HolyCoast: Reinstating Separate But Equal in Colleges
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Monday, April 16, 2007

Reinstating Separate But Equal in Colleges

Captain Ed points to a Minnesota article on a group which plans to return our colleges, not just to the days of separate but equal, but to the 1400's. The initial act by the group was to get a Minnesota college to install ritual foot washing facilities for Muslim students, but they're not content to stop there:

But I also discovered something more important for colleges seeking guidance on "accommodations": Projects like MCTC's are likely to be the first step in a long process.

The task force's eventual objectives on American campuses include the following, according to the website: permanent Muslim prayer spaces, ritual washing facilities, separate food and housing for Muslim students, separate hours at athletic facilities for Muslim women, paid imams or religious counselors, and campus observance of Muslim holidays. The task force is already hailing "pioneering" successes. At Syracuse University in New York, for example, "Eid al Fitr is now an official university holiday," says an article featured on the website. "The entire university campus shuts down to mark the end of Ramadan." At Henry Ford Community College in Dearborn, Mich., "halal" food -- ritually slaughtered and permissible under Islamic law -- is marked by green stickers in the cafeteria and "staff are well-trained in handling practices."

At Georgetown University, Muslim women can live apart in housing that enables them to "sleep in an Islamic setting," as the website puts it. According to a student at the time the policy was adopted, the university housing office initially opposed the idea, on grounds that all freshman should have the experience of "living in dorms and dealing with different kinds of people." That might sound appealing, Muslim students told a reporter in an article featured on the website. But in their view, the reporter wrote, "learning to live with 'different kinds of people' " actually "causes more harm than good" for Muslims, because it requires them to live in an environment that "distracts them from their desire to become better Muslims, and even draw[s] weaker Muslims away from Islam."

Most religious groups that want to teach students in their faith take their own money and start their own schools. There are great Baptist, Nazarene, Methodist, Catholic, Jewish, etc. schools, but can you name any great Muslim universities in the United States? I can't.

The Muslim activists would rather demand that the school spend your tax money to fund their special programs and facilities and eventually require the schools to dance to their tune (oh wait, true Muslims don't dance and don't like tunes). As Captain Ed suggests, this process will eventually lead to segregated schools, something which we as a nation had supposedly done away with.

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