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What Iran's textbooks can teach us about sectarianism and ancient hatreds

Daneshmand

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What Iran's textbooks can teach us about sectarianism and ancient hatreds- Washington Post

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President Obama ruffled more than a few feathers in his final State of the Union address with his assertion that the ongoing violence in the Middle East is “rooted in conflicts that go back millennia.” The online response was immediate and unforgiving, as otherwise sympathetic foreign policy observers derided the president’s construction as regrettable and cringe-worthy.

Obama left the details vague, but it wasn’t difficult to guess that he was referring to any number of “ancient hatreds” assumed to plague the region — paired oppositions that include Muslims against Christians, Arabs against Persians and especially Sunnis against Shiites. The rising tensions betweenSaudi Arabia and Iran seem to confirm the widespread bias that sectarian conflict is endemic to the world’s second-largest religion, that what happened on the plains outside Karbala more than 13 centuries ago is all that we need to know to understand the foreign policy maneuvers between these two regional powers in this century. But have Saudi Sunnis and Iranian Shiites really been divided for eons by an inescapable conflict of faith?

My research on the Iranian educational system offers some novel evidence that, in fact, this sectarian divide has not been the central issue in the decades since the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran. In the 1980s, during the most fervently ideological period of Islamization following the revolution, educational planners in Iran struggled to piece together a primary-school curriculum that would “purify” and train the next generation of Iranians. What stands out is that even then, with its founder Ayatollah Khomeini still very much alive, the Islamic republic’s earliest textbooks simply ignored or played down Shiism as an identity and a practice.

Why revolutionary Iran did so has important lessons for today. The logic of the revolution meant that Iran aspired to take on the leadership of the world’s Muslims. Its educational planners could ill afford to draw distinctions between Iran and the rest of the world. Islam, rather than Shiism, provided the essential building blocks.

At the same time, the textbooks reveal themselves to be acutely nationalistic, centered on producing and promoting a distinctly Iranian identity tied ineluctably to being a Shiite. The paired opposition that mattered most to the textbook authors was, simultaneous, interlocking and inextricable duality: to be a Shiite Muslim was to be Iranian. This intersection of the Shiite dimension of Islamic identity with the formation of a new national identity can be clearly seen in the textbooks produced and used in those pivotal days.

Textbook content throughout the period — and indeed to this very day — oscillated between elements of Iranian and Islamic identity, sometimes within the same lesson. For example, consider the third-grade lesson Better than Whom. This story opens with prophet Muhammad engaged in conversation with his closest companions at a mosque when, unannounced, friend and follower Salman al-Farsi appears. Muhammad invites Farsi, an ethnic Fars or Iranian, to join the group in prayer, a gesture of hospitality that is not well received by the others.

Muhammad’s companions do not hesitate to shout their objections: “Salman is a Farsi speaker and we are Arabs! He ought not sit in our group and or above us [in the assembly]. He must sit in a lower level of the room than us.” Greatly upset, Muhammad reprimands his followers. “Being a Fars or an Arab,” he exclaims, “is not a reason for thinking better or worse of a person. Neither color nor ethnicity makes one wiser.”

The lesson draws a bright line across its principal thesis: “We Muslims know each other as equals and as brothers. Accent and language do not separate us from one another. Where we live, ethnicity, or our color cannot separate us one another.” The use of Farsi to promote tolerance and a vision of cosmopolitanism is hardly by accident. His character is a crafty maneuver, a political tool used by the textbook authors to stealthily teach young readers that as Iranians they should never accept second-grade status in the Muslim world, least of all to their Arab brothers and sisters.

This same point is made again, less subtly, in the retelling of the Karbala story in Lesson in Freedom, also from the third-grade curriculum. Invited by the people of Kufa to be their spiritual leader only to be abandoned to his fate by their fecklessness, the death of the prophet’s grandson Husayn at the Battle of Karbala is the seminal trauma for the Shia and the principal source of the schism between the two major branches of Islam.

Lesson in Freedom reimagines the slaughter of Husayn and his entourage as a selfless act of salvation and rebirth, not for Shiites but for all of Islam: “With his martyrdom, Imam Husayn saved the Koran from danger, so that the Koran and Islam might remain on this earth to guide and help humanity.” Layered thick with the markers and signals of Shiite practice and memory, but denuded of any and all labels that directly or plainly identify Iran as a Shiite country, the lesson leaves enough room for teachers and students alike to imagine themselves as Shia and Iranians, the one abrogated to the other in equal measure.

