WASHINGTON — A federal religious freedom watchdog panel says it has reviewed textbooks used in a Saudi-run school in northern Virginia and confirms that they contain passages that promote violence and intolerance. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom said June 11 that the most troubling elements of the textbooks at the Islamic Saudi Academy (ISA) refer to the interpretation of the Quran.
Excerpts from "Tafsir," a Quran interpretation book for 12th-graders, state that it is permissible for a Muslim to kill an apostate, an adulterer or someone who has murdered a Muslim intentionally, the commission said.
Another textbook, "Tawhid," says Muslims may take the life and property of followers of "polytheism" faiths, which the panel said would include Christians, Jews, Shiite and Sufi Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists.
The prekindergarten through 12th grade academy has been under scrutiny by the religious freedom panel and others for allegedly teaching a violent interpretation of Islam. The school’s Web site says ISA "not only promotes respect and mutual understanding between Muslims and non-Muslims … it strives for its staff and students to uphold tolerance, honesty, integrity and compassion."
The commission had asked the State Department to obtain and release all Arabic-language textbooks used at the school’s two locations. Under pressure, the ISA distributed some textbooks, but the panel said those books did not contain the most troubling passages.
The Saudi government, which runs the school, had earlier promised "to remove remaining references that disparage Muslims or non-Muslims or that promote hatred toward other religions or religious groups" from its textbooks. The commission said judging from the materials they reviewed, that job remains incomplete.
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