I World DIGEST Tainted from page 43 reach coordinators to some of the nation's key national resource cen- ters, including those at Georgetown, Harvard and Yale, from where she said in the inter- view that she had just returned from conducting teacher training. Enclave's Impact Many of the principal players involved in disseminating pro- Islamic, anti-American and anti- Israel materials to the public school system have links, direct or indirect, to a little-known place called Dar al Islam. Located in Abiquiu, N.M., Dar all Islam (www.daralislam.org), which means "abode of Islam" in Arabic, is an Islamic enclave registered with the state as a non-profit in 1979. Situated in the remote mountainous desert of northern New Mexico, near the Ghost Ranch where artist Georgia O'Keefe lived, the massive complex is accessible only by an unpaved, dirt road. It was created with direct financing from the late Saudi monarch, King Khaled ibn Aziz, and from five princesses in the Tainted from page 43 positive propaganda about Islam, the Palestinians and the Arab world, while denigrating — in subtle and not so subtle ways — America, Israel, Judaism and democracy. Distributed in public elemen- tary, middle and high schools, the materials are paid for by U.S. tax- payers. Among other things, The Modern Middle East includes an exercise that has teachers divide the class into "Jeds" and "Pads;' representing Jews and Palestinians. The Pads are grouped inside a central area, meant to represent Palestine, while the Jeds are dispersed around the room. Students then debate whether the Jeds should immigrate to the "Land of Pad." Teachers are directed to show favoritism toward the Jeds, guiding the class to see the Jews as both victims and aggressors who succeed in taking over land that belongs to others. Parents' complaints in north- 44 Royal House of Saud, according to Saudi Aramco World. A 1988 arti- cle in Saudi Aramco World detailed the saga of the royal family's pur- chase of 8,500 acres of land and construction of a mosque and other buildings to form Dar al Islam. According to the enclave's Web site, the original intent was to establish a "Muslim village as a showcase for Islam in America!' When that became too difficult, the vision changed to an educa- tional conference and retreat cen- ter. Those buildings sit on 1,600 of the original acres; the rest was sold and invested to help finance its operation, Dar al Islam officials say. In addition to the mosque, the enclave has a madrassa, or reli- gious school, summer camp and teacher-training institute. It runs speakers bureaus and programs and maintains a Web site. Dar al Islam spokesman Abdur Ra'uf Walter Declerck acknowl- edges some minor participation in the creation of Dar al Islam by a Saudi princess, but he disputes most of the funding history of Dar ern California led to a published analysis of the material by a team headed by Jackie Berman, an educational consultant at the San Francisco JCRC. The report, issued two years ago, concluded that "histor- ical distortion and factual misrepresentations woven throughout the Case Study of the Arab-Israeli Conflict render it unac- ceptable for classroom use." Tax money actually pays for these materi- als twice — once at the state or local level, where the materials are purchased, and again at the federal level, where some universities with fed- erally funded Title VI national resource centers focusing on the Middle East help produce, promote and endorse such materials. Sandra Alfonsi, head of Hadassah's Curriculum Watch, has focused on the issue for years: "We believe that we can al Islam as recounted in the Saudi Aramco World article. "It was not purchased by the royal family," he said. Funding then and now "comes from Muslims all over," he said, but would not elabo- rate. Shabbas, the lecturer and editor of The Arab World Studies - Notebook, was director of Dar al Islam's summer teacher-training program in 1994 and 1995, accord- ing to Declerck and Shabbas. One of Dar al Islam's Web sites, islamamerica.org, posts articles defending Palestinians and their supporters, while excoriating democracies, including America and Israel. Some Saudi watchers say Saudi Arabia's goal is to export the most rigid brand of Islam: Wahhabi Islam, which in contrast to other forms of Islam, is intolerant of other religions, according to experts. It's an agenda "more dangerous than communism" ever was, according to Ali Al-Ahmed, director of the Institute for Gulf Affairs, a Washington-based pro- democracy think tank, because it no longer ignore the pattern of Islamist revisionism that leads us from the K-12 textbooks to university courses and demon- strations on the college campus- es and to the issue of the infu- sion of Arab petrol dollars that have funded and continue to fund American education!' In 2003, Gilbert Sewall of the American Textbook Council published "Islam and the Textbooks," an analysis of some widely circulated social studies targets all non-believers, includ- ing Christians, Jews and most Muslims. Such apostates have only three choices, he said: "Convert, be subjugated or die." The Saudi Embassy in Washington did not respond to several requests for comment. Declerck of Dar al Islam said the kind of Islam practiced in Saudi Arabia, is "not what we transmit. Dar al Islam communi- cates much more of a main- stream Islam," he said. But Al- Ahmed was adamant: In American public schools, the Saudis are carrying out "a delib- erate program to spread their version of Islam everywhere!' "Their job is to give money to certain groups of Islamic organi- zations, to fund certain people, and those people they fund are people who they believe will fur- ther their goal of spreading Wahhabi Islam," he said. ❑ JTA Editor Lisa Hostein and corre- spondent Sue Fishkoff in California were among contributors to this report. and history textbooks. In their quest to expand cov- erage of Islam and non-Western civilizations — laudable, given 21st-century geopolitics — textbook publishers have dis- torted history, wrote Sewall, the former education editor of Newsweek. At the end of September, he reiterated his concerns in a let- ter to the California Curriculum Commission in advance of its public hearings on teaching materials by 12 publishers for grades K-8. "It is not accidental that world history texts submitted to California read alike when they present Islam or that cov- erage of Islam in these books is lyrical and uncritical:' Sewall wrote. "Islamic pres- sure groups have been work- ing energetically for 15 years to scrub the past in instructional materials. Textbooks either gloss over jihad, sharia (Islamic law), Muslim slavery, the status of women and Islamic terrorism — or omit the subject altogeth- er." Dealer Found Dead Athens/JTA — An Israeli busi- nessman who went missing in Greece was found to have been murdered. The body of diamond dealer Shmuel Levy was discov- ered Saturday buried in a coastal town 30 miles from Athens, two weeks after he disappeared. Local police said four Greeks were under arrest on suspicion of abducting and killing Levy, 66, in a bid to steal his haul of diamonds. Aid To Arab Victims Jerusalem/JTA — The Jewish Agency for Israel compensated Israeli Arab terror victims. The Jewish Agency's chairman, Zeev Bielski, met Sunday with four families who lost relatives in a gun attack by an extremist Jew in the Arab town of Shfaram last August, giving each a check for $5,000. It was the first time the Jewish Agency's Fund for the Victims of Terror has provided compensation to Arabs. Disarmament Plan Ramallah/JTA -- The Palestinian Authority said it would disarm a terrorist group linked to its main political fac- tion. Under the plan announced Sunday by Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei, members of Fatah's Al Aksa Brigade will be disarmed and incorporated in legitimate police units within weeks. The plan falls short of the requirement in the U.S.-led peace road map for ter- rorist groups to be completely disbanded, and does not take into consideration the far more powerful Islamic armed factions. Anti-Semitic Books Berlin/JTA — Anti-Semitic tracts are on sale at the Frankfurt Book Fair again this year. English copies of "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" and Henry Ford's "The International Jew" were displayed on the shelves of one of the Iranian booksellers at the fair, according to German political scientist Matthias Kuentzel, who purchased the books there recently. Fair organiz- ers told JTA they could take no action unless an official complaint was lodged. Kuentzel tracks anti- Semitism and Islam. October 27 . 2005 jN