World ■ nted Teachings What your kids are learning about Israel, America and Islam. Editor's note: This is the first part of a special JTA investigation. New York/JTA ith the school year back in full swing, do you know what your chil- dren are learning? In thousands of public school districts across the United States, without ever know- ing it, taxpayers pay to disseminate pro-Islamic materials that are anti- American, anti-Israel and anti- Jewish. Often bypassing school boards and nudging aside approved curricula, teaching pro- grams funded by Saudi Arabia make their way into elementary and secondary school classrooms. These teachings enter school systems with the help of a federal program, Title VI of the Higher Education Act, which is now up for renewal. Expert analyses of these materials have found them to be full of inaccuracies, bias and pros- elytizing. They also have found that many of the major history and social studies textbooks used in schools across the country are highly critical of democratic insti- tutions and forgiving of repressive ones. These materials praise and sometimes promote Islam, but criticize Judaism and Christianity and are filled with false assertions. Most taxpayers don't know they're paying — at the federal, state and local levels — for the public schools to advance these materials. Much has been written about the anti-Israel, anti-American bias found at many university Middle East studies departments, some of which receive Saudi funding. Critics have also probed the export of Saudi teachings to American mosques and Islamic schools. w Probe's Findings A special yearlong investigation by 42 The gates of Dar at Islam, an Islamic enclave in Abiquiu, N.M., whilbh ,stands at the center of a network of groups and individuals involved in teaching Islam in the publiC schools. JTA reveals for the first time how Saudi influence is penetrating the American classrooms of young children. The investigation uncov- ers the complex path by which biased textbooks and supplemen- tary teaching materials creep into U.S. public schools. It reveals who creates these materials and how some of America's most presti- gious universities — with the use of federal funds — become involved in disseminating them. Saudi influence enters the class- rooms in three different ways. The first is through teacher-training seminars that provide teachers with graduate or continuing edu- cation credits. The second is through the dissemination of sup- plementary teaching materials designed and distributed with Saudi support. Such materials flood the educational system and are available online. The third is through school textbooks paid for by taxpayers, some of them vetted by activists with Saudi ties, who advise and influence major text- book companies about the books' Islamic, Arab, Palestinian, Israeli and Middle Eastern content. Ironically, what gives credibility to the dissemination of these dis- torted materials is Title VI of the Higher Education Act, a federal program enacted in 1958 in part to train international experts to meet the nation's security needs. Under Title VI, select universities get federal funding and prestigious designation as national resource centers for the study of places and languages the government deems vital for meeting global challenges. Eighteen of these centers are for the study of the Middle East; each receives an average of about $500,000 per year. The taxpayer- supported grants are worth at least 10 times that amount in their abil- ity to garner university support and attract outside funding, pro- ponents of Title VI say. As part of its federal mandate, each center assigns an outreach coordinator to extend its expertise to the community and to school- children in kindergarten through 12th grade. Outreach usually includes workshops, guest speak- ers,-books, pamphlets and whole syllabuses and curricula broken down into teaching modules, with instruction booklets for teachers, and sometimes visual aids such as films. While some school district officials are completely unaware of the material reaching their teachers and classrooms, others welcome it: Believing they're importing the wisdom of places like Harvard or Georgetown, they actually are inviting into their schools whole curricula and syl- October 27 2005