What is scary about the report is that the school featured (Dar Ul Uloom Secondary)
is not a fringe madrassa but a secondary faith school that is funded by the state and overseen by the school inspectors OFSTED.They are supposed to teach the national curriculum and in theory should offer admission to any child regardless of their religious background (although I can`t see many non muslim parents wanting to send their children there)
The fact that the school authorities did not allow the undercover reporter access to some of the classes, despite him looking the part (skull cap etc) and having been a member of staff for a considerable length of time would suggest that they were complicit with what was being taught at the institution. Quite how they managed to hoodwink OFSTED and carry on propagating hate for so long beggars belief.
Some of the Islamist apologists on here have sought to dismiss the school as being run by Wahhabis but it is in fact operated by the Deobandi movement, which, despite its puritanical roots, has distinct ideological underpinnings to Wahhabism and attracts a lot of followers in the subcontinent. So its highly likely that the sort of hate filled teaching in evidence at Dar Ul Uloom is a fair reflection of the education children receive at institutions run by the Deobandis in Pakistan and other parts of the world.
@Spaklingway, the news items I previously posted that you requested. I remember many here at the time insisted, with some justification, that the institutions featured belonged to fringe wahhabi groups and therefore not representative of mainstream Muslim opinion
http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-...-children-uk-being-taught-chop-hands-off.html
http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-affairs/81973-wahabbis-control-biggest-mosques-uk.html
However, evidence that the Deobandis, who arguably have a much wider following among 'mainstream' Muslims than the Wahhabis are similarly advocating segregation, anti semitism and Islamist supremacism is a real cause of concern.
Those attempting to rationalise the repugnant antisemitism expressed in the report by citing the founding of the state of Israel and the Palestinian struggle are either ignoring the historical context to Jewish-Muslim hostilities (Banu Qaynuqa, Banu Qurayza, Banu Nadir ring a bell?) or, more likely, being deliberately disingenuous about it. The early conflict between the Muslims and the assortment of Jewsih tribes in the Arabic peninsula has had a profound impact on Islam's subsequent relationship with other communities and is at the root of its deeply held mistrust and hatred of the disbeliever (due to the fact that many Jewish tribes challenged Mohammed's status as a prophet in the early days of Islam).Many of the Quranic revelations relating to disbelievers (which most Islamists regularly use to justify their deeply bigoted and antisemitic views) can also be traced back to this period.
Given the above, I believe what we are witnessing in the Middle East is just a continuation of the 1400 year conflict between Islam and Judaism and nothing to do with the creation of Israel (although it has certainly added to the hostilities).I will post a summary of one of Syed Qutb's works (when I do find it) that clearly illustrates the Islamist view of Muslim-Jewish relations that clearly bear this out..
This also explains the deep hatred of Jews and Idolaters that many Pakistanis appear to suffer from (and hence the RAW-MOSSAD conspiracy theories). In the standoff between the two countries, the Jews are replaced by Hindus (idolaters) who are assigned the attributes traditionally assigned to the Jews by Muslims, i.e those of deviousness, weakness and treachery, based on the Prophet Mohammed's experience with the Jews,