Topic: NYC Muslims Push to Add Holidays to School Year | |
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NYC Muslims Push to Add Holidays to School Year
New York State News Written by Suzanne MA Friday, 03 July 2009 15:09 Article found here NEW YORK (AP) — Moneeb Hassan remembers having to choose between a final exam in American history or celebrating the Muslim holy day of Eid al-Adha. In the end, he chose both. Hassan, 17, is one of thousands of Muslim students in the city who must perform a balancing act between his academic and religious obligations during his holidays. But the nation's largest school district hasn't sanctioned official Muslim holidays. "People came to this country for freedom of religion," Hassan said. "We're just asking for fair and equal treatment." Muslim activists lobbying to add the holy days to the school calendar — which takes school off for Christmas and the Jewish holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur — were heartened this week by a City Council resolution supporting the observance of the two holidays — Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha. A handful of school districts in New Jersey and Michigan have recognized Muslim school holidays, while efforts in Baltimore and Connecticut have failed recently. New York City has the nation's largest school system. A 2008 study by Columbia University's Teachers College estimates at least 10 percent of the city's 1.1 million students are Muslim. Supporters say the school board needs to be inclusive of the growing number of Muslim students in New York. Mayor Michael Bloomberg spoke out against approving the holidays this week, saying it would open the door to other religious groups asking for days off. "One of the problems you have with a diverse city is that if you close the schools for every single holiday there won't be any school," Bloomberg told reporters on Tuesday. "Educating our kids requires time in the classroom and that's the most important thing to us more than anything else." A day later, he sounded like he might be willing to give it some thought, saying that he would take a closer look at the resolution. But he still stuck to his original point that honoring every religious holiday isn't practical. Eid al-Fitr, or the Festival of Breaking the Fast, marks the end of the sacred month of Ramadan. Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of the Sacrifice, is celebrated in the fall and commemorates the prophet Ibrahim's faith in being willing to sacrifice his son. The stress of catching up on school work, rescheduling exams and having to ask for special permission to miss classes for the holidays is a routine Muslim students shouldn't have to go through, Hassan said. He remembers finishing his 7 a.m. history exam in just 40 minutes, racing out of the classroom, jumping into his father's car and speeding off to the mosque. If the exam was later in the day, he would have missed the morning prayer, a significant part of the Eid celebration. City Councilman Robert Jackson, a Muslim, said he and a coalition of over 80 community groups in the city will begin canvassing the mayor's office for his support for the holiday. If Bloomberg isn't receptive, "we may have to consider legal action," he said. "Discrimination may be an issue in this case." Jackson said a bill that would mandate the holidays as state law has been introduced in Albany. Susan Fani, a spokeswoman for the Catholic League, said she didn't oppose recognizing Muslim holidays in public schools, but was concerned that Catholics and Christians in the city were not treated with the same amount of respect and sensitivity. "Catholics get a Santa Claus or a tree," but aren't allowed to display nativity scenes in school, Fani said. "We just want to make sure that the enthusiasm that City Council is showing towards Muslims is the same kind of enthusiasm they are showing toward Christians." But others welcomed the idea, saying it is a chance for the city to extend an olive branch to the Muslim community. "The more we support one another in our spiritual quest, the better off we become as a society," said Rabbi Michael Weisser of the Free Synagogue in Queens. "Children are exempted from school during Rosh Hashanah. A fair minded person would have to agree that our brother religion of Islam should have the same sort of benefit. It's an issue of fairness." |
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Here we go, America. This is just the beginning.
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Edited by
boo2u
on
Sat 07/04/09 09:28 AM
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Here we go, America. This is just the beginning. I would imagine the American Indian might have said something similar. I'd say the Christians brought this on themselves, with endless demands and rituals and wanting to indoctrinate the world. Now you will have competition. Who's bigger and badder.. Now you have a religion with twice the ritual prayer habits to work around. After all God can't go a whole day with out being recognized, God is very insecure you know.... When Islam try's to dominate the political scene, then we'll have fireworks for sure. Neither religion can exist with out making it self known and feared. Hopefully I will be dead when one of these religions takes over the world. Funny that neither religion can prove the existence of God, yet we have to cater to both. |
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as far as im aware, the U S isnt a um.. seculer,.. religious country,
so i dont think they have to allow any one into their schools if they dont want, BUT, if you choose to take any religion in, to participate then you need to respect their religion and allow them to set their own rules. give them their days off |
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My philosophy on this type of thing is this.
We are either fair to ALL by honoring all holidays or we have none in the public realm. It is unfair to honor certain religions, peoples or cultures holidays and not honor them all. There are hundreds if not thousands of different cultures and religions in this country who get ignored when it comes to being honored publically but if we honor all of them publically we may have a whole lot of holidays to track in the government. But we need to either respect everyone publically or we need to show no favoritism, that is the only solution. |
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Here we go, America. This is just the beginning. The begining was the belief that... We hold these truths to be self evident... If we truly hold such 'truths' to be self evident they are so for all. Reguardless of culture or belief. |
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Is there anything, anything at all that doesn't involve religion.. UGH
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My philosophy on this type of thing is this. We are either fair to ALL by honoring all holidays or we have none in the public realm. It is unfair to honor certain religions, peoples or cultures holidays and not honor them all. There are hundreds if not thousands of different cultures and religions in this country who get ignored when it comes to being honored publically but if we honor all of them publically we may have a whole lot of holidays to track in the government. But we need to either respect everyone publically or we need to show no favoritism, that is the only solution. This is the central point of the "separation of church and state" argument. Muslims, Wiccans, American Indians, Buddhists, etc. all have just as much a right to the government and to celebrate their holidays as the traditional Abrahamic religions, but a government that is to serve all of them equally can only go so far to cater to the desires of one before trampling on the rights of others and must therefor remain neutral to all. |
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There are hundreds if not thousands of different cultures and religions in this country who get ignored when it comes to being honored publically but if we honor all of them publically we may have a whole lot of holidays to track in the government. There are also hundreds if not thousands of people that care not one whit bout the holidays currently worshiped by law in this country... Yet we have had to accept them as they are 'by law'... which causes me to wonder when this thing that some call an attack on our constitution actually got started. after all the founding generation of Americans had a document... and in it they put this. 'Congress shall make no law...' NO LAW... and yet some religions DO have laws in place protecting their holidays. NO MEANS NO, NADA, NOTHING, GOVERNMENT SHOULD NEVER INVOLVE ITSELF IN RELIGION. Religion should NEVER involve itself in GOVERNING. (except as a by product of individual morals). |
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maybe it's different in other states...but here...they get spring break and winter vacations...people can decide how to celebrate those as they wish.
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maybe it's different in other states...but here...they get spring break and winter vacations...people can decide how to celebrate those as they wish. ![]() What kind of winter vacations? The only ones that I've seen around here revolve are around Christmastime. |
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maybe it's different in other states...but here...they get spring break and winter vacations...people can decide how to celebrate those as they wish. ![]() What kind of winter vacations? The only ones that I've seen around here revolve are around Christmastime. we have 2 weeks here....they are around the holidays before and after....wiccans that celebrate the winter solstice can celebrate during that time as well as Christmas and Hanukkah for others...are not celebrate anything at all....just take a break |
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Federal mandated religious based holidays... What a violation of the constitution!
Better if all federal employees could chose the days that fit their own 'religion'. (within reason) That way there would allways be somebody 'home' when we need the fed. |
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