20 October 2012
In a noteworthy development that has been largely unreported by foreign media, Egypts Education Ministry announced that a new human rights class for 11th grade students will use portions of the Bible in its curriculum and will discuss non-Muslim rights in Islam. Traditional religion courses split Christians and Muslims into two groups to learn about their respective faiths. The goal of the new human rights class, the ministry said, is to educate students on citizenship, and it will be taught to all 11th graders, beginning this academic year. While traditional religion courses will remain split, the human rights class offers a new move toward greater inclusivity. The course will examine human rights and citizenship, including what it means to be Egyptian, which should help bring Muslim and Christian students together.
The course will use Christian and Muslim precepts of human rights to discuss human rights within the Egyptian context. It is ambitious, but could be the start of something new and great for the country, in which each faith is given credibility within the classroom setting.
A report in Egypts Al-Wafd newspaper mentioned in late September that the second chapter of the textbook for the Patriot Studies class, as it is called, will include Christian principles, which follows the first chapter about non-Muslim rights in Islam. With this course, the government is moving toward creating more inclusive educational environments. Learning about Christian and Muslim principles as they learn about citizenship, students in Egypt will hopefully discover that each faith is vital and important to the future of the country.
In another step to avoid divisions, the cover of the textbook features a picture from the January 2011 uprising with a cross and crescent intermingled, a sign of unity between the two religions in Egypt.
The textbook promotes equal citizenship and the building of a diverse political system that will represent all of society, the ministry said.
With a growing interest in human rights education in Egypt since the revolution, this textbook is a first step toward teaching Muslim students about other faiths. Eleventh grade teacher Salma Mahmoud believes that this is the greatest moment for Egyptian education.
For teachers like Mahmoud it is a chance to develop a dialogue between Christian and Muslim students. She says that while simply having a chapter discussing Christian principles in the textbook is important for the future of Egypt, its importance goes beyond the text.
What we can have are debates, questions and open discussions about each others beliefs in a forum that is not contentious and where students dont feel alienated. At the end of the day, many of these students brothers, friends and relatives were in the streets during the 18 days and fought and died for Egypt, so they can learn that we all have the same desires, she said of the class.
And she is right. The advent of inclusive education could be a moment for all Egyptians to finally begin to overcome the notion that what separates them is religion. By learning each about others faith in the context of citizenship, students will hopefully begin to understand the other and build relationships with their fellow Egyptians, religion notwithstanding.
It wont be an overnight success, but going forward, with more and more of the younger generation of Muslim students knowing a little about the beliefs and faith of their Christian neighbors, it will undoubtedly help bring Egyptians together.
Joseph Mayton is a Cairo-based journalist. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with the Common Ground News Service (www.commongroundnews.org).
Copyright The Daily Star 2012.



















