|





"
Multiculturalism's goal is not to teach about other cultures,
but to promote — by means of distortions and half-truths --— the notion that
non-Western cultures are as good as, if not better than, Western culture."
|
|
FEATURE ARTICLE
Multiculturalism's War on Education
By Elan Journo
(Editor’s note: Elan Journo is a writer and editor for the Anyn
Rand Institute in Irvine,
California.)
Back to school nowadays means back to classrooms, lessons and textbooks
permeated by multiculturalism and its championing of "diversity." Many parents
and teachers regard multiculturalism as an indispensable educational supplement, a
salutary influence that "enriches" the curriculum. But is it?
With the world's continents bridged by the Internet and global commerce,
multiculturalism claims to offer a real value: a cosmopolitan, rather than
provincial, understanding of the world beyond the student's immediate
surroundings.
But it is a peculiar kind of "broadening." Multiculturalists would rather have
students admire the primitive patterns of Navajo blankets, say, than learn why
Islam's medieval golden age of scientific progress was replaced by fervent
piety and centuries of stagnation.
Leaf through a school textbook and you'll find that there is a definite
pattern behind multiculturalism's reshaping of the curriculum. What
multiculturalists seek is not the goal they advertise, but something else
entirely. Consider, for instance, the teaching of history. One text acclaims the inhabitants of
West Africa in pre-Columbian times for having prosperous economies and for
establishing a university in Timbuktu; but it ignores their brutal trade in
slaves and the proliferation of far more consequential institutions of learning in
Paris, Oxford and elsewhere in Europe. Some books routinely lionize the
architecture of the Aztecs, but purposely overlook or underplay the fact that
they practiced human sacrifices. A few textbooks seek to portray Islam as peaceful
in part by distorting the concept of "jihad" ("sacred war") to mean an internal
struggle to surmount temptation and evil. Islam's wars of religious conquest
are played down.
What these textbooks reveal is a concerted effort to portray the most
backward, impoverished and murderous cultures as advanced, prosperous and
life-enhancing. Multiculturalism's goal is not to teach about other cultures,
but to promote -- by means of distortions and half-truths -- the notion that
non-Western cultures are as good as, if not better than, Western culture. Far
from "broadening" the curriculum, what multiculturalism seeks is to diminish the
value of Western culture in the minds of students. But, given all the facts, the
objective superiority of Western culture is apparent, so multiculturalists
artificially elevate other cultures and depreciate the West.
If students were to learn the truth of the hardscrabble life of primitive
farming in, say, India, they would recognize that subsistence living is far
inferior to life on any mechanized farm in Kansas, which demands so little
manpower, yet yields so much. An informed, rational student would not swallow
the "politically correct" conclusions he is fed by multiculturalism. If he were
given the actual facts, he could recognize that where men are politically free as in
the West, they can prosper economically; that science and technology are
superior to superstition; that man's life is far longer, happier and safer in
the West today than in any other culture in history.
The ideals, achievements and history of Western culture in general -- and
of America in particular -- are purposely given short-shrift by
multiculturalism. That the Industrial Revolution and the Information Age were
born and flourished in Western nations; that the preponderance of Nobel prizes in
science have been awarded to people in the West -- such facts, if they are noted, are
passed over with little elaboration.
The "history" that students do learn is rewritten to fit multiculturalism's
agenda. Consider the birth of the United States. Some texts would have children
believe the baseless claim that America's Founders modeled the Constitution
on a confederation of Indian tribes. This is part of a wider drive to portray
the United States as a product of the "convergence" of three traditions --
native Indian, African and European. But the American republic, with an elected
government limited by individual rights, was born not of stone-age peoples,
but primarily of the European Enlightenment. It is a product of the ideas of
thinkers like John Locke, a British philosopher, and his intellectual heirs in
colonial America, such as Thomas Jefferson.
It is a gross misconception to view multiculturalism as an effort to enrich
education. By reshaping the curriculum, the purveyors of "diversity" in the
classroom calculatedly seek to prevent students from grasping the objective
value to human life of Western culture -- a culture whose magnificent
achievements have brought man from mud huts to moon landings.
Multiculturalism is no boon to education, but an agent of anti-Western
ideology.
* * * * * * * * * *
DISTRIBUTED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE BY AMERICANISM EDUCATIONAL LEAGUE
|