muslim equals terrorist. The viciousness and the vileness of this case surpass anything I’ve seen before.”

This entire episode brings to mind a quotation from Pirkey Avot:

“Whoever destroys one life is as if he has destroyed an entire world.”

Similarly, whoever destroys one reputation is as if he has destroyed the good name of us all.

Noah Feldman on Ben Gamla and Khalil Gibran, Teaching Religion in Public Schools

Sunday, August 26th, 2007

Noah Feldman writes a short piece in today’s NY Times Sunday Magazine on the same theme I wrote about yesterday here: can public schools be devoted to teaching about a particular religious tradition without espousing it. He begins the essay with a similar premise to the one I argued yesterday–that religious and secular are not necessarily polar opposites:

The source of the [Supreme Court's] confusion [over defining what religious expressions are permissible in secular society] is the mistaken notion that the categories “religious” and “secular” are strictly binary, like an on-off switch. It’s true that some things are inherently religious, like a prayer or a church or a Torah scroll. (It would be impossible to make heads or tails of them without reference to their religious nature.) But it’s also true that many things that are not inherently religious are not inevitably secular either: they can be infused with religious meaning through the intention of a believer. A gymnasium or a warehouse has a perfectly secular use but also can be consecrated by worshipers who invoke God’s name there for purposes of worship. Examples of what you might call “dual use,” such things can be at once secular to one person and religious to another.

The most convincing interpretation of our constitutional tradition is that the government may not engage in or pay for conduct that is inherently religious but may accommodate religion when the steps taken to do so are not inherently religious in themselves. The phenomenon of dual use suggests a helpful way of restating this requirement: the state may expend resources to accommodate activities that are religious in the eyes of the believers as long as those activities can still be performed by the general public that interprets them as secular.

This is precisely what I argued yesterday in saying that while Arabic or Hebrew are languages used to express religious ideas they are much more than that. As long as you understood this distinction in preparing your curriculum you should be able to navigate this delicate waterway gingerly but well.

But it turns out Feldman comes down on the other side of the fence from me:

The public schools at the center of the other recent controversies, however, seem to represent accommodation of the single-use [religious] variety. Khalil Gibran, administered by the New York City Department of Education, is a watered-down, American version of the British and Canadian models of state-run religious schools catering to Muslims. The school’s name, borrowed from a noted Christian-born Lebanese-American writer of universalist sympathies, appears calculated to signal that the school is not narrowly Muslim. Yet Islam will presumably be taught — it would be educationally indefensible to teach Arab civilization without including it — and enrollment seems likely to include Muslim students in disproportionate numbers. It is difficult to imagine the city sponsoring such an institution without the impetus to maintain warm relations with its Muslim community in the wake of 9/11.

As my reader Amir points out in his comment from today, neither Khalil Gibran nor Ben Gamla prevent non-Arabs or non-Jews from enrolling. In fact, contrary to what Feldman presumes at least in the case of the Arab school, both have students who are not adherents of Islam or Judaism. While it appears that Ben Gamla is heavily (but not fully) Jewish-enrolled, the same may not be the case at Khalil Gibran as a school intern pointed out in Jewish Week:

Still, some questioned whether the school, which had been hoping for an enrollment of about 60, with about half Arabic speakers, could meets its goal. As of Tuesday, said Naamah Paley, who was in charge of enrollment, there were 50, and few were Arabic speakers. Most are African-American.

Feldman expands on his discussion of whether teaching about religion is ipso facto a religious act:

The Ben Gamla Charter School, for its part, claims it will teach Hebrew without inculcating religion. But the school, headed by an Orthodox rabbi, appears to be a version of the nondenominational Jewish community schools that have proliferated recently across the United States. The name Ben Gamla is taken from an Israelite high priest, said by the Talmud to have provided for Jewish schools throughout Judea.

Teaching religious ideas as an academic subject can, of course, be a prime example of dual use, since such ideas may be studied critically without embracing them. But if a school employs religion as the organizing principle for a curriculum inextricably intertwined with a single religious faith, dual use is unlikely to emerge. Studying religious doctrine as a set of ideas to be believed is inherently a religious act — in fact, Judaism traditionally considers the study of God’s word the very essence of religious devotion.

