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Re: you will pray to Allah
It crosses my colonial mind that this subject would not be much of an issue if home-grown, British muslims had not bombed London buses and the subway, and that muslems were not killing and maiming British troops in Iraq and Afghanistan ... I do believe that any animosity towards muslims has little to do with whom they pray to, and much to do with Islamic extremism, not only in England, but also around the world. One can hear many anti-muslem statements from ordinary Canadians, and it gets worse as the casualty list in Afghanistan grows larger ... I can't argue that this is right, but it is understandable.
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Re: you will pray to Allah
That's not where I'm coming from Eric. The fact that it was non-Muslims being asked to participate in prayers of Islam is purely incidental to me. As I've said earlier I would feel the same about it if it were Jewish children being asked to pray to Jesus.
I don't think the teacher should be sacked. I do think he/she should have been more sensitive to the children in the situation and I do not think detention was appropriate. Neither extreme is ideal. |
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" That also makes the incident hearsay, doesn’t it? Do we also call it hearsay when a report in the media states what so and so has said? No of course not we take such reports at face value until it can be shown that the report wasn’t accurate " .. your quote from another thread. |
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Hearsay - noun - information which cannot be adequately substantiated; rumour. The question is, is a report in the newspaper or on the TV or radio hearsay/rumour? If the answer is yes then you, me and most posters have been commenting on hearsay in this and many other threads. But I don’t think that a report in the newspaper or on the TV or radio is hearsay, in the accepted definition of the word. Whereas reporting what someone said what someone else said or did is hearsay. In the butty issue the reporter reported what was told to him. The shopkeeper made a statement and so did the school head. Was that hearsay? Did other people comment on what the head stated and also the shopkeeper? The answer is yes they did. So if I am commenting on hearsay, so are other people. So go and pick on them also. Or is this yet another childish “Nah! Nah! Nah! Nah! Nah! Jambutty is wrong!” attempt? So it really depends on what you understand the definition of hearsay to be. |
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:mosher: I'm with you there Katex
However, this is taking thread wandering to the extremes. We have one perfectly adequate thread about the butty shop saga yet Jambutty has to go and bring it up on this thread too. :rolleyes: But as we are on the subject of reports in newspapers and heresay - my OWN opinion on the matter is that if a reporter reports events which have been told to him by the person they happened to and the events involve another person who has not personally made a comment then I regard the portion which refers to acts by the other person as heresay. As in the case of the butty shop owner who stated that the teacher was less than calm, cool and collected when addressing her pupils. We only have the butty shop owner's word for that. We have no confirmation (or otherwise) by the teacher or by a third party witness. Therefore IMO the statement cannot be taken at face value. Now can we get back to religious practices in schools. |
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Just as I suspected all along. And it is no surprise that WillowTheWhisp agrees with you. |
Re: you will pray to Allah
:D :D :D
Well done Jim. |
Re: you will pray to Allah
Not another thread!!!:(
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