This is a new focus brought to our attention by the Va coordinator.
English literature and Reading present the greatest opportunity for schools to surreptitiously introduce significant bias in the curriculum. Importantly, it is through these materials that many students form views and opinions about world issues. It is where the strongest influence on the on emotional aspects of learning occur — which incidentally is the most important part of the human learning process. Humans learn more from emotional experiences and broad generalizations than from rational thought, analysis, and facts.
I believe the English textbooks being reviewed by the DOE focus on grammar, techniques for reading for comprehension, techniques for analyzing to distinguish fact from opinion, the author’s intention, etc. However, the selected texts within these books can have significant bias, much more so than social studies texts. We will need to analyze the subject matter of the texts; viewpoints shown, emotional content; information about the author, organization, etc. from which the selected texts is gleaned; HIDDEN MEANINGS, among other things. Often when competing viewpoints are presented, the one favored (by the education establishment) will be longer, better composed, etc. making it seem more credible. Or, the favored viewpoint might just have a higher ’emotional quotient.’ The key SOL components are those that refer to such indicators as: “The student will read and analyze a variety of nonfiction text,” “recognize the author’s intended purpose,” “identify a position/argument to be confirmed, disproved, or modified” — such as SOL section 9.5 for 9th Grade English.
These are mostly Florida approved textbooks.
Islam-Biased Textbooks
CONFIDENTIAL
by School Districts
Washington 5-8 World Cultures McDougal Littell 2005
World Cultures and Geography
Washington 9-12 World Geography Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 2005
World Geography
Washington 9-12 World History Prentice Hall 2000
World History: Connections to Today
Washington 9-12 World History Honors McDougal Littell 2005
World History: Patterns of Interaction
Copyright (c) 2009 by Citizens for National Security (CFNS). Information contained in this document may not be reproduced without the written approval of CFNS, P.O. Box 880302, Boca Raton, FL 33488. 561-483-6430.
iv
Executive Summary
Students in K-12 schools lack the experience and skills to validate
most of what they hear, easily absorb propaganda, tend to believe what
their textbooks and teachers tell them, and form opinions that are
difficult to change once established. Zealous promoters of Islam trying
to win the hearts and minds of these children with their messages are
well aware of these factors. All Floridians should be, too.
In mid-2008, Citizens for National Security – a Florida nonprofit,
501(c)(3) Public Charity – assembled a volunteer Task Force to learn
about and evaluate Islamic efforts to exert their influence in
Florida’s public schools. In this initial report, CFNS focuses
exclusively on “flawed” K-12 history and geography textbooks. Flawed
textbooks are defined, within the context of this study, as those that
include egregious errors, glaring omissions, questionable inclusions,
or political, ethnic, cultural and other biases that clearly seek to
foster an Islamic agenda.
Although agenda-based campaigns to shape textbook content have existed
for some time, the past decade has seen particularly aggressive and
intense overt and stealth efforts by proponents of Islam to inject
their beliefs into public K-12 classrooms via textbooks and associated
material. Concerned parents and educators in California and Texas – the
top two state purchasers of instructional materials – have had the most
experience in recognizing and mitigating these attempts.
Florida, the third leading buyer of elementary and high school
textbooks in America, has a combination statewide adoption and district
selection process. That notwithstanding, agenda-based advocates in
Florida, including Islamics, have opportunities at three levels to
influence decisions that lead to getting their favored textbooks in
front of K-12 public-school students. Against this backdrop of possible
manipulation of textbook selection, there are also troubling national
trends in the content of history and geography textbooks.
CFNS has compiled an extensive national list of Islam-tainted textbooks
from reviews by outside sources, as well as Task-Force members. Over
200 fully referenced quotations and excerpts from flawed textbooks
exemplify their Islamic slant. CFNS volunteers contacted all Florida
school districts to determine what textbooks they were using. Data on
over 900 of them, from all 67 districts, were eventually obtained.
Of all the Islam-flawed K-12 history and geography textbooks
identified, almost half of them are used in Florida. Six school
districts are using at least five of these flawed textbooks, and seven
districts at least four. 64 of Florida’s 67 districts use one or more,
and nine are using flawed textbooks not adopted by Florida statewide.
This report reveals the methods used to distort and mold the content of
Florida’s elementary and high school history and geography textbooks in
favor of Islam. The success of its supporters thus far in penetrating
the state’s K-12 public classrooms with their beliefs calls for urgent
reexamination of the current textbook selection process, and future
research focusing on “supplementary” instructional aids not subject to
oversight, acquisitions by school libraries, and private schools.
Typical Quotations from Islam-Slanted K-12
History and Geography Textbooks Used in Florida
(excerpted from CFNS Task Force report)
Actual quotations and other wording from the textbooks referred to are
in boldface; quotations or comments by authors and reviewers are in
lightface, enclosed within brackets.
World History (McGraw-Hill/Glencoe, 2008)
Page 191
“…because humans rejected Allah’s earlier messengers, Allah sent his final revelation [to
Mohammed].”
[This de-legitimizes Christianity and Judaism by turning Jesus and Abraham into Muslims, and
marginalizing them.]
World History: The Human Journey, Modern World
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Holt, Reinhart & Winston
“Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who had been expelled from the
land claimed by Israel were living as refugees in camps. The Israeli
government would not allow the return of the Palestinians, nor would it
pay the Palestinians for land seized. Palestinian lands were given to
Jewish immigrants.”54
54 Page 701, Laurel Carrington, Mattie P. Collins, Kira Iriye, et al., eds., World History
the Human Journey, Modern World, teacher’s ed. (Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
2005).
[“incorrectly asserts all or most of the refugees were expelled by
Israel. Then it inaccurately implies that there were negotiations over
the Palestinian refugees in which Israel refused Arab proposals for the
refugees’ return or the payment of compensation.”]
World History (NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007)
Page 491
“Women, as wives and mothers, have an honored position in Saudi society.”
[It’s well known that they are limited members of Saudi society.]
World Cultures: A Global Mosaic (Pearson Prentice Hall, 2004)
Page 582
“Muslims believed that women were more likely than men to bring dishonor on the family.
Women were expected to be modest and remain secluded within the home. They wore veils to
conceal their faces from men who were not members of their family. In some Muslin homes,
women used separate entrances and ate their meals only in the company of other women.
“The system gave women security.”
[Speaks for itself]
The Earth and Its People: A Global History
Houghton Mifflin Company
“Jesus was offended by what he perceived as Jewish religious and
political leaders’ excessive concern with money and power….” 48
48 Page 134, Richard W. Bulliet, Pamela Kyle Crossley, Daniel R. Hedrick, et al., The Earth
and Its People: A Global History, advanced placement ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Company, 2005)
[“sets Jesus in opposition to Jewish leaders using some of the worst
stereotypes of Jews as justification”]
Modern World History: Patterns of Interaction (IL: McDougal-Littell, 2007)
Page 583
“The land now called Palestine consists of Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
[Self-serving inaccuracy speaks for itself.]
– 1 –
EXHIBIT 5 from “Islam in Florida’s K-12 Textbooks”©,
published by Citizens for National Security (www.CFNS.US)
Quotations and Excerpts from flawed K-12
history and geography textbooks used in Florida
Quotations and excerpts from The Trouble with Textbooks: Distorting History and
Religion Gary A. Tobin & Dennis R. Ybarra, 2008, Lexington Press
(Actual quotations and other wording from the textbooks referred to are in boldface;
quotations or comments by authors and reviewers are in lightface, enclosed within
brackets; quotations without comments are believed to speak for themselves in the
opinion of the reviewers.)