Although it cannot be known for certain before they have begun instruction, Khalil Gibran and Ben Gamla seem poised to teach religion as a set of beliefs to be embraced rather than as a set of ideas susceptible to secular, critical examination. What, after all, is the point of a Jewish cultural school if not to bring the students to appreciation and acceptance of Jewish values? And what are those values if not the outgrowth of Judaism’s millenniums of religious faith and practice?

I disagree with Feldman’s notion that because the school curriculum will teach about Islam that this necessitates that it promotes Islam. It certainly is possible this this could happen. And if Ben Gamla is a thinly disguised Solomon Schechter Day School (and it very well may be), I would agree that this should not be the realm of a public school.

But I maintain that there should be a way to teach about religion in public school without advocating it. Isn’t what the entire academic field of religious studies is all about? Do I have to be Sufi to teach Sufism in a high school or college? I certainly must have an interest in Sufism, but I must have an academic interest and not a believer’s interest.

And as a spiritual, but largely secular Jew, I object to Feldman’s narrow definition of what constitutes Jewish culture and identity (“What, after all, is the point of a Jewish cultural school if not to bring the students to appreciation and acceptance of Jewish values? And what are those values if not the outgrowth of Judaism’s millenniums of religious faith and practice?”). Jewish culture is far larger than merely Jewish faith and practice; or at least it should be. Certainly Jewish faith and practice is part of Jewish culture. But so are vast swaths of Jewish tradition that do not involve faith or theology. Feldman himself points to secular Zionism as but one example, but there are many more including the entire realm of secular Jewish identity represented by groups like the Workmen’s Circle, Jewish Bund; and cultural expressions like klezmer music, Jewish art, literature, etc. While our religion is part of us, we are more than just a religion.

If Jews Can Have a Public School, Why Can’t Arabs?

Saturday, August 25th, 2007

The new public school…called the Ben Gamla Charter School…is run by an Orthodox rabbi, serves kosher lunches and concentrates on teaching Hebrew.

About 400 students started classes at Ben Gamla this week amid caustic debate over whether a public school can teach Hebrew without touching Judaism and the unconstitutional side of the church-state divide. The conflict intensified Wednesday, when the Broward County School Board ordered Ben Gamla to suspend Hebrew lessons because its curriculum — the third proposed by the school — referred to a Web site that mentioned religion.

Opponents say that it is impossible to teach Hebrew — and aspects of Jewish culture — outside a religious context, and that Ben Gamla, billed as the nation’s first Hebrew-English charter school, violates one of its paramount legal and political boundaries.

New York Times

Question for Stop the Madrassa and all those New York Jews raising a gevalt and geschrei about the new Khalil Gibran International Academy, the first New York public school dedicated to teaching Arab culture and language: if Florida has the Ben Gamla Charter School why can’t Brooklyn have Khalil Gibran? Why is it kosher to teach Jewish children in public school Hebrew and associated Jewish cultural subjects, but treif for Arab-Americans to learn about their traditions in a similar public school setting? Remember “what’s good for the goose is good for the gander?”

If New Yorkers opposed to the school can be so all-fired certain it will be a breeding ground for jihadi propaganda, how can they claim the Jewish school will not propagate its own religious agenda? Why should an Arab public school be a recruiter for Al Qaeda, but a Jewish public school be pure as the driven snow? Of course we know the answer to that question. Much (if not all) of the opposition to Khalil Gibran is based on racism; and much of that racism alas comes from Jewish sources like Daniel Pipes, David Yerushalmi, Campus Watch and Stop the Madrassa. If you scratched a millimeter beneath the surface you’d find these types view Judaism as a peaceful, tolerant religion and Islam an angry, intolerant one. Certainly Judaism to their mind is inherently superior to Islam.