As Iran entered the 1990s, narratives of Shia identity diminished across the curriculum, now stripped of stories like Better than Whom and Lesson in Freedom. With Khomeini passed from the scene and the great war with Iraq ended, state planners became more comfortable with imagining a national identity constituted by the pre-Islamic past. Appeals to Iranian and Islamic identity appeared side by side in purposeful fashion, sometimes in the same lesson, and always in overlapping sequence to reinforce the notion that being Iranian and Islamic was simultaneous and incontrovertible.

This effort took on even greater momentum in the 2000s. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proved a key driver of the secularization of the curriculum. His rhetorical broadsides against the clergy and advocacy of the “Iranian school of thought” eroded taboos against criticism of clerical rule, even as it reflected the preferences of an Iranian population that had moved on without much fanfare or posturing from the dual-cultures debates of the past.

As education became increasingly important to professional advancement in this period, Iranian families cared more about getting their children into college than prevailing over their Sunni neighbors. Religious and national identities mattered now insofar as they were testable items at which students could excel in the all-important examinations that would determine their professional fate. Iranians, like people elsewhere, proved quite capable of imagining their community in all of its complexity and chewing the proverbial gum at the same time.

What does this all mean for the debate over “ancient hatreds” in today’s Middle East? Iran’s textbooks show that even a revolutionary Islamic state has grappled with the modern problem of adapting Western ideas while remaining true to its authentic past. This dilemma of modernization, common to many late-developing countries in the Middle East and in Asia, explains Iranian behavior in the world — including its pursuit of nuclear energy — more than an imagined hatred or intractable desire for historical revenge on its Arab and Sunni neighbors. The confusion of a revolutionary exceptionalism rooted in Iranian chauvinism but that nonetheless aspires to be the model of change for a world oppressed by Western powers is the only paired opposition that matters.
 
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Iranian children are not taught to be sectarian and hateful. On the contrary they are being taught to be confident about themselves and their identity without being bigots.

I wonder the same can be said about Saudis or many other American "allies" out there.
 
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I remember one thing .. Quaid e Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah who is the founder of Pakistan use to emphasis on good relations with Iran .... we have no problem with iran .... All these years iran Helped pakistan on many occasions i wonder how people can drag iran on sectarian issues .....
 
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I remember one thing .. Quaid e Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah who is the founder of Pakistan use to emphasis on good relations with Iran .... we have no problem with iran .... All these years iran Helped pakistan on many occasions i wonder how people can drag iran on sectarian issues .....

That is so true. But the rise of Takfirism has caused all these troubles in the world. And the same Takfiris then blame others for being "sectarian". In reality, it is themselves who are sectarian. Whether when they are massacring other Sunnis or Christians or the Shias or nowadays as becoming more and more common, massacring school and university students. The Takfiris have become so much emboldened that, they are just an inch away from declaring humanity itself being sectarian so that they can go on and massacre humanity, from babies to old women. This is where Takfiri mindset will take us, eventually.
 
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And here is a comparison with an American ally's education system from their own mouthpieces:

http://www.alarabiya.com/2015/08/27/intolerance-in-textbooks-in-saudi-schools/

Intolerance in Textbooks in Saudi Schools

The Saudi government has repeatedly tried to assert itself as a world authority on Islam. However, the vast majority of Muslims around the world disagree profoundly with their ultra-conservative interpretation of Sharia. One aspect of the Saudi’s government view on Islam that is particularly appalling is the way that intolerance is promoted in its textbooks, often meant for children in elementary school.

Reports from Freedom Watch and other human rights organizations have noted that the textbooks used for elementary and secondary students in Saudi Arabia promote hatred towards other religions, including Muslims who do not adhere to Wahhabi ideology. An analysis of twelve different textbooks gathered from teachers, families, and administrators in Saudi schools were translated by two independent Arabic speakers. These textbooks are poisonous, ensuring that a new generation of Saudis grows up with hatred towards other religious communities. Although some changes have been made by the Saudi government in recent years (the textbooks date to 2006), the same ideologies are still, in large part, taught in Saudi schools.