Modern World History: Patterns of Interaction
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/McDougal Littell
TTWT p. 84:
“Muhammad’s teachings, which are the revealed word of God…, are found in the
holy book called the Qur’an.”16
16 Page 15, Roger B. Beck, Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, et al., Modern World History: Patterns of
Interaction, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 5)
[“But Modern World History prefaces its description of Jesus’ birth and resurrection with
the appropriate qualifiers:”]
“According to the New Testament, Jesus of Nazareth was born around 6 to 4 B.C.”
“According to Jesus’ followers, he rose from the dead….”17
17 Pages 14- 15, Roger B. Beck, Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, et al., Modern World History: Patterns of
Interaction, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 5)
[“In these cases the Muslim belief is stated as fact, while the Jewish and Christian beliefs
are characterized as something less…verifiable.”]
TTWT p. 115:
[“describes the Arab Israeli wars in terms that imply Israel started them”]
“ Main Idea Q. What land did Israel gain from the wars against its Arab
neighbors?”30. [emphasis added] (TTWT Notes,Chapter 7)
30 Pages 589, Roger B. Beck, Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, et al., Modern World History: Patterns of
Interaction, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 7)
– E-5 –
– 2 –
TTWT p. 115:
“While the United Nations granted the Palestinians their own homeland, the
Israelis seized much of that land, including the West Bank and Gaza Strip, during
its various wars.”31 [emphasis added]
31 Pages 585, Roger B. Beck, Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, et al., Modern World History: Patterns of
Interaction, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 7)
Modern World History: Patterns of Interaction (cont’d)
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/McDougal Littell
TTWT p. 115:
“1967. Israel wins Six-Day War and seizes more Palestinian land for what it calls
security purposes.” 32
32 Pages 587, Roger B. Beck, Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, et al., Modern World History: Patterns of
Interaction, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 7)
[“The phrasing ‘for what it calls security purposes’ is particularly pejorative – and
inaccurate.”]
TTWT p. 145:
“a widespread campaign of civil disobedience called the [I]ntifada, or ‘uprising.’
The Intifada took the form of boycotts, demonstrations, attacks on Israeli soldiers,
and rock throwing by unarmed teenagers…. However, the civil disobedience
affected world opinion, which, in turn, put pressure on Israel to seek negotiations
with the Palestinians.” 52
52 Pages 587, Roger B. Beck, Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, et al., Modern World History: Patterns of
Interaction, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 8)
TTWT p. 149:
“2000 Visit by Israeli leader Ariel Sharon to holy Arab site launches second
Intifada and years of violence.” 66
66 Pages 587, Roger B. Beck, Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, et al., Modern World History: Patterns of
Interaction, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 8)
– 3 –
[“The demonizing of Sharon as an enemy of holiness and religion makes it difficult to
objectively understand the incident or its implications.”]
People, Places, and Change
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Holt, Reinhart & Winston
TWTT p.69:
[“reduces Christianity to opposition to Jewish law”]
“During the era of Roman control, a Jewish man named Jesus… taught that faith
and love were more important than Judaism’s many laws.” 20
20 Page 384, David M Helgren, Robert J. Sager and Alison S. Brooks, Peoples, Places and Change,
teacher’s ed. (Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 4)
TWTT p. 98:
“In the 60s B.C. the Roman Empire conquered the region, which they called
Palestine.”23
23 Page 384, David M Helgren, Robert J. Sager and Alison S. Brooks, Peoples, Places and Change,
teacher’s ed. (Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
[“The assertion is false.”]
The Earth and Its People: A Global History
Houghton Mifflin Company
TWTT p. 69:
“[Jesus] was essentially a rabbi, or teacher, and that, offended…by the perfunctory
nature of mainstream Jewish religious practices in his time, he prescribed a return to
the personal faith and spirituality of an earlier age.” 21 [emphasis added]
21 Page 134, Richard W. Bulliet, Pamela Kyle Crossley, Daniel R. Hedrick, et al., The Earth and Its People:
A Global History, advanced placement ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 4)
– 4 –
TWTT p. 72:
“the Jewish authorities in Jerusalem…turned him over to the Roman governor,
Pontius Pilate… Jesus was… executed by crucifixion…” 32
32 Page 134, Richard W. Bulliet, Pamela Kyle Crossley, Daniel R. Hedrick, et al., The Earth and Its People:
A Global History, advanced placement ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 4)
TWTT p. 77:
[“sets Jesus in opposition to Jewish leaders using some of the worst stereotypes of Jews
as justification”]
“Jesus was offended by what he perceived as Jewish religious and political leaders’
excessive concern with money and power….” 48
48 Page 134, Richard W. Bulliet, Pamela Kyle Crossley, Daniel R. Hedrick, et al., The Earth and Its People:
A Global History, advanced placement ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 4)
TWTT p. 84:
[“Muhammad’s spiritual experience is described as follows”]
“During one night vigil, known to later tradition as the ‘Night of Power and
Excellence’,“a being whom Muhammad later understood to be the angel Gabriel
(Jibra’il in Arabic) spoke to him…”.19 [emphasis added]
19 Page 199, Richard W. Bulliet, Pamela Kyle Crossley, Daniel R. Hedrick, et al., The Earth and Its People:
A Global History, advanced placement ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 5)
World Cultures and Geography: Eastern Hemisphere and Europe
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/McDougal Littell
TWTT pgs. 84, 101:
“Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all share common traits. Judaism is a story of
exile. Christians believe that Jesus was the promised Messiah. The Qur’an is the
collection of God’s revelations to Muhammad.” 18, 32 [emphasis added]
18,32 Page 209a, Sarah W. Bednarz, Ines M. Miyares, Mark C. Shug, et al., World Cultures and Geography:
Eastern Hemisphere and Europe, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 5)
– 5 –
[“ The reduction of Judaism to a series of exiles in this geography text covering Israel
and the Palestinian territories is meant to reinforce the notion that Jews were displaced
from the historic land of Israel long ago and to reduce the legitimacy of their
contemporary residence in that land.”]
TWTT p. 104:
[“also spins the ‘Jesus was a Palestinian’ myth”]
“Sometime during the years 8 to 4 B.C., a Jewish boy named Jesus was born in
Bethlehem, a small town in ancient Palestine.” 42
42 Page 230, Sarah W. Bednarz, Ines M. Miyares, Mark C. Shug, et al., World Cultures and Geography:
Eastern Hemisphere and Europe, teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
World Geography
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/McDougal Littell
TWTT p. 116:
“Arab-Israeli Conflict. 1948, The State of Israel is created; war with Arabs follows
immediately. 1967, Israel takes control of Jerusalem, West Bank, and Gaza Strip at
the end of the Six-Day War.”41 [emphasis added].
41 Page 532, Daniel D. Arreola, Marci Smith Deal, James F. Peterson and Rickie Sanders. World
Geography, California teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 7)
[“The passage characterizes Israel as the aggressor in 1967 and by implication in 1948 as
well.”]
