via TCPJ Alert – Islamic charter school coming to Nashville
Nolensville Academy for Math and Science has once again notified the Metro Nashville School Board of its intent to submit a charter school application. Lead petitioner Ismail Fidan is going to try again for a charter school after having had four prior applications rejected including the Nashville Academy of Science & Technology.
The Nolensville Academy’s “Letter of Intent” states that the majority of the students it plans to serve come from “minority-immigrant groups living in and around the Nolensville area.”
It seems counter-intuitive to segregate
“minority-immigrant” groups from the opportunity to integrate and
assimilate in the more inclusive Metro Nashville school population.
Responding to a 2008 civil rights office violation, the Metro Nashville school system was forced to desegregate foreign-language students and place them in the more inclusive general student population.
Chartering a public school to segregate
“minority-immigrant” groups on its face also contradicts the push by
Nashville’s socialist-progressives promoting an “equitable and inclusive” socialist utopia for the city.
Another cautionary note to the Metro
Nashville school board regarding the Nolensville Academy application;
consider the experience of the Minnesota charter school, the TiZa
Academy, which was sued into bankruptcy
by the ACLU for violating the Establishment clause of the
Constitution. Contributing to the suit was TiZa making religious
accommodations for the predominantly Muslim student population thereby
effectively turning the school into an Islamic madrassa.
Would the Nolensville Academy be “Gulen-inspired”
A quick search of Mr. Fidan’s involvement and associations with other charter schools includes the overtly Gulen schools Coral Academy of Science in Nevada and the Fulton Science Academy
which was recently informed by its county school board that the
school’s charter would be revoked a full two years before it was due to
expire.
Nolensville Academy board member Marieta
Velikova, like other board members at other Gulen schools, is a member
of the Turkish-American Chamber of Commerce and a board member of the
Society for Universal Dialogue (SUD), aka the Knoxville Turkish Cultural
Center. The SUD and the Iris Foundation (submitter of failed Knoxville
Academy Gulen charter school) share the same address. Iris
Foundation’s Board’s secretary (and proposed President of the failed
Knoxville charter school), Suzan Mertyurek, is a board member of Gulen
schools in other states.
Growing public awareness about the Gulen charter school network
along with reports of the federal investigation of problems associated
with these schools also contributed to the recent denial of a
Gulen-connected charter school application by the Loudon County, Virginia school board.
Last year, Louisiana closed the Abramson
Science & Technology (Gulen) charter school and the Texas
legislature initiated an investigation into the charter school network
since it has the highest number of Gulen schools in the country. In
fact, it was the 2011 New York Times article
on the Gulen network in Texas that both publicly exposed and confirmed
information that independent researchers had been gathering for some
time.
Keep reading at tn Council 4 political justice.More on the Gulen charter schools in our archives.
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