[Diversity 141] Re: Ramadhan KareemUjwala Samant lalumineuse at yahoo.comThu Sep 4 07:09:35 EDT 2008
I am surprised by this comment. All schools have Christmas holidays, Easter break... surely those are religious holidays? In elementary school, my son brought home St. Patrick's day crafts, and of course Father Christmas was a theme as well. Separation of church and state in state schools is.... non existent. In my son's school holiday list, Yom Kippur is listed as a holiday. And I can assure you we have a strong Hindu and Muslim population. Wishing someone for their religious holidays (and we have seen Merry Christmas being wished prior to those holidays) is hardly perpetuating a religious doctrine. If anything, this information helps us to understand different religions, and understand the cultural backdrops of our learners. There have been questions about Persian (Irani) New Year, Diwali, and for those who have Hindu students, Ganesh Chaturathi (the festival of the god Ganesh) started yesterday. Diversity is not just having a multi-ethnic meal and simplistic multicultural parties. It is about learning in-depth and in a profound manner. I am curious how this explanation was perceived as a means to circulate religious doctrine. With best wishes, Ujwala Samant --- Kearney Lykins <kearney_lykins at yahoo.com> wrote: > I am surprised that no one has yet commented on the > propriety of using a government listserve to > circulate religious doctrine. > > Has The Diversity and Literacy Discussion List now > become a vehicle for promoting religious > holidays and disseminating prayers? > > > Regards, > > Kearney Lykins > > > > > ----- Original Message ---- > From: Ochieng kh <ochykheyr at yahoo.com> > To: The Diversity and Literacy Discussion List > <diversity at nifl.gov> > Sent: Tuesday, September 2, 2008 10:02:45 AM > Subject: [Diversity 129] Ramadhan Kareem > > > Dear All, > Many of you have Muslim students who are celebrating > the blessed month of Ramadhan. I would like to wish > them Ramadhan kareem. It is a month of deep > reflection and self-restraint while praying for > spiritual purity, good tidings and endless bounties. > > > It is a blessed opportunity to reflect upon and > grapple with the issues that afflict the souls of > not only the Muslim ummah but the greater creation > of Allah (SWT). > > It is also the time to ponder and generate solutions > to such issues as injustices, inequality, wrongs > visited upon the poor and vulnerable, unity of the > ummah, corruption, leadership, marginalization, > environment, prejudices and stereotypes, etc. > > Ramadhan is an important month of Patience, sharing > and selflessness and a time to seek the mercy and > forgiveness from Allah (SWT) > > May Allah (SWT) grant all of us us the > ibadah(devotion) of the night of Qadr(blessed night) > and make us the best ummah. > RAMADHAN KAREEM > Ochieng M.Khairallah > > > > ---------------------------------------------------- > National Institute for Literacy > Diversity and Literacy mailing list > Diversity at nifl.gov > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, > please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/diversity
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