Guest guest Posted October 4, 2006 Report Share Posted October 4, 2006 In the interest of balance, it's worth noting that Hindu Indians were themselves divided over whether the California textbooks [mentioned toward the end of the editorial I just posted] actually did "defame" Hinduism. The issue is complicated, but in general was framed as a confrontation between "right-wing" or "nationalist" Hindu groups, who opposed the textbooks, and more "moderate" groups who did not. Who's right? It's hard to say; you'll have to decide for yourself. In order to help you decide, here are three brief news items that shed considerable light on the debate. The first was published a month ago, when a California Superior Court upheld the textbooks, while admitting that they contained significant factual flaws. The second is a statement by a coalition of U.S. Hindu groups who considered that decision a victory. The third and last is a "nationalist" rebuttal, arguing that the decision was certainly *not* a victory. ********** 1. HINDU TEXTBOOKS FLAWED BUT RETAINED WASHINGTON (Sept. 6, 2006 [iANS]): A California court has accepted a Hindu body's contention that some textbooks with a flawed presentation of Hinduism were approved improperly, but refused to throw them out of schools for now. A flawed approval process had resulted in textbooks that presented the debunked Aryan Migration Theory as fact, misrepresented caste as central to Hinduism and left the impression that Hinduism devalued the role of women, the Hindu American Foundation (HAF) said in a press release. The California Superior Court last week upheld HAF's claim that the state School Board of Education (SBE) had followed a flawed and illegal approval process for sixth grade textbooks. But the court denied its demand that SBE be required to throw out the currently approved textbooks and revisit the entire textbook adoption process, it said. In his ruling, Judge Patrick Marlette wrote the California SBE has been conducting its textbook approval process under invalid "underground regulations', but said the rejection of textbooks would be disruptive not only to affected sixth graders, but potentially every California public school student using any and every textbooks. The judge decided against a sweeping ruling that could open the door to other lawsuits discarding textbooks in the most populous state in the US, the release said. SOURCE: DNA India URL: http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1051433 ********* And now here is a response to the California court decision (actually a response to the state educational board decision, which the court was upholding in its decision). 2. VICTORY OVER HINDU NATIONALISTS IN TEXTBOOK CASE SACRAMENTO (---, 2006): The intense struggle over the content of Indian history in California textbooks ended yesterday with the special committee of the California State Board of Education [sBE] voting unanimously to overturn a majority of contentious changes proposed by Hindu right-wing groups to California school textbooks. This decision is a victory for community organizations such as Friends of South Asia (FOSA), the Ambedkar Center for Peace and Justice, the Federation of Tamil Sangams of North America, and the Coalition Against Communalism (CAC), who have worked diligently to ensure that ahistorical and sectarian content proposed by Hindu right-wing groups is removed from California textbooks. Hundreds of South Asian scholars from across the United States and nearly fifty internationally renowned Indologists had repeatedly written to the Board as well, protesting the changes proposed by the Hindu nationalist groups. SOURCE: Friends of South Asia (Press Release) URL (for full statement): http://tinyurl.com/ryqus ********** And here is a "nationalist" rebuttal: 3. PYRRHIC VICTORY FOR U.S. HINDUS NEW DELHI (September 17, 2006): Hindus received unfair and unequal treatment in the matter of how sixth-grade students in the public education system would be taught about the Hindu religion. Why should Hindu children be taught that "Hindus worship talking monkeys and throw widows into fires?" Why should the primordial stories of the Hindu scriptures be branded as "myths," when the scriptures of the monotheistic traditions are said to come from Only One (mutually exclusive) God(s)? It is a sad and undeniable truth that the California Hindu community has failed to win a substantive victory in the US courts in the matter of the shoddy depiction of Hindu faith and culture in school textbooks. The substance of the so-called "success" is [akin to] the judge accepting that rape was committed, but refusing to redress the victim's grievance. Injustice has thus been perpetuated against the Hindu community -- and it is a measure of the moral weakness of the Hindu American Foundation (HAF) that its leaders are claiming legal triumph. [...] The school board allowed [the textbook approval process] to be hijacked by a group of known Hindu-baiters, including proponents of the discredited Aryan Invasion Theory. [...] [Focusing on the need to reform] the adoption process for textbooks [...] misses the point entirely. What is at stake is the content of the books; the flawed and biased adoption process only underlines this mischief. When the process of textbook revision began last year, the Curriculum Commission accepted the changes mooted by representatives of Christian, Jewish and Muslim groups, but posted changes desired by Hindus for re-review by Hindu-baiting academics! The Jews, for instance, sought removal of references portraying Christianity as an "improvement" upon Judaism. Many changes desired by Hindus simply rectified obvious errors, such as the claim that "Hindi is written with the Arabic alphabet, which uses 18 letters that stand for sounds," when in fact Hindi is written in the Devanagari script and has 52 characters. [...] The judge's refusal to order revisions in the textbooks has had the effect of officially promoting a negative projection of the Hindu faith as compared to other religions. This deprives Hindu students of an educational experience at par with that of their peers, and thus violates their rights under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution. SOURCE: The Organiser, New Delhi URL: (for full statement) http://tinyurl.com/olx3n ********** Okay, so those are the facts from several points of view, for any of you who may be interested in this debate. I hope it was helpful. Now: What is your position? Please share it with us! Thank you DB Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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