TWTT pgs. 124,125:
[“implies that it was Israel rather than the Arab countries who forced the Palestinian
refugees into the squalid camps”]
“Caught in the middle of this turmoil were Palestinian Arabs…. Many of these
people had roots in Palestine that went back for centuries. They either fled their
homes or were forced into UN-sponsored refugee camps just outside Israel’s
borders. The land designated for Palestinians on the West Bank and Gaza Strip is
under Israel control.”61
– 6 –
61 Page 513, Daniel D. Arreola, Marci Smith Deal, James F. Peterson and Rickie Sanders. World
Geography, California teacher’s ed. (Evanston, IL: McDougall Littell, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 7)
World Geography Today
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Holt, Reinhart & Winston
TWTT pgs. 98, 99:
“Many Jews resented Roman rule of Palestine24
24 Page 452, Robert J. Sager, and David M. Helgren, World Geography Today, teacher’s ed. (Austin: Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, 2005) (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
[“It should read ‘Judea.’ The textbook goes on to explain, somewhat erroneously, that]
“Palestine is an old Greek name for the eastern…Mediterranean.”24
World History: The Human Journey, Modern World
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Holt, Reinhart & Winston
TTWT p.98:
[“In its map of ‘Egypt: The New Kingdom, c. 1450 B.C.,’ it uses the inaccurate label
‘Palestine’ for the western Mediterranean coastal plain. But the accompanying text only
speaks of Canaan, making this lesson a confusing one for students.22”]
22 Pages 4,6, Laurel Carrington, Mattie P. Collins, Kira Iriye, et al., eds., World History the Human
Journey, Modern World, teacher’s ed. (Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2005)(TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
TTWT p.123
[“incorrectly asserts all or most of the refugees were expelled by Israel. Then it
inaccurately implies that there were negotiations over the Palestinian refugees in which
Israel refused Arab proposals for the refugees’ return or the payment of compensation.”]
“Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who had been expelled from the land
claimed by Israel were living as refugees in camps. The Israeli government would
not allow the return of the Palestinians, nor would it pay the Palestinians for land
seized. Palestinian lands were given to Jewish immigrants.”54
54 Page 701, Laurel Carrington, Mattie P. Collins, Kira Iriye, et al., eds., World History the Human
Journey, Modern World, teacher’s ed. (Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2005).(TTWT Notes, Chapter 7)
– 7 –
[“In fact, Arab nations refused to recognize or negotiate with Israel in any way.”]
TTWT p.139
“Terrorism in the Middle East….The ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestine
has been used by some to justify the horrendous acts of terrorism committed by a
few fanatics.” 32 [emphasis added]
32 Page 808, Laurel Carrington, Mattie P. Collins, Kira Iriye, et al., eds., World History the Human
Journey, Modern World, teacher’s ed. (Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2005).(TTWT Notes, Chapter 8)
[“The language minimizes the official policy of the PLO, Hamas, and support from 70
percent of the population of the Palestinian territories for suicide bombings.”] 33
33 Pew Research Center, July 2007, http://pewglobal.org/reports/display.php?ReportID=257.
(TTWT Notes, Chapter 8)
World Cultures: A Global Mosaic
Pearson Education/Prentice Hall
TTWT p.104
“Jesus, the founder of Christianity, was born in Palestine while it was under Roman
rule.” 43
43 Page 587, Ifkithar Ahmad, Herbert Brodsky, Marylee Susan Crofts, et al., World Cultures: A Global
Mosaic, teacher’s ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2004). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
[“The Gospels say Jesus was born in ‘Bethlehem of Judea.”]
World History: Connections to Today
Pearson Education/Prentice Hall
TTWT p.147
“[Young Palestinians in the first Intifada] stoned Israeli troops and disobeyed
curfew laws….” 60
– 8 –
60 Page 900, Elisabeth G. Ellis and Anthony Esler, World History: Connections to Today (Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2001). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 8)
[“Rebellious American teenagers could readily empathize with the “disobedience” of
their Palestinian counterparts when it is phrased in this manner.”]
Glencoe World History
McGraw-Hill/Glencoe
TTWT p.101
“Although later [after King David] the Israelites would be conquered and scattered,
Palestine remained the Promised Land in the minds of many Jews.” 31
31 Page 56, Jackson J. Spielvogel, Glencoe World History, teacher’s ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill /
Glencoe, 2005). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
[“In the minds of Jews, the Promised Land was Israel not Palestine.”]
TTWT p.102
[“Glencoe World History shows the danger of conflating ancient conflicts erroneously to
the present.”]
“Conflict in Palestine. Conflict in Southwest Asia has a long history. When the
Israelites entered Palestine around 1220 B.C., other peoples were already settled
there. One of these peoples was the Philistines. For over two centuries, Israelites and
Philistines fought for control. By 1020 B.C., the Israelites found themselves on the
verge of being conquered by the Philistines…. David, the next king of the Israelites,
defeated the Philistines and established control over all of Palestine.” 33
33 Page 57, Jackson J. Spielvogel, Glencoe World History, teacher’s ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill /
Glencoe, 2005). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
The World and Its People
McGraw-Hill/Glencoe
– 9 –
TTWT p.101
“If Abraham moved to the land of Canaan (Palestine) he would be blessed…”30
30 Pages 473,509, Richard C. Boehm, David G. Armstrong, Francis P. Hunkins, et al., The World and Its
People, teacher’s ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill/Glencoe, 2005). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
[“is also among those textbooks introducing confusing land nomenclature.”]
TTWT p.116
[“also soft pedals the Arab countries’ role in initiating hostilities in 1948”]
“War soon broke out between Israel and its Arab neighbors.” 36
36 Pages 473,509, Richard C. Boehm, David G. Armstrong, Francis P. Hunkins, et al., The World and Its
People, teacher’s ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill/Glencoe, 2005). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 7)
Traditions and Encounters: A Global Perspective on the Past
McGraw-Hill
TTWT p.102
“Israelites formed a branch of Hebrews who settled in Palestine (modern-day
Israel).”
[“Again, the ‘Palestine’ of ancient times is contrasted with the modern nation called
Israel.”]
“[Abraham] migrated to Palestine about 1850 B.C.E….” “According to their
scriptures some Hebrews migrated from Palestine to Egypt during the eighteenth
century B.C.E.” “[T]his branch of the Hebrews departed under the leadership of
Moses and went to Palestine…. [T]hese Hebrews known as the Israelites, fought
bitterly with other inhabitants of Palestine and carved out a territory for
themselves.” 35
35 Pages 45-48, Jerry H. Bentley and Herbert F. Ziegler, Traditions and Encounters: A Global Perspective
on the Past, teacher’s ed. (Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2006). (TTWT Notes, Chapter 6)
______
– 10 –
Quotations and excerpts from Florida’s flawed K-12 textbooks provided by
consultants and members of Citizens for National Security, with reviewer comments
The American Vision (McGraw-Hill/Glencoe, 2005
Page 27
[Passage on] “Islam and West African Civilization.”
“Ideas as well as goods traveled along these African trade routes. Among the most significant of
these were the religious ideas of Islam.
“In the early A.D. 600s, Islam began winning converts outside of its native Arabia. By 711 Islam,
whose followers are called Muslims, had spread all the way across northern Africa to the Atlantic
Ocean. Through both armed conquest and the sense of religious solidarity that Islam promoted,
this new creed won wide acceptance.
“By the 900s, the nomadic people who controlled the trade caravans in the Sahara had become
Muslim as well. Then in turn carried Islam across the Sahara into the heart of West Africa, where
many people living in the region’s cities and market towns would eventually embrace it.”
[Nothing is mentioned of religion before Islam. It’s as though no religion ever existed before
Islam.]
