Muslim School Reaches Out to
Its Community
Challenged by 9/11, New
Horizon in Pasadena has responded by stressing academic
standards.
By Hemmy So, Times Staff
Writer
July 5, 2006
In the wake of 9/11, New
Horizon School in Pasadena has faced tough challenges in
asserting itself as a progressive Muslim campus.
Enrollment numbers dropped. Parents, teachers and students
were regarded with suspicion. And right-wing commentators
bashed the school's pledge of allegiance, which begins:
"As an American Muslim, I pledge allegiance to God and His
prophet. I respect and love my family and my community, and
I dedicate my life to serving the cause of truth and
justice."
But rather than revert to isolation, the school has
aggressively sought to shape its image through high academic
performance and community outreach.
"Part of our school mission is the American Muslim
identity," said Levent Akbarut, a New Horizon School board
member. "It's not an emphasis on the country where you're
from. That's second place to being an American, and that's
not really something taught in most Islamic schools."
The private religious school, which has three satellite
campuses in Los Angeles and Irvine, is affiliated with the
Islamic Center of Southern California. The Pasadena campus,
where tuition costs about $7,250 a year, includes 170
students from preschool through eighth grade.
Affirmation of the Muslim American identity is a
multilayered task. To instill Muslim beliefs and values, the
core curriculum includes Islamic and Koranic studies and
Arabic language classes. Each Friday, students attend
afternoon prayer services.
And although history classes also contribute to shaping an
American identity, the school offers real-life lessons about
the classic American melting pot.
Blond blue-eyed children of Eastern European immigrants
giggle with their African American classmates. A spunky
Colombian American fourth-grader yelps in frustration when
his character in the California history game "Go West!" ends
up with frostbite.
The student body is Muslim, but the teaching staff is mixed.
Some are lifelong Muslims, others converted, and still
others belong to different faiths.
Second-grade teacher Carol Dean and a few other instructors
and administrators from a neighboring private Christian
school arrived at New Horizon 11 years ago. Their former
school, operated by the Worldwide Church, had shut down.
But there were no problems in adjusting to their new home.
Dean, a member of the Church of God, said religion — whether
Christian or Muslim — has only enhanced her teaching.
"The one thing that I wanted to do is still teach the values
I taught at my other school, and I found that was what they
had here, the universal values of honesty, justice,
generosity and respect," Dean said.
Assistant middle school director Nahid Ansari, a Muslim,
said the school's mission is to celebrate religious and
cultural diversity while focusing on Islamic and secular
education.
"It's a reflection of America and teaches respect for other
cultures and gives exposure to other cultures," Ansari said.
"It shows we don't live in a cocoon."
Khalil Kariem, whose three children attend New Horizon, said
the presence of non-Muslim teachers at the Islamic school is
a sign of its dedication to the children and academics.
"I see that that's just the way God wants it," he said.
"When I see teachers who aren't Muslim, that makes me feel
better because I think, OK, they see that this is a
first-rate school and they choose to teach here."
New Horizon received a Blue Ribbon Award last year from the
U.S. Department of Education for outstanding academic
achievement, a rarity among Islamic schools. The Pasadena
campus earned the distinction by scoring in the top 10% of
state assessment exams. The school is proud of the honor.
Blue ribbons adorn building columns and balcony railings,
and a commemoration table sits in the middle school lobby.
"There are great teachers here," said Mona Ghannoum, 9. "We
have the best curriculum and best teachers."
Rambunctious sixth-grader Haseeb Khan has pragmatic reasons
for liking Islamic studies over every other subject:
"It's easy, and our teacher usually lets us go out early.
And it's interesting to learn."
The campus has reached out in other ways, including a
partnership with Chaim Weizmann Community Day School, a
Pasadena Jewish school.
Their kindergartners became pen pals and visited one
another's schools. The Jewish and Muslim students have
planted daisies together and made friendship quilts. With
students from St. Mark's Episcopal School in Altadena, they
have also celebrated Daniel Pearl Music Day, honoring a Wall
Street Journal reporter kidnapped and killed in Pakistan in
early 2002.
During a recent Friday afternoon sermon for elementary
school students, Islamic studies teacher Haris Tarin
reflected on the importance of casting a positive image of
Muslim Americans in the community.
"If you're always on top of everything you're doing, you'll
feel good about yourself and respect yourself, and others
around us will respect us also," he said. "The prophet
Muhammad, what did he say? Love for your brother what you
would — "
The students joined in to complete the sentence:
"Love for yourself."
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