HINDU
FOUNDATION SUES CALIFORNIA STATE
(March 18, 2006)
Sacramento,
California: The Hindu American Foundation (HAF) filed suit against
the California State Board of Education (SBE) in California Superior
Court in Sacramento today. After months of repeated correspondence
with the SBE and California Department of Education (CDE), HAF filed
suit as the foundation contends that a fair and open process was
not followed in adopting textbooks that introduce Hinduism to sixth
grade students. HAF sued the SBE for failure to perform those duties
required by the California Education Code and the Standards of Evaluation
of Instructional Materials with respect to Social Content.
"Today
Hindu Americans have taken a stand against not only the illegal
machinations of the SBE and unfair treatment Hindus received during
the textbook adoption process, but also the inaccurate and unequal
portrayal of their religious tradition in school textbooks,"
said Nikhil Joshi, Esq., member of the HAF Board of Directors. "This
is about treating Hindus in America and their religion with the
same level of sensitivity and balance afforded to other religious
traditions and their practitioners," continued Joshi. The HAF
complaint alleges that the SBE violated the law when it approved
textbooks for sixth grade history-social science that tend to demean,
stereotype, and reflect adversely upon Hindus; that portray Hinduism
as undesirable; that hold Hindu beliefs and practices up to ridicule
or as inferior; that inaccurately describe and characterize Hinduism;
and discourage belief in that religious tradition. HAF identified
five areas where the foundation holds that the staff recommended
edits were not only inadequate, but also inconsistent.
HAF
asks in the lawsuit that
1)
the description of the role and status of women in Hinduism be
neutral and consistent with the treatment accorded this issue
in the context of other religions;
2)
the description of the caste system and the social practice of
"untouchability" be historically accurate and consistent
with descriptions of social inequities in other societies that
are falsely perpetrated by some in the name of religion;
3)
description of Hindu theology and its understanding of divinity
be consistent with the understanding of practicing Hindus;
4)
Hinduism not be unfavourably compared with other religions or
made to appear as a more regressive or archaic belief system;
and
5)
the text present the Aryan Invasion or Aryan Migration Theory
as one possibility, along with the prevailing view among Hindus
that Hinduism is indigenous to India.
On
December 2, 2005, SBE's Curriculum Commission initially approved
several Hindu edits that addressed these issues. The SBE decided
to ignore the Curriculum Commission only in regards to the edits
suggested by Hindu groups. HAF further argues that the SBE violated
the California Open Meeting Act among other procedural violations
when it made numerous private determinations that effectively subverted
the public process. The Bagley- Keene Open Meeting Act requires
that certain state agency meetings be conducted openly so that the
public may remain informed. HAF is seeking a temporary restraining
order to halt the publishing of the textbooks until the issues of
whether the textbooks meet the state standards have been resolved
by a court of law.
"Were
dealing with hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars here,"
stated Suhag Shukla, Esq. HAF Legal Counsel. "We need to ensure
that the suggested edits by the Hindu American community are given
due consideration and that ultimately the text is fair and accurate
before it goes to the print." An emergency hearing for injunctive
relief will be scheduled within the next week. A copy of the complaint
and exhibits are available on www.hinduamericanfoundation.org
The
Hindu American Foundation (HAF) is a human rights group whose purpose
is to provide a voice for the 2 million strong Hindu American community.
HAF interacts with and educates government, media, think tanks,
academia and public fora about Hinduism and issues of concern to
Hindus locally and globally. Promoting the Hindu and American ideals
of understanding, tolerance and pluralism, HAF stands strong against
hate, discrimination, defamation and terror.
The
Hindu American Foundation is not affiliated with any religious or
political organizations or entities. HAF seeks to serve Hindu Americans
across all sampradayas (Hindu religious traditions)
Release
Source: www.c2b2bnews.com
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