I, for one, am not opposed to either school provided they approach their respective curricula in the broadest and most inclusive manner possible. For example, in answer to the question of whether Hebrew can be taught “outside a religious context.” I would answer a qualified yes–depending on how you approached it. First, the Hebrew language represents both religious and secular traditions. Therefore, it is not a language monopolized by one tradition or the other. Second, to teach Hebrew you have to refer to religious concepts, but you do not have to embrace them. In other words, Hebrew does not have to endorse Judaism. It merely reflects it.

Another element I would insist upon in both schools is a rigorous curriculum component teaching about ethnic identity and other religious traditions. There should be no excuse for such a school turning inward upon itself and furthering an insular agenda that ignores other religions.

Finally, the opponents of Khalil Gibran are utter hypocrites. You know most of them would have no problem with Ben Gamla. In fact, some of them would be enrolling their kids there if it opened in Brooklyn. Given the school’s owner’s plans to expand, it just might:

Peter Deutsch, a former Democratic member of Congress from Florida who started Ben Gamla…hopes to replicate it in Los Angeles, Miami and New York.

In fact, I have a challenge to Joel Klein and Michael Bloomberg. Open a Ben Gamla Academy in New York in THE SAME BUILDING as Khalil Gibran. In fact, do team teaching in which members of each ethnic group learn about the others traditions in addition to their own. Now, that would be a contribution to interfaith dialogue and tolerance. I’d urge Stop the Madrassa to close up shop and turn to a positive agenda that encourages both Jews and Arabs to learn about their traditions in mutual respect and harmony. How’s that for a wild and crazy idea?

Actually, not so crazy. Things like this actually happened once before in history. In medieval Spain, Jews and Muslims co-existed relatively peacefully. They worked, studied and lived together. They respected each other’s traditions (on the whole). Why can’t we use this as a model for what Ben Gamla and Khalil Gibran could do for New York?

New York Rabbi Defends Local Arab School

Monday, August 20th, 2007

And it’s about time too as Haaretz reports:

U.S. Rabbi Michael Feinberg defended a planned Arab school in New York on Monday…

Addressing a rally in front of the New York Department of Education, Rabbi Feinberg called on elected officials to come forward in support of the Khalil Gibran International Academy, which is scheduled to open on September 4.

Rabbi Feinberg called the virulent Internet campaign against the school “the lowest of McCarthyite tactics.”

debbie almontaserDebbie Almontaser: burned at stake by NY Post, Campus Watch and local Islamophobes (Diane Bondareff/AP)

Yesterday, I wrote about Larry Cohler Esses terrific reportage on the Debbie Almontaser ‘witch-burning’ incident instigated by Daniel Pipes’ Campus Watch gang. I said yesterday that it was a shande that the Jewish community has let anti-Arab demagogues like Campus Watch take the lead on this issue. Despite the fact that Almontaser was a committed ally of the ADL, having gone through inter-faith training with them, no one from that group came to her aid during the Intifada incident. They let her twist in the wind.

To be fair, Cohler-Esses notes that Rabbi Michael Paley, Judaic consultant at the Jewish Federation (and someone I knew when he was a college student at Brandeis) has also come to the school’s defense (his daughter is an intern there). But why is he the only Federation official speaking out in support?

And the politicians were equally callow. Mayor Bloomberg expressed tepid support and said she made the right decision in resigning. Joel Klein, schools chancellor said barely anything. The teachers union president, to which Almontaser had belonged when she as a teacher before she was named principal, betrayed her and sealed her fate by denouncing her.

We must remember what happens when good people stand by and do nothing as victims’ reputations and careers are trashed. We may be judged as a society by what we did and what we refused to do in situations like this.

A local journalist tells me that left anti-Semitic elements may have entered the fray on behalf of the school. I replied to him:

When a community’s leaders leave the field of battle to the right-wing crazies, well then crazy things will happen. When people see the mayor, chancellor & teachers union president abandon someone like Almontaser, then the left extremist fruitcakes see their chance to fill the vacuum. The ADL & Federation are also to blame for taking a powder on this.

Leaders are meant to lead. When they don’t, others who are less worthy will.

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