Pages 30-31
[Arabs and Europeans are both guilty UNTIL]
“African slavery began to change with the arrival of Islam. Muslims in the Middle East were
permitted to enslave non-Muslims….”
[The author is trying to show that Arabs and Muslims are separate when slavery is concerned. By
adding the word “permitted,” it’s made to seem as though this kind of slavery by the Muslims is
different and acceptable.]
[This is the only time that Slavery and the word Muslim are used together. Islam is not mentioned
again as a slaveholder. Henceforth, slaves are shown to be captured and held by the Europeans.]
Page 56
[Statement about Jews is written in such a way that it makes the reader think that Jews had little
opportunity to maintain Jewish customs or to study Hebrew in America. It doesn’t mention the
Holocaust by name. It also fails to mention why Jews also came from Iran and Syria]
“Following the tragic events of World War II, thousands of homeless European Jews came to the
United States. Many Eastern Jews, particularly from Iran and Syria, soon followed. With the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, many Russian Jews migrated to America. Unlike the Russian
immigrants of the 1800s, these Jews had little opportunity to maintain Jewish customs or to study
Hebrew.
– 11 –
The American Vision (IL: McGraw-Hill/Glencoe, 2008)
Page 694
[The claim that the Nazis]
“systematically attempted to kill all European Jews”
[is true, but the rest of the sentence,]
“…and others whom they regarded as inferior,”
[is not.]
[The six extermination camps were built for the explicit purpose of exterminating the Jews. The
Wannsee Conference of 20 January 1942 addressed the extermination of the Jews.]
[The main problem here is that it collapses the Jews into the category of “just another victim,”
ignoring the fact that the murder camps in Poland were designed to murder Jews, not “the
disabled, Gypsies, homosexuals, and Slavic peoples”]
Page 696
[Kristallnacht: The text indicates that on this occasion the Gestapo]
“arrested at least 20,000 wealthy Jews.”
[This statement has anti-Semitic overtones. First, more than 30,000 Jews were arrested. Second,
since the beginning of the Aryanization of Jewish property in October 1937, and with the laws
passed from 1933 onward limiting where Jews could work, there were no “wealthy” Jews in
Germany. This phrasing creates the impression that wealth and Jews were synonymous, and that
an understandable economic envy drove the Nazi policies against the Jews.]
[The caption over the photo on the bottom left corner of p. 696 reads,
“After World War II broke out, the Nazis methodically deprived Jews of their rights.”
[Not exactly. The Nazis began methodically depriving Jews of their rights on April 7, 1933, with
the passage of the first anti-Jewish law, which prohibited Jews from working for the government.]
Page 698
“Nazi atrocities included sending millions of Jews, Gypsies, Slavs, the disabled, and others to
concentration and extermination camps”.
[That is not the Endlösung or “Final Solution.” The Final Solution is the Final Solution of the
Judenfrage, that is, of the Jewish Question, not the Gypsy Question or the Disabled Question or
the Slav Question. Here we have the leveling of the Jews into a general category of “victim,” with
no distinctions made with regard to who is targeted for extermination and why.]
– 12 –
Pages 700-708
[Captions for the photos of Jews in Dachau and Buchenwald at the time of the “liberation” do not
refer to them as Jews; rather, they are simply called “survivors,” once again taking the Jews out of
the Holocaust.]
Chapter 25
[While this chapter offers a good account of the Civil Rights Movement, it makes no mention of
significant contributions from well-known Jews such as Abraham Joshua Heschel, or of wellknown
Jewish victims such as Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner. More than one-third of
the white volunteers in the Movement were Jews at a time when Jews made up about 3% of the
American population. That seems noteworthy.]
Pages 1036-41
[From the index:] Terrorism
[These pages that address terrorism do not use the words Islamic or Muslim with the word
“terrorist.”]
Page 1038
[From the Index:] Islam
[One gets the misleading impression that Islamic terrorism arose from “the rise of the oil industry”
and “the spread of Western ideas” into the Middle East. This ignores Islamic purist movements
such as Wahhabism from the 18th century and Salafism from the 19th century, which justify the use
of violence both against non-Muslims and against “moderate” Muslims and which inform the
modern terrorist ideologues, such as those in the Muslim Brotherhood, Hezbollah, and al-Qaeda. ]
Page 1038
“American support of Israel also angered many in the Middle East. In 1947 the UN divided Britishcontrolled
Palestine into two territories to provide a home for Jews. One part became Israel. The
other part was to become a state for Palestinian Arabs, but fighting between Israel and the Arab
states in 1948 left this territory under the control of Israel, Jordan, and Egypt.”
[No mention that it was the Arab states that started the fighting by attacking Israel.}
World History (Thomson, Wadsworth, 2004)
Page 25
“Many scholars today doubt that the early books of the Hebrew Bible reflect the true history of
the early Israelites. They argue that the early books of the Bible, written centuries after the events
described, preserve only what the Israelites came to believe about themselves and that recent
archaeological evidence often contradicts the details of the biblical accounts…what is generally
agreed, however, is that between 1200 and 1000 BCE, the Israelites emerged as a distinct group of
– 13 –
people, possibly organized into tribes or a league of tribes, who established a united kingdom
known as Israel.”
[The writer has “given” that there was a place known as Palestine/ Israel and that Jews lived there,
but the writer breaks down the Bible itself, even more important than the place that Jews settled.
The word ‘Bible” is not found in the index, but there are five pages attributed to “Koran,” and
that religious book is found in the index. The writer then takes the ” given” fact on page 25 and
adds this to it: that Jews did once settle in Palestine centuries before; but on page 666 it states
that]
“The land of Palestine – once the home of the Jews but now inhabited primarily by Muslim
Palestinians – was to become the national home for the Jews…but Arab nationalists were
incensed. How could a national home for the Jewish people be established in a territory where
90% of the population was Muslim?”
[Together, these statements constitute bias.]
“The Israelites viewed the Temple in the city of Jerusalem as a symbolic center of their religion and
hence of the kingdom of Israel itself. The Temple now housed the Ark of the Covenant, the holy
chest containing the sacred relics of the religion and, symbolically, the throne of their invisible God
of Israel.”
[Relics of the religion? How about the Torah? Is that a relic? Is it any more a relic than the
Koran?]
Page 26
“The people of Judah survived, eventually becoming known as the Jews and giving their name to
Judaism, the religion of Yahweh, the Jewish God.”
[In the index, we find the strange name of Yahweh with a parenthesis stating that “god of
Israelites” – lower case G. There is no index find for the name of Allah. The term ALLAH is not
used for the Muslim God. The writer is not against using Arabic words because on Page 840, he
refers to the material welfare of the Muslim community as UMMA.]
“According to Jewish conception, there is but one God, called Yahweh, who is the creator of the
world and everything in it. The Jewish God ruled the world; he was subject to nothing. All people
were his servants, whether they knew it or not.”
[Jews have never called their God “Yahweh!”]
Page 142
“It was in the midst of the confusion and conflict in Judaea that Jesus of Nazareth (c. 6 B.C.E. – 29
C.E.) began his public preaching. Jesus – a Palestinian Jew – grew up in Galilee, an important
center of the militant Zealots.
