High school
geography and world history textbooks lay the foundation for students'
life-long understanding of the world in which they live. Since the anniversary
of 9/11 coincides with the start of the school year, this is a good moment to
take stock and consider what our students should know about the world that was
not in their textbooks prior to 2001. Since the events of
9/11 highlighted Islam as a religion we did not really
notice, let me identify what we now realize our students should know about it.
Students
need to know that
Similarly,
students should know that an increasing number of
Students
should learn that successful integration of immigrants, especially Muslims,
requires planning and careful thought. As a nation of immigrants, the
But part of
the integration is cultural. The Muslim desire for religious and economic
freedom often is not matched by a desire to live in a society that promotes
individual freedom in cultural and moral spheres of life. In fact, much of the
Muslim revulsion against the West (the revulsion that feeds terrorism) is due
to our society's refusal to require "proper" ethical behavior. This
is especially true of the sexually-enticing character of Western popular
culture.
Students
should know that the Muslim world has not undergone an
Enlightenment as we understand it. Although the adoption of Islamic
mathematical, medical, architectural, and scientific techniques brought
Students
should realize that although many Muslim individuals are excellent scientists,
engineers, doctors, and educators (indeed, they probably will be taught by some
of them), most Islamic societies have not yet undergone this Enlightenment
process. They do not have the social structures in place that mediate between
religious and scientific domains of experience. They have not experienced the
decades, even centuries, of struggle between the two types of knowledge,
religious and scientific, that the West underwent.
While such
struggles constitute part of the adjustment problems Muslim immigrants have had
with Western society for decades, they are also being felt in the
9/11
brought to the West the recognition that Islam, the globe's second-largest
religion, plays a major part in the world, both in far-away countries and here
at home. Our high schools and universities should be preparing their students
to live in that world.
Flesher is director of UW's Religious Studies Program.
More information about the program, as well as past
columns, can be found on the Web at www.uwyo.edu/relstds/index.htm.