One of the issues that outside observers have with the Saudi government is that government spokesmen have stated that they have revised all educational materials. However, independent observers repeatedly find material that is intolerant or incites hatred against people of other faiths, including Muslims that do not support the ultra-conservative view espoused by the Saudi government.

Below we’ve listed some examples of the hateful language included in Saudi textbooks, and keep in mind that these are targeted towards impressionable, school-aged children:

– Saudi textbooks teach that the fight between Muslims and Jews is inevitable and that it will continue until Judgment Day. That Muslims will triumph over Jews, and that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a known anti-semitic forgery, is a historical fact. They also fail to recognize Israel in maps, using the pre-1967 borders and labeling it as “Palestine: occupied 1948.”

– They denigrate and condemn Sunni Muslims that do not adhere to Wahhabi ideology, calling them deviant and polytheistic, and refer to Sufi and Shi’a Muslims as heretics and polytheists.

– Students are called to avoid befriending, being courteous to, respecting, or even greeting Christians and Jews, labeled as polytheists and unbelievers.

It is important to note that apart from the thousands of schools in Saudi Arabia itself, these textbooks are used in schools located in world capitals all around the world. Saudi textbooks are also distributed to Islamic schools around the world that are run independently. Considering that Saudi Arabia has, in recent years, claimed to preach religious tolerance to the world and has bid for position as an advocate of human rights in the United Nations, these kinds of teachings are not only terribly bigoted, they are also undeniably hypocritical.
 
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That is so true. But the rise of Takfirism has caused all these troubles in the world. And the same Takfiris then blame others for being "sectarian". In reality, it is themselves who are sectarian. Whether when they are massacring other Sunnis or Christians or the Shias or nowadays as becoming more and more common, massacring school and university students. The Takfiris have become so much emboldened that, they are just an inch away from declaring humanity itself being sectarian so that they can go on and massacre humanity, from babies to old women. This is where Takfiri mindset will take us, eventually.

These Takfiris are backed by Israel and other forces that is the real problem ... They dont know ABC of islam they are controlled by other forces .. and the agenda is simple defame islam as much as they can ... they are doing it in the whole world ... Muslims needs to be united ...
 
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I remember one thing .. Quaid e Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah who is the founder of Pakistan use to emphasis on good relations with Iran .... we have no problem with iran .... All these years iran Helped pakistan on many occasions i wonder how people can drag iran on sectarian issues .....
Iran was also the first country that accepted Pakistan's existence. They did not care what sect Pakistan followed. The author rightly points out that the shia sunni schism does not direct Iran as much as the will to have Islamic unity, regardless of being shia or sunni. This is a good initiative. Islamic unity is what all of us should aspire for-while treating our minorities fairly and as fellow citizens of course.
 
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Having met many many Iranians and even worked with a couple of them, I can say most of them don't care about finding out someone else's religion, they would talk to you about anything else or be friends with you without asking you their religion or Sect. Can't say the same about many Sunnis I have met, one of the first thing they want to know is if you are a Sunni or a Shia. This is a phenomena amongst British Pakistanis who are being radicalised and converted into Takfirisim with funding from Saudia, Qatar and UAE.
 
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Having met many many Iranians and even worked with a couple of them, I can say most of them don't care about finding out someone else's religion, they would talk to you about anything else or be friends with you without asking you their religion or Sect. Can't say the same about many Sunnis I have met, one of the first thing they want to know is if you are a Sunni or a Shia. This is a phenomena amongst British Pakistanis who are being radicalised and converted into Takfirisim with funding from Saudia, Qatar and UAE.

It is so sad to hear that. So sad.
 
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Having met many many Iranians and even worked with a couple of them, I can say most of them don't care about finding out someone else's religion, they would talk to you about anything else or be friends with you without asking you their religion or Sect. Can't say the same about many Sunnis I have met, one of the first thing they want to know is if you are a Sunni or a Shia. This is a phenomena amongst British Pakistanis who are being radicalised and converted into Takfirisim with funding from Saudia, Qatar and UAE.

Every one is not the same and we can say the same about sunnis as well... ISIS would ask you about your religion and than would kill you ... same can be said about the sunni talibans as well ... dont get me wrong be we need to be united ...SHIA OR SUNNI does not matter follow Quran and the teachings of Prophet Muhammad PBUH .......
 
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