I remembered this right now, and I've been thinking about this a bit.
In a secular country, should the government's curriculum-setting body, which decides the curriculum for schools affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education, have passages from religious books?
I remember that in high school, we had the Sermon on the Mount as one chapter in our English book.
Now I have a couple of objections to this:
a) It wasn't really a piece of great English literature - it was a simplification of a translation
b) It was edited - they removed the bits about fornication and adultery (I liked those bits - why get rid of them? You think that 16 year olds can't handle someone telling them not to fornicate or commit adultery? ). This gives a wrong impression of the Sermon on the Mount, and a Christian could consider it quite offensive that such disrespect could be shown to his holy book by deciding willy nilly what is good and what is bad. It is also misinformation - people come to really believe that what they read was what was authentic.
c) It was anti-Semitic - they didn't remove the bits about the Jews being hypocrites
d) It was from the Bible, which is a Christian religious book and thus should not really be taught to high school students, because it violates the separation of Church and State. Best that the state not include any religious material at all, instead of including stuff from one and going down a slippery slope.
What is rather hypocritical is that if someone suggested putting something from a Hindu religious text in the syllabus, there would be a huge hue and cry about how education was being compromised by some religious agenda . It's actually happened before, too. I'd bet the same thing would happen in America is someone suggested putting Christian religious stuff in schoolbooks.
In a secular country, should the government's curriculum-setting body, which decides the curriculum for schools affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education, have passages from religious books?
I remember that in high school, we had the Sermon on the Mount as one chapter in our English book.
Now I have a couple of objections to this:
a) It wasn't really a piece of great English literature - it was a simplification of a translation
b) It was edited - they removed the bits about fornication and adultery (I liked those bits - why get rid of them? You think that 16 year olds can't handle someone telling them not to fornicate or commit adultery? ). This gives a wrong impression of the Sermon on the Mount, and a Christian could consider it quite offensive that such disrespect could be shown to his holy book by deciding willy nilly what is good and what is bad. It is also misinformation - people come to really believe that what they read was what was authentic.
c) It was anti-Semitic - they didn't remove the bits about the Jews being hypocrites
d) It was from the Bible, which is a Christian religious book and thus should not really be taught to high school students, because it violates the separation of Church and State. Best that the state not include any religious material at all, instead of including stuff from one and going down a slippery slope.
What is rather hypocritical is that if someone suggested putting something from a Hindu religious text in the syllabus, there would be a huge hue and cry about how education was being compromised by some religious agenda . It's actually happened before, too. I'd bet the same thing would happen in America is someone suggested putting Christian religious stuff in schoolbooks.
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