Iran Educates Children to 'Seek Martyrdom'
By Erick Stakelbeck, CBN News Terrorism Analyst
December 19, 2007 This article is based
on a special interview with IMPACT-SE's Research Director.
Click here to see the video
During Iran's war with Iraq in the 1980s,
Ayatollah Khomeini sent thousands of Iranian children directly
into minefields. He promised that they'd see heaven as their
reward.
Today's Iranian leadership is quite unpopular
with its growing younger generation -- the Mullahs are attempting
to reclaim this group one textbook at at a time.
This is becoming a common scene in Iran.
Pro-democracy Protests against the ruling regime. Just last
weekend Tehran University students waved signs that said "live
free or die."
In some ways, this is the new face of Iran--
70 percent of the population is under the age of 30. Many
of these Iranians are hungry for the kind of freedoms Americans
enjoy. But the Iranian government has other ideas.
"Imagine 225,000, 250,000 even 100,000
kids who have been taught to hate America, hate the West,
get ready for martyrdom," Shayan Arya said.
Shayan Arya's family left Iran when he was
a teenager. He says the government's educational curriculum
teaches children as young as first grade to prepare for war
and seek martyrdom.
"You are responsible for learning it--you
get tested on it, you have to study it, you have to write
papers on it, you have to answer to your teachers, he said.
The Institute for Monitoring Peace and Cultural
Tolerance recently gave CBN News an exclusive look at some
Iranian textbooks. All non-Muslims are portrayed as evil --
especially the U.S. and Israel.
A seventh-grade textbook encourages students
to "not cease.until the redeeming message of 'there is
no god but Allah' is realized throughout the whole world."
These books also teach war between Iran and
the west is inevitable. Iranians must either bring about a
global Islamic victory or else.
"Victory is not guaranteed, according
to the books. It's either victory or collective martyrdom,"
said IMPACT-SE's Research Director.
Eighth grade texts hammer that message home.
One section reads "either we shake one another's hand
in joy at the victory of Islam in the world, or all of us
will turn to eternal life and martyrdom."
"Gradually they build on it so that
by 10th or 11th grade, children should be ready to be martyred,"
Arya said.
IMPACT-SE has studied Iran's educational
system extensively. It views the Iranian curriculum as extreme
even for the Middle East.
"If you're dealing with such people,
such a regime, that tries to instill in young children or
schoolchildrens' minds the idea of global war to the end,
this is frightening," IMPACT-SE's Research Director said.
"And you will not find this in Syrian textbooks or Saudi
Arabian textbooks or Egyptian textbooks."
The radical message of the Islamic Revolution
has fallen on deaf ears for many young Iranians. But president
Mahmoud Ahamdenijad isn't giving up without a fight.
He says Iran's educational curriculum has
become too secular and must be cleansed.
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