Hungry and stupid
May 20, 2018
“Many students now take fasting very seriously,” says Heinz-Peter Meidinger, President of the German Teachers' Association. At schools with a significant number of families from a Muslim background — and there are now many of them across Germany — how to react to observing students during the month of Ramadan has become a central topic that school administrators and teachers must confront.
In some cases, the Muslim parents are exerting strong pressure on school administrations not to schedule any examinations or field trips during this period. It becomes particularly difficult when the religious concerns of a few individual students restrict all students. “We are sort of asked to massage examinations for all students during a certain period of time. That’s not possible,” Meidinger says. “We’re already constantly discussing whether schoolgirls should be allowed to wear headscarves.” The questions raised by the Muslim practice of fasting are, however, much more crucial for the practical role of education.
Yup. A lot of Muslim kids might not even be genuinely fasting but they've got to show to their peers that they're "good" Muslims. Therefore, they won't eat or drink during their time in school. Worse, I've seen retarded parents who boast about their five-years-old daughter who fasts! They deny all nutrition to their children during the day. But then when the quiz, test, or exam marks are significantly lower, the blame will be placed on the "racist" infidels.
As it happens, the children have been sent to school with food and drink, but don’t touch them. Although not all Muslim children fast at school, Jahn believes that there’s growing peer pressure on them to do so. “If I have three children in a class who fast at the beginning (of Ramadan), there will soon be five and then ten.”
Soon, the non-Muslim kids will be assaulted in Germany for the horrible crimes of eating and drinking during Ramadan. Diversity!
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