[Jesus is referred to as a Palestinian Jew. Palestine didn’t even exist in this time frame]
– 14 –
Page 143
“A few loyal followers of Jesus spread the story that Jesus had overcome death…and then
ascended into heaven…”
[How many is a few? 100? Three? Using the word “story” makes it sound like a myth…but then
the ascension into heaven sounds like the writer is trying to show how similar Jesus’ plight was to
Mohammad, N.B. there is a rock in a mosque in Israel where the foot of Mohammad stepped to
ascend into heaven.]
Page 148
While many aspects of the Roman world would continue, the heirs of Romans created new
civilizations – European, Islamic and Byzantine – that would carry on yet another state in the
development of human society.”
[The heirs of Roman society created Islam?]
Page 218
[This chapter on Africa tells how Arab forces invaded and controlled Egypt. Then it says in the
next paragraph that]
“The Arab Conquerors were probably welcomed by many, if not the majority of the local
inhabitants.”
Pages 228-229
[States that slavery did not originate with Europeans; it was practiced in ancient times in Africa.
NO MENTION OF ARABS HAVING ANYTHING TO DO WITH IT, EXCEPT]
“Those pressed into service as soldiers were sometimes more fortunate, since in Muslim societies in
the Middle East, they might at some point win their freedom.”
Page 347
[In a section entitled ” Reflection,”]
“…while Islam sometimes followed the path of Arab warriors, they rarely imposed their religion
by force on the local population. In some instances, as with the Mongols, the conquerors made
no effort to convert others to their own religions. By contrast, Christian monks, motivated by
missionary fervor, converted many of the peoples of central and eastern Europe.”
[While the Arab conquerors didn’t always use force to impose their religion, they did treat those
that didn’t convert to Islam as second-level subjects. Then the text attempts to enhance Islamic
tolerance by demeaning that of Christianity.]
Page 586
“[figure caption] SERVING THE WHITE RULER. Although European governments claimed to be
carrying out the civilizing mission in Africa, all too often the local population was forced to labor
– 15 –
in degrading conditions to serve the economic interests of the occupying powers. Here African
workers are depicted as they transport goods for a European merchant.”
[The stereotypical slave master in the drawing is depicted as a WHITE person, not possessing the
mulatto coloring of the Arab. The figure fails to point out that Arabs were significant slave owners
and slave masters, too]
Page 663
“[in essay “A Call for a Muslim State,” a December 1930 speech by Mohammed Iqbal to the All-
India Muslim League] What I mean to say is that Muslim society, with its remarkable homogeneity
and inner unity, has grown to be what it is under the pressure of the laws and institutions
associated with the culture of Islam. …Even the Hindus do not form a homogeneous group. …The
Muslim demand for the creation of a Muslim India is, therefore, perfectly justified. …India is the
greatest Muslim country in the world. …]
[By resorting to this “essay,” the textbook writer finds yet another way to put down another
religion – in this case Hinduism – and build up Islam.]
Page 805
“Left- and right-wing terrorist groups flourished in the late 1970s and early 1980s, but terrorist acts
also stemmed from militant nationalists who wished to create separatist states. …Angered over the
loss of their territory to Israel, some militant Palestinians responded with a policy of terrorist
attacks against Israel’s supporters [and Israel].”
[The terrorist attacks by the Palestinians are blamed on Israel.]
Page 830
“What were the sources of Muslim anger? …bin Laden declared that the [9/11] attacks were a
response to the ‘humiliation and disgrace’ that have afflicted the Islamic world for over eighty
years, a period dating back to the end of World War I.”
[Bin Laden justifies 9/11 by putting all the blame on the West.]
World Geography (McDougal Littell, 2005)
Page 75
“The religion [Islam] has close ties to the prophets and teachers of Judaism and Christianity.”
[A commonly used tactic by promoters of Islam to equate it to the other major religions, and
making it appear more Western in thought and acceptance.]
Pages 512-513
[Under the subtitle “CREATING THE STATE OF ISRAEL”]
“Caught in the middle of this turmoil were Palestinian Arabs and Christians. Many of these people
had roots in Palestine that went back for centuries. They either fled their homes or were forced
– 16 –
into UN-sponsored refugee camps just outside Israel’s borders. The land designated for the
Palestinians on the West Bank and Gaza Strip is under Israeli control.”
[Too much is missing here. (1) There needs to be an explanation of why surrounding Arab nations
do not want Israel in the Middle East. (2) Since when were Christians in the Middle East caught up
in the “turmoil with the Palestinian Arabs?” (3) There is no explanation that it was NOT Israel that
took the land on the West Bank and Gaza unprovoked. It was Arab nations who initiated the
war, and Israel took these areas to protect themselves.]
Pages 506-507
“RELIGIOUS DUTIES SHAPE LIVES: Despite its rapid modernization, some aspects of Muslim
culture have remained the same for centuries. If you traveled to SW Asia, one of the first things
you would likely notice is that women cover their heads, hair and sometimes faces with a scarf or
veil. This is in keeping with the belief that covering those parts of the body is pleasing to God.
Women’s roles have gradually expanded during the 20th century. More Arabic women are
becoming educated and are able to pursue careers in other nations. Because family is viewed as
very important, many women stay at home to manage affairs.”
[What is missing here is the word “Allah” instead of God. You never hear Arabs in the U.S. saying,
“praise God.” They always say, “praise Allah.” Also, it’s very noticeable that the words ”forced
to” do not appear. And, though the woman’s roll has expanded in some arenas, in comparison
many more women have been forced into subservient status than those whose rolls have been
“expanded.”]
Page 492
[A misleading paragraph]
“The desert area that occupies parts of Israel is the Negev Desert. Unlike some deserts, this one
produces crops through extensive irrigation.”
[The suggestion is that the Arab deserts can’t produce anything because the Israeli ones have access
to irrigation. Page 495 relates to this and infers the conclusion that Israel is stealing the water.]
Page 532
[Photo caption]
“Jerusalem checkpoints deepen Palestinian resentment.”
GLOSSARY
[Ramadan is defined, but there are no equivalent definitions for the Jewish Holy Days of Yom
Kippur or Rosh Hashanah.
Mosque is defined, but not ashram or synagogue.
Sunni and Shiite are defined, but not Catholic, Protestant, Presbyterian, Jew, etc.
Muhammad is defined, but not Jesus Christ (or John the Baptist who baptized him).]
– 17 –
World Cultures and Geography (McDougal Littell, 2005)
Pages 436-438
[Points out that Jews refer to]
“their god (sic)”
[as Yahweh, yet Muslims refer to their god as God, not mentioning Allah at all. The word God
used by Muslims appears instead of Allah throughout.]
Page 437
“Jesus is BELIEVED [caps inserted for emphasis) by followers to be the messiah”
[but with Muhammad,]
“Gabriel continued to send revelations to Muhammad over 22 years.”
[written as a “fact.”]
Page 474
“Islam encourages people to live a life of tolerance and peace.”
[There is a massive amount of historical and contemporary evidence that proves otherwise.]
Social Studies: Communities, Long Ago and Today (Houghton Mifflin, 2005)
[Christianity, Islam, Buddhism and Hinduism are mentioned in the book, as are other religions;
but, there is no reference to Judaism whatsoever.]
Pages 388-389
“Most of the people who lived on manors belonged to the Roman Catholic Church. They
practiced a religion called Christianity. The Roman Catholic Church grew strong during the Middle
Ages. At that time, members of the Catholic church supported it by giving a tenth of their earnings.
Church leaders became rich and powerful. Sometimes kings and queens did not agree with church
leaders. However, because of its power, rulers often decided to obey the church.”
