"Am I therefore become your enemy,because I TELL YOU THE TRUTH...?"
(Galatians 4:16)

ISLAMIC INVASION WATCH:Islamic group banned after visit to Seminole classroom prompts complaints

An Islamic group has been banned from visiting classrooms in Seminole County schools after officials said it crossed the line between telling students about the Muslim culture and pushing its religion.The flap over the Academy for Learning Islam's visit to Lake Brantley High School also has caused the school system to re-evaluate who it lets into county classrooms to present educational programs and what they can talk about.By fall,teachers will have stricter guidelines. Speakers on religion, drugs, alcohol and nearly 50 other touchy topics will get closer scrutiny before they can speak on campuses, Superintendent Bill Vogel said."We got complaints that their presentation moved from cultural diversity to a religious focus," Vogel said.A similar run-in between a school and Islam occurred this week in Friendswood, Texas, when Friendswood Junior High Principal Robin Lowe was removed from her job after allowing an Islamic group to address an assembly of students.Parents in the predominantly Anglo and Christian community complained the presentation was not appropriate, according to The Associated Press.In addition to the Lake Brantley High visit, the Sanford-based academy also presented programs at Crooms Academy, Sanford Middle, Seminole High, Wicklow Elementary and Wekiva Elementary this past school year, officials said.They received no complaints about those presentations by the group that says one of its goals is to spread understanding of Islam among mainstream Americans.But a ruckus arose after three representatives of the Islamic group showed up at teacher Alison Henderson's family dynamics class at Lake Brantley in late April. Henderson had requested the program through the school district's speakers bureau, but the three were substitutes for the originally scheduled speaker, officials said.Regina Klaers, spokeswoman for Seminole schools, said things went well until a question-and-answer period after a PowerPoint presentation."The conversation went awry," Klaers said. "It became a discussion of religion and not culture."Hasnain Kassamali, who heads the academy, said there was no intent to push his religion.(REALLY??????)"We were trying to share some of our culture and explain why we do some of the things we do," Kassamali said.For example, he said, students often wonder why Islamic women wear head scarves, and that is among things that speakers from his group explain.But Alan Kornman, who led those complaining to the School Board about the academy, said the Muslim group clearly wants to convert students to Islam. He heads the Central Florida chapter of the United American Committee, a right-leaning watchdog group that says it wants to alert Americans to the threats of Islamic extremism."Hasnain Kassamali is well aware of the rules of the speakers bureau program but chose to do a bait and switch under the guise of diversity and multiculturalism to further his Islamic faith and political doctrine," Kornman said.Walt Griffin, director of high schools for the district, said the district committee would review topics that speakers can present in the schools and firm up which ones are appropriate.Religion is a touchy area, he said, and from now on speakers on religious topics probably would be confined to the handful of religious-history classes the district offers in high schools.
By Dave Weber
PS:IF you would do the same,let's say like in Saudi Arabia(and you are a christian)...you get in jail,tortured and beheaded later....
As in the days of Noah...