Friday, June 25, 2010

US study downplays Pakistan madrassa threat

“We do need to take the militant madrassa issue very, very seriously - in all likelihood they should probably be shut down.” [Brookings Institution]

Ahmadiyya Times | News Staff | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: Daily Dawn | Pakistan
By Dawn | June 24, 2010

WASHINGTON: Pakistan desperately needs more schools to curb extremism but madrassas - the Islamic seminaries that have struck fear in the West - are not the main problem, a US study said Wednesday.

The Brookings Institution, a think-tank, estimated that fewer than 10 per cent of Pakistani students attended madrassas and said the number of such "militant seminaries" was not increasing.


Rebecca Winthrop, a Brookings fellow and co-author of the report, said more Pakistani parents preferred not sending children to school at all to enrolling them in madrassas.

“We do need to take the militant madrassa issue very, very seriously - in all likelihood they should probably be shut down,” she said at the launch of the report.

But she added: “We should really leave the question of the role of Islam in the Pakistan education system to the Pakistanis to debate. This is not something that I think is fruitful if outsiders - us here in the US - start weighing in on.”

The study found that a more urgent priority was to increase the supply of schools in Pakistan, whose literacy rate of 56 per cent is among the lowest outside of sub-Saharan Africa.

Winthrop quoted one estimate that if Pakistan boosted primary school enrollment from the present two-thirds of children to the world average of 87 per cent, the country's risk of conflict would decrease by three-quarters.

But the study found that Pakistani public schools also needed major improvement, with many now failing to teach basic skills and instilling hostility toward Hindus and India.

The US Congress last year approved a five-year, 7.5 billion-dollar plan aimed at building schools, infrastructure and democratic institutions in Pakistan.

“Nowhere is it more important to focus our education resources and ensure that our partners are engaged and determined to get it right than in Pakistan,” said Congresswoman Nita Lowey, who heads the House subcommittee that approves funding for foreign operations.

Some previous studies have put madrassa enrollment higher. The US commission that investigated the September 11, 2001 attacks warned in its final report that some madrassas have become “incubators for violent extremism.”




Read original post here: US study downplays Pakistan madrassa threat

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for your comments. Any comments irrelevant to the post's subject matter, containing abuses, and/or vulgar language will not be approved.

Top read stories during last 7 days

Disclaimer!

THE TIMES OF AHMAD is NOT an organ of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, nor in any way associated with any of the community's official websites. Times of Ahmad is an independently run and privately managed news / contents archival website; and does not claim to speak for or represent the official views of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. The Times of Ahmad assumes full responsibility for the contents of its web pages. The views expressed by the authors and sources of the news archives do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Times of Ahmad. All rights associated with any contents archived / stored on this website remain the property of the original owners.