“Many important ideas taught in Europe in the Middle Ages came from scholars who followed a
religion called Islam. Islam started in the Middle East and spread to parts of Europe, including
Spain. People in the Islamic world had been exploring scientific ideas. Students in European
universities began to study those ideas, too. They learned new things about medicine and the
stars.”
[Christianity is put in a negative light, whereas Islam is shown in a positive light.]
– 18 –
The American Pageant (Houghton Mifflin, 2002)
Page 935
“Tiny Israel stunned the Soviet-backed Egyptians in a devastating Six-Day War in June 1967. When
the smoke had cleared, Israel occupied new territories in the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights,
the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank of the Jordan River, including Jerusalem. Although the Israelis
eventually withdrew from the Sinai, they refused to relinquish the other areas and even introduced
Jewish settlers into the heavily Arab district of the West Bank. The Arab Palestinians already living
in the West Bank and their Arab allies elsewhere complained loudly about these Israeli policies, but
to no avail. The Middle East was becoming an ever more dangerously paced powder keg that the
war-plagued United States was powerless to defuse.”
[The writer failed to mention that the Arabs were the aggressors here, provoking the war. They
also failed to mention, for instance, that the Golan Heights, on a hill overlooking the most
fertile valley in Israel, was lined with Arab bunkers to attack Israel (reviewer was there
immediately after the 6-Day War and saw them). Also not mentioned was the Arabs hatred of
Jews in general, never letting them visit their most holy place – the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem –
until Israel managed to take over Jerusalem during that war.]
Page 1033
“[In describing Bin Laden’s resentments of the U.S.] its [U.S.] military presence on the sacred soil of
the Arabian peninsula and its support for Israel’s hostility of Palestinian nationalism.”
[These are not Bin Laden’s words, but those of the author who adopts these words without
qualification.]
World History (IL: McGraw-Hill/Glencoe, 2008)
Page 192
“The Quran permitted fair, defensive warfare as jihad (jih*HAD), or ‘struggle in the way of
God’… Mohammad’s successors expanded their territory”
Page 193
“In the conquered territories, Arab administrators were tolerant, sometimes even allowing local
officials to continue to govern. Both Christians and Jews were allowed to practice their religions
because they were ‘People of the Book’…those who had written scriptures revealed by God before
Mohammad. Those who chose not to convert were required to be loyal to Muslim rule and pay
taxes.”
[In addition to having to pay taxes, those who did not convert were classified as dhimmi’s –
viewed as second-rate citizens, and treated poorly.]
– 19 –
World History (McGraw-Hill/Glencoe, 2008)
Page 40
[Egypt under Hatshepsut did not occupy “Palestine.” That name was given to the region in
question by the Romans more than 1500 years later.]
Page 50
[Jews did not call their God Yahweh.]
Page 190
“[Mohammad] defended himself.”
[Why no mention of Mohammad as a raider, as someone who specified how war booty was to be
divided, as a warrior who indisputably waged offensive war? This section is sanitized to the point
of being propagandist rater than educational.]
Page 191
“…because humans rejected Allah’s earlier messengers, Allah sent his final revelation.”
[This de-legitimizes Christianity and Judaism by turning Jesus and Abraham into Muslims, and
marginalizing them.]
Page 191
“The shari’ah does not separate religious matters from civil or political law.”
[Along with telling the reader how Muslims must be honest and just, the next paragraph should
include the implications of a doctrine––fundamental to Islam––that does not allow for the
separation of church and state, especially for a country like the United States.]
Pages 192-193
[Students are told the Muslims “expanded,” that they “took control” of Syria, and that by 642
Egypt “had been added” to the empire. Exactly how did the Muslims “expand,” “take control,”
etc.? Why is there no discussion here of the Muslim destruction of Christian and Jewish
communities and of the dreadful devastation caused by these early Muslim jihad wars?]
“[the Quran permitted] “fair defensive war as jihad”
[Nonsense to anyone who knows the history of those wars.]
Page 193
“[Jews were required to] pay taxes”
Arab “administrators” (they were imperial officials ruling over subject populations) were not
tolerant, at least not in the sense that we use that word today. Why in this section on “Arab Rule”
is there no mention of the oppressive and humiliating nature of the “taxes” Jews and Christians, as
– 20 –
dhimmi, had to pay under Muslim rule? The jizra tax––its intent and the deliberately humiliating
way in which it was collected––should be described so that students really understand how
Christians and Jews lived under Muslim rule.]
Page 202
[Re Arab slave trade,]
“all people are equal”
[and]
“not strictly the case”
[Slaves were hardly the only group “not considered equal” in the Islamic world. The Christian
and Jewish dhimmi were institutional inferiors. It is telling that the word “infidel,” used repeatedly
by Muslims with regard to non-Muslims, does not appear in this text until page 325, when it is
used to describe how Christians viewed Muslims. ]
Page 203
“The Role of Women”
[section makes it appear that Islam accords women a serious degree of equality with men. This
section is intellectually dishonest. According to the Quran (2:282), a woman’s testimony is worth
half that of a man. Verse 4:34 declares, “Men have authority over women because God has made
one superior to the other.” There is no end to the evidence about the inferior status of women
under Islam, both from the sacred texts and from history and custom, from the origins of Islam
right up to the present.]
Page 325
[Here we are told that the Crusaders committed a “horrible massacre” when they took Jerusalem.
This is true, but why is there no mention of “horrible massacres” by Muslims during their
conquests?]
Page 996
“Many Jews had immigrated to the Palestine Mandate, believing it to be their promised land.”
[The terminology “promised land” belongs to the Bible. The correct terminology is biblical
homeland. Jews immigrated to Palestine because Jews have always lived there since biblical times.
“The Zionists wanted the land of ancient Israel to be a home for the Jewish people”
[This paragraph skillfully develops the Islamist revisionism that purports that the state of Israel was
created because of world sympathy after the Holocaust. Interestingly, this is in direct antithesis to
the material on Page 679 where Zionism and immigration to Palestine are correctly explained as
responses to Europe anti-Semitism dating back to the Middle Ages. The final paragraph on Page
– 21 –
996 does not explain the role of the Arabs in creating the Palestinian refugee problem, and it
makes no mention of the Jewish refugees from Arab lands.]
Page 997
[The following comments refer to the map. The key, using arrows, indicates two groups of Arab
“refugees,” one from 1948 and one from 1967. Then note that all the Jews arriving in Israel are
part of a “Jewish immigration, 1948-1964.” Thus, according to this textbook, Holocaust survivors,
who account for almost all of the”350,000 from Europe,” are not refugees, their experiences
between the late 1930s and 1948 notwithstanding, nor are “264,500 from N. Africa,” all of whom
fled intolerable conditions in Arab countries without their property. What exactly does it take to
make a Jew a “refugee?”]
Page 999
[There is no truth in the statement that the PLO recognized the Israeli state in return for the
Palestinian control over a semi-independent area. The PLO Charter has yet to be changed and still
calls for the destruction of Israel.]
World History: Patterns of Interaction (Florida Edition: McDougal-Littell, 2005)
Page 78
[Photo caption] “This statue of Moses was carved by Michelangelo.”
[In the painting that Michelangelo used as the basis for creating the statue, there were lengthy rays
emanating from Moses toward Heaven. The sculptor had no choice but to truncate them for the
statue. Hence, Moses appears to have “horns” on his head. Without explanation, impressionable
students may be led to adopt the anti-Semitic, mythical belief of some that Jews have horns.]
