ointe,c1 1- eac in s Vtiat '.iour kids are earn iris about- Israel ic a and iSiass labuses developed with the sup- port of Riyadh. An Example The "Arab World Studies Notebook" is one such example. Billed by its creators as an impor- tant tool to correct misperceptions about Islam and the Arab world, the manual for secondary schools has been blasted by critics for dis- torting history and propagating bias. First published in 1990 as the Arab World Notebook, the manual was updated to its current form in 1998. The newer publication was created as the joint project of two organizations — both of which receive Saudi funding. Some of the references are subtle, critics say, making them all the more harm- ful. For example, the manual: • Denigrates the Jews' historical connection to Jerusalem. • Suggests that Jews have undue influence on U.S. foreign policy -Suggests that the Koran "syn- thesizes and perfects earlier revela- tions': meaning those ascribed to by Christians and Jews. • Leaves out any facts and fig- ures about the State of Israel in its country-by-country section, but refers instead only to Palestine. One of the groups involved in the publication is the Berkeley, Calif.-based Arab World and Islamic Resources, or AWAIR, (www.awaironline.org) founded in 1990 with funding from organiza- tions that include Saudi Aramco, a Saudi government-owned oil com- pany. The editor of the notebook is Audrey Shabbas, AWAIR's founder. Saudi Aramco World, the publica- tion of Saudi Aramco, features pieces praising Shabbas and her teacher-training materials. The second organization involved in the manual is the Middle East Policy Council of Washington, which helps print and disseminate the 500-page manual of essays, lesson plans and pri- mary sources. The council lists the manual as the primary resource material for its teacher-training program. It employs Shabbas to conduct its training and seminars. According to the group's Web site (wwwmepc.org), more than 16,000 educators have attended its workshops in 175 cities in 43 states. The manual itself claims to October 27 2005 the instructional materials they have reached 25 million students. create so subtly that apolitical The council, which is headed by teachers are unlikely to spot them." Charles Freeman Jr., a former U.S. In an interview with JTA, ambassador to Saudi Arabia, gets Stotsky called the notebook "a direct funding from Saudi Arabia. piece of propaganda" rather than In an interview, the council's scholarly work. acting director, Jon Roth, declined The American Jewish to specify how much money his Committee issued a scathing group gets from Riyadh, but made report on the manual earlier this clear that he is seeking much year, called more. In September, "Propaganda, Roth visited Saudi Proselytizing, and Arabia to meet with Public Education: A Prince Alwaked bin Critique of the Arab Talal bin Abdulaziz al World Studies Saud, a member of Notebook": The the royal family who report said that the owns Kingdom publication, while Holding Company, "attempting to one of the world's redress a perceived wealthiest compa- deficit in sympa- nies. thetic views of the "We have been Arabs and Muslim trying to cultivate Sandra St otsky religion in the the relationship with American class- the prince for a long room, veers in the opposite direc- time, because he has lots of tion — toward historical distor- money': Roth said after his trip. tion as well as uncritical praise, "Our hope and expectation is mil- whitewashing and practically pros- lions" from the Saudi prince, who elytizing!" initiated the meeting after hearing The result, the AJCommittee about the teaching program, Roth said. He said his group operates on an annual budget of $750,000. The council's board of directors includes executives from compa- New York/JTA nies with huge financial stakes in Saudi Arabia, including Boeing, he state of California is on the ExxonMobil Saudi Arabia, the brink of a major election that Carlyle Group and the Saudi involves neither Arnold Binladin Group. Schwarzenegger nor Clint Eastwood. The candidates are textbooks and other teaching Notebook Critics materials that will influence what Sandra Stotsky, a former senior schoolchildren across the state associate commissioner of the — and across the United States Massachusetts Department of — will learn for more than a Education, is one of a growing decade. number of critics of the Arab With a debate under way over World Studies Notebook It is one of evolution and intelligent design the examples she cites in a study, in science textbooks, a less-publi- "The Stealth Curriculum: cized battle is being waged over Manipulating America's History the content of social studies and Teachers' in which she examines history materials — some of supplemental teaching materials. which are pro-Islamic, anti- The problem with many of the American, anti-Israel and even supplemental materials, which are anti-Semitic. most often distributed through California is in the final stages teacher training workshops, "is the of the "adoption process" for his- ideological mission of the organi- tory and social studies materials zations that create them': she said in kindergarten through eighth in her study, published last year by grade. The process, which takes the Thomas B. Fordham place every seven years, deter- Foundation, a Washington-based mines which books make the think tank on education. "They mark, enabling local school dis- embed their political agendas in report said, "is a text that appears largely designed to advance the anti-Israel and propagandistic views of the Notebook's sponsors, the Middle East Policy Council (MEPC) and Arab World and Islamic Resources (AWAIR), to an audience of teachers who may not have the resources and knowledge to assess this text critically!' David Harris, the AJCommittee's executive director, said upon issu- ing the report in February: "Educating American children about the Middle East and about different religions is vitally impor- tant, but the notebook is precisely the wrong way to go about it." Shabbas, in the introduction to the manual, says that AWALR's mission is to counter the "rampant negative stereotypes of Arabs and Muslims held by most Americans!' Responding to criticism specifi- cally about the effect of Jewish lob- bying, she said everything in the manual comes from the Arab and Muslim point of view: "The note- book is what it is. If you go out anywhere in the Arab world, you're likely to hear that view" of the U.N. partition and Jewish influence. Social Studies Controversy T tricts to use state funds to pur- chase them. With the political, educational and financial stakes so high, publishers, special inter- est groups and educators take the process as seriously as any politi- cal campaign. Among the contenders is History Alive! The Medieval World and Beyond, a seventh-grade textbook, with other course mate- rials, published by the Teachers' Curriculum Institute. The course was piloted in Scottsdale, Ariz., earlier this year. But after a series of protests from parents — who objected to what they saw as distortions of Christianity and Judaism, with an overarching positive spin on Islam — the publisher decided to stop the trial. "There was a lot of objection to the amount of coverage of Islam',' said Liz Russell, the development director of the Teachers' Curriculum Institute, which is based in Rancho Cordova, Calif. The book was developed to meet California standards, which "Most textbooks merely tell peo- ple the U.N. voted for partition and the Arabs rejected it',' she said, adding that American students need to "delve into why people do what they do; what are their val- ues. She also noted that the publica- tion directs students to solicit other perspectives from various groups, including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and the American Jewish Committee. Roth of the Middle East Policy Council dismissed the critics of the notebook as "cranks!' His council touts the manual as an important resource for educators. The manu- al is "of such high standards that the Middle East Policy Council believes it should be in the hands of every educator': the group's Web site says. The AJCommittee took the unusual step of issuing a public warning "urging school districts across the nation" not to use the manual. Still, Shabbas and her publication are welcomed by out- Tainted on page 44 require "a lot more on religion in general" than most other states, she said. California has mandated the study of religion since 1987. Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism and Hinduism are studied in sixth grade, and Islam is covered in seventh grade. Meanwhile, the institute has pulled The Modern Middle East, a package of supplemental materi- als deemed so objectionable that a report by the San Francisco Jewish Community Relations Council said it creates a hostile environment for Jewish students. The material is still for sale, however, and copies already in circulation likely will sit on class- room shelves for years to come, according to educational experts. Both The Modern Middle East and History Alive! have hit the market since the early 1990s, a period that began what one reviewer has termed "the Islamization of the textbooks:' Analysts say today's history and social studies textbooks, and supplementary materials, sow Controversy on page 44 43