World History: Patterns of Interaction (IL: McDougal-Littell, 2007)
Page 270
“Because the Qur’an forbade forced conversion, Muslims allowed conquered peoples to follow
their own religion… Tolerance…continued after the Muslim state was established.”
Page 270
“The persecuted people often welcomed the [Muslim] invaders and chose to accept Islam. They
were attracted by the appeal of the message of Islam, which offered equality and hope in this
world.”
Page 1017
“The land now called Palestine consists of Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.”
– 22 –
Page 1019
“While the United Nations had granted the Palestinians their own homeland, the Israelis had
seized much of that land, including the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, during various wars. Israel
insisted that such a move was vital to its national security.”
Modern World History: Patterns of Interaction (IL: McDougal-Littell, 2007)
Page 583
“The land now called Palestine consists of Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Page 584
“In 1947, the UN General Assembly voted for the partition of Palestine into a Palestinian state and
a Jewish state. Jerusalem was to be an international city owned by neither side. The terms of the
partition gave Jews 55 percent of the area even though they made up only 34 percent of the
population. In the wake of the war and the Holocaust, the United States and many European
nations felt great sympathy for the Jews.
“Largely as a result of this fighting, the state that the UN had set aside for the Palestinians never
came into being. Israel seized half of the land in the 1948-1949 fighting. While the fighting raged,
at least 600,000 Palestinians fled, migrating from the areas under Israeli control. They settled in
UN-sponsored refugee camps that ringed the borders of their former homeland.”
Page 587
“In 1987, Palestinians began to express their frustrations in a wide spread campaign of civil
disobedience called the intifada, or “uprising.” The intifada took the form of boycotts,
demonstrations, attacks on Israeli soldiers, and rock throwing by unarmed teenagers.”
[“Islamist terrorists” would be more accurate. This relatively benign portrayal of Palestinian
protests excludes attacks on Israel’s civilians, but does include “unarmed teenagers.” While Intifada
militants, including rock throwers, were of all ages, the writer selectively identifies “teenagers,” to
whom middle- and high-school teenagers can relate with sympathy.]
World History (NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007)
Page 306
“Another duty is jihad, or struggle in God’s service. Jihad is usually a personal duty for Muslims,
who focus on overcoming immorality within themselves. At other times, jihad may be interpreted
as holy war to defend Islam and the Muslim community, much like the Crusades to defend
– 23 –
Christianity. However, just holy war may be declared only by the community, not by an
individual Muslim or small group.
“Muslims consider Jews and Christians to be “People of the Book”, spiritually superior to
polytheistic idol worshippers. Although there have been exceptions, the people of the Book have
historically enjoyed religious freedom in many Muslim societies”
Page 308
“Similar to Jewish law, the Sharia [law] regulates moral conduct, family life, business practices,
government, and other aspects of individual and community life.”
Page 474
“By the end of the 1948 war, Israel controlled almost three fourths of Palestine, including land in
the Negev Desert and half of Jerusalem. Jordan and Egypt divided the rest of Palestine between
them. The Palestinians were left with no country at all.”
Page 480
“Israel seemed unwilling to allow a Palestinian homeland.”
Page 491
“Women, as wives and mothers, have an honored position in Saudi society.”
[It’s well known that they are limited members of society in most other ways.]
Page 1054
“For decades, the Middle East has been the focus of conflicts that have global impact. The Middle
East commands vast oil resources and key waterways such as the Persian Gulf. During the Cold
War, both the United States and the Soviet Union wanted access to the oil and the
waterways…Meanwhile, the persistent dispute between Israelis and Palestinian Arabs has added to
tensions.”
Human Heritage: A World History (Glencoe, 2004)
Page 342
“ Islamic society produced some women of great knowledge & power… . Reciting & memorizing
the Koran was an important requirement in education”
World Cultures: A Global Mosaic (Pearson Prentice Hall, 2004)
Page 565
“Jesus, the founder of Christianity, was born in Palestine while it was under Roman rule.”
[Palestine did not exist until the Romans named it approximately 135 years after the birth of Jesus.]
– 24 –
Page 571
“Jihad includes a person’s inner struggle to achieve spiritual peace as well as any battle in defense
of Islam.”
“ Muslims believe that Allah is the same God as the God of the Jews and Christians, Muslims also
believe in a final day of judgment. On this day, it is believed, the wicked will be punished with
suffering and the faithful will be rewarded with eternal life in heaven.”
“[Muhammad] called Jews and Christians ‘people of the Book’ because they followed God’s
teachings in the Bible. The ‘people of the Book’ had a special status as ahl al-dhimma, or protected
people, and Muslims were required to treat them with tolerance.”
“ Islam also teaches that all people are equal. ‘Know that every Muslim is a brother to every other
Muslim, and that you are now one brotherhood,’ declared Muhammad.”
Page 572
“Islam spread rapidly during the 100 years after Muhammad’s death. By 732, the Muslim Arabs
had conquered an empire that reached from the Indus River to the Atlantic Ocean. Why did Islam
expand so swiftly?…The idea of jihad motivated many Muslim soldiers. The lure of the riches to
be won in the conquered lands was another powerful incentive.”
“ The Muslims were tolerant conquerors. They did not force ‘people of the Book’ to convert to
Islam. Jews and Christians were free to worship as they pleased”
Page 582
“ The Koran permits a man to have as many as four wives, as long as he treats each of them
equally. This means that he must give them all the same material benefits, the same amount of
love, and the same degree of respect. Since few men could afford to support several wives, most
men had only a single wife.”
“Muslims believed that women were more likely than men to bring dishonor on the family.
Women were expected to be modest and remain secluded within the home. They wore veils to
conceal their faces from men who were not members of their family. In some Muslin homes,
women used separate entrances and ate their meals only in the company of other women.
“The system gave women security.”
Page 583
“…although the Koran made women subordinate to men, women, like all believers, were equal in
the eyes of God.”
– 25 –
People, Places, and Change
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Holt, Reinhart & Winston, 2005)
Page 404
“As Saudi Arabia’s economy grew, many foreign workers came to the country to work. In the
early 2000s foreign workers made up about 25 percent of Saudi Arabia’s population. These
workers included people from Yemen, Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Iraq, South Korea, and the
Philippines.” [Emphasis added]
[Palestine was not a country in 2000, nor has it been since. Yet, it is included with other countries
as if it was.]
Page F427A
“Writing Activity and Tips…Kazakhs have many different holidays, including two New Year
celebrations. Think about a holiday that you would like to add to our calendar. Write a letter to
the President of the United States arguing for the addition of this holiday.”
[The word “Muslim” is not used, though the chapter discusses Islam very heavily. Kazakhstan is
predominantly a Muslim country, in which Islam is the major religion. This directive encourages
middle school readers to campaign for a national Islamic holiday.]
Page 463
“Violence between Algeria’s government and some Islamic groups has claimed thousands of lives
since then [1992].”
[In reality, the Muslims were the ones who entered into a huge terrorism campaign against the
Algerian government that only engaged in violence to protect the country.]
Page 471
“The Slave Trade…However, by the 1600s…European traders met this demand [for labor in
Europe’s American colonies] by selling enslaved Africans to colonists.”
Page 521
“The Portuguese also established large estates along the Zambezi River that used slave labor. In the
1700s and 1800s Mozambique became an important part of the slave trade. Africans were
captured there and sent as slaves to Brazil and other parts of the world.”
Page 523
“The British banned slavery in their empire in 1833. The Portuguese colonies of Angola and
Mozambique remained as Africa’s main slave markets.”
[Note – not Muslims who lived in these colonies, but the Portuguese.]
[On pages 471, 521 and 523 above – and on page 87 where the United States is also blamed for
slavery – never does the reader see the major role Muslims played in its practice. Someone else is
always to blame for it – the Europeans, the U.S., the Portuguese, the Brazilians, the British, Angola,
Mozambique, etc.]
– 26 –
Quotations and excerpts from Islam in the Classroom: What the Textbooks Tell Us
Gilbert T. Sewall, American Textbook Council, 2008
(Quotations by the authors are in lightface, enclosed within brackets; actual quotes from
the textbooks referred to are in boldface)
World History: Modern Times (Glencoe)
[Glencoe’s Modern Times summarizes September 11 with more detail and
insight. But here, too, terrorism goes unlabeled and unexplained:]
[“The attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were acts
of terrorism. Terrorism is the use of violence by nongovernmental
groups against civilians to achieve a political goal. Terrorist acts
are intended to instill fear in people and to frighten their
governments into changing their policies. The terrorist attacks on
September 11, 2001, killed all 266 passengers and crewmembers on the
four hijacked planes. Another 125 people died in the Pentagon. In
New York City, nearly 3,000 people died. More Americans were killed
in the attacks than died at Pearl Harbor or on D-Day in World War
II,”] pg29,30
[Having made a valuable point about state-sponsored terrorism,
Glencoe’s World History: Modern Times broadens the subject,
switching to a new section entitled “Islamic Militants: A Clash of
Cultures.”]
[“Terrorist acts became more frequent in the later twentieth
century.”
[the text begins, abandoning the stated subject from the start.]
[“Acts of terror have become a regular aspect of modern society
around the globe.”]
[Then the book continues:]
[“Terrorism has been practiced since ancient times. In the modern
period, one example occurred in Russia in the late 1800s, when
radical reformers bombed trains or assassinated officials to fight
the czar’s repression. The causes of recent world terrorism are
complex. Some analysts say this terrorism is rooted in the clash of
modern and Islamic cultures.
They argue that because many states in the former Ottoman Empire did
not modernize along Western lines, Muslims have not accommodated
– 27 –
their religious beliefs to the modern world. Other analysts note
that the Christians and Muslims have viewed each other with
hostility since at least since the time of the Crusades. Others
suggest that poverty and ignorance lie at the root of the problem—
extremists find it easy to stir up resentment against wealthy
Western societies. Finally, some say terrorism would be rare if the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict could be solved.”]pg24, 25
[The reference to “recent world terrorism”—editors do not want to
label it “Islamic terrorism”—lists views outsourced to unnamed
“analysts,” letting World History: Modern Times editors off the
hook. The text never clarifies what it means when it says, “Muslims
have not accommodated their religious beliefs to the modern world.”
The idea that “poverty and ignorance lie at the root of the problem”
sounds plausible but is not true. Terrorists are rarely poor or
ignorant. Who really believes that terrorism would go away if the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict were resolved? Who pretends that this
resolution is an immediate possibility?]
[Neither Prentice Hall’s World History: The Modern World nor
Glencoe’s World History: Modern Times explains that Islamic
terrorism is a worldwide event or that jihad is vivid reality in
Africa (Algeria, Nigeria, Sudan, Egypt), the Middle East (Palestine,
Lebanon, Israel, Syria, Iraq, Iran, the Caucasus), and Asia
(Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kashmir, Indonesia), with terrorism a fact
of life in the Balkans and Europe and in the United States: it’s
quite a list, and global.] pg25
[World History: Modern Times first declares awkwardly that few
Muslims are extremists, then segues incoherently into the status of
women in modern Islamic societies:]
[“Because militants have received so much media attention, some
believed that most Muslims were extremists. They are in a minority,
however, especially in their view toward women. In the early 1900s,
many Middle Eastern women had few rights. This situation had existed
for centuries, but it was not seen in the earliest Islamic
societies. In Muhammad’s time, Muslim women had extensive political
and social rights. Restrictions on women came later.”] pg29
The American Vision: Modern Times (Glencoe)
[American Vision: Modern Times, as do other textbooks, points to
poverty and cultural imperialism as root causes of Islamic
terrorism. To reiterate, it concludes with the standard textbook
disclaimer, highlighting the word contrary:]
[“These Muslim movements wanted to overthrow pro-Western governments
– 28 –
in the Middle East and create a pure Islamic society. Muslims who
support these movements are referred to as fundamentalist militants.
Although the vast majority of Muslims believe terrorism is contrary
to their faith, militants began using terrorism to achieve their
goals.”] pg32
The Americans: Reconstruction to the Twenty-first Century
(McDougal Littell) 98
[The context of Islamic terrorism is likewise hard to discern in
U.S. history textbooks, even though the September 11 narratives are
fuller and the examination of U.S. Foreign policy less superficial
than in world history textbooks. McDougal Littell’s The Americans:
Reconstruction to the Twenty-first Century says:]
[“The reasons for terrorist attacks vary. Traditional motives
include gaining independence, expelling foreigners, or changing
society. These reasons often give rise to domestic terrorism—
violence used by people to change the policies of their own
government or to overthrow their government.
“In the late 20th century, another type of terrorism began to emerge.
Terrorists who carried out this type of terrorism wanted to achieve
political ends or destroy what they considered to be the forces of
evil. They attacked targets not just in their own country, but
anywhere in the world. These terrorists were willing to use any type
of weapon to kill their enemy. They were even willing to die to
ensure the success of their attacks.”]
[While the language and explanations in The Americans:
Reconstruction to the Twenty-first Century, are more illuminating
than those in many high school world histories, what the textbook
says is also artful in what it avoids. A student will be hard
pressed to identify religion and, more specifically, radical Islam
as the enemy and source of the terrorist attacks.] pg30,31
Textbooks Referenced by Sewall
World History: Connections to Today (Prentice Hall)
[From 2001 on, World History: Connections to Today, Prentice Hall’s
market-dominant high school world history then and now, and several
spin-off versions customized for California and other states, listed
Shabbir Mansuri and Susan Douglass of the Council on Islamic
Education as academic reviewers. The textbook says:]
– 29 –
[“Some Muslims look on jihad, or effort in God’s service, as another
duty. Jihad has often been mistakenly translated simply as ‘holy
war.’ In fact, it may include acts of charity or an inner struggle
to achieve spiritual peace, as well as any battle in defense of
Islam.”] pg14
World History: Patterns of Interaction (McDougal Littell)
[As early as 2002 another high-profile textbook, World History:
Patterns of Interaction, a high school world history textbook
published by Houghton Mifflin under the McDougal Littell imprint,
did not mention jihad. Houghton Mifflin’s multigrade series then
dropped jihad from textbooks; by 2005 Houghton Mifflin had
apparently removed jihad from its entire series of social studies
textbooks. The advisory role of the Council on Islamic Education in
making these editorial decisions remains unclear.] pg14
Commentary by Sewall
Islam in the Classroom: What the Textbooks Tell Us
(American Textbook Council)
“Social studies textbooks do not raise the issue of homosexuality in
the Muslim world.” pg22
“Textbooks mention Islamic slavery only obliquely” pg23