from The Calgary Herald, Feb 11, 2011
About one dozen families who recently immigrated to Canada are  demanding that the Louis Riel School Division in Winnipeg excuse their  children from music and coed physical education programs for religious  reasons.
The families believe that music is un-Islamic - just like  the Taliban believe and then imposed on the entire population of  Afghanistan - and that physical education classes should be segregated  by gender even in the elementary years.
The school division is  facing the music in a typically Canadian way - that is, bending itself  into a trombone to try to accommodate these demands, even though in  Manitoba, and indeed the rest of the country, music and phys. ed are  compulsory parts of the curriculum.
Officials say they may try to  have the Muslim children do a writing project on music to satisfy the  curriculum's requirements. The school officials have apparently  consulted the Manitoba Human Rights Commission, and they have also  spoken to a member of the Islamic community suggested by those very same  Muslim parents.
In any event, the school district is trying to  find a way to adapt the curriculum to fit the wishes of these families,  rather than these families adapting to fit into the school and Canadian  culture.
Mahfooz Kanwar, a member of the Muslim Canadian Congress, says he has some better ideas.
"I'd  tell them, this is Canada, and in Canada, we teach music and physical  education in our schools. If you don't like it, leave. If you want to  live under sharia law, go back to the hellhole country you came from or  go to another hellhole country that lives under sharia law," said  Kanwar, who is a professor emeritus of sociology at Mount Royal  University in Calgary.
That might be putting things a little more  forcefully than most of us would be comfortable with, but Kanwar says he  is tired of hearing about such out-of-tune demands from newcomers to  our country. "Immigrants to Canada should adjust to Canada, not the  other way around," he argues.
Kanwar, who immigrated to Canada  from Pakistan via England and then the United States in 1966, says he  used to buy into the "Trudeaupian mosaic, official multiculturalism  (nonsense)."
He makes it clear, that like most Canadians, he is  pleased and enjoys that Canada has citizens literally from every country  and corner in the world, as it has enriched this country immensely. But  it's official multiculturalism - the state policy "that entrenches the  lie" that all cultures and beliefs are of equal value and of equal  validity in Canada that he objects to.
"The fact is, Canada has an  enviable culture based on Judeo-Christian values - not Muslim values -  with British and French rule of law and traditions and that's why it's  better than all of the other places in the world. We are heading down a  dangerous path if we allow the idea that sharia law has a place in  Canada. It does not. It is completely incompatible with the idea and  reality of Canada," says Kanwar, who in the 1970s was the founder and  president of the Pakistan-Canada Association and a big fan of official  multiculturalism. Kanwar says his views changed when he started  listening to the people who joined his group. They badmouthed Canada,  weren't interested in knowing Canadians or even in learning one of our  official languages. They created cultural ghettos and the Canadian  government even helped fund it.
"One day it dawned on me that the  reason all of us wanted to move here was going to disappear if we didn't  start defending Canada and its fundamental values." That's when Kanwar  started speaking out against the dangers of official multiculturalism.  He has been doing so for decades.
So, it's no surprise that Kanwar  is delighted with the recent speech British Prime Minister David  Cameron delivered to the 47th Munich Security Conference on Feb. 5.
"Under  the doctrine of state multiculturalism," said Cameron, "we have failed  to provide a vision of society to which they feel they want to belong.  We have even tolerated these segregated communities behaving in ways  that run counter to our values. So when a white person holds  objectionable views - racism, for example - we rightly condemn them. But  when equally unacceptable views or practices have come from someone who  isn't white, we've been too cautious, frankly even fearful, to stand up  to them. . . . This hands-off tolerance," said Cameron, "has only  served to reinforce the sense that not enough is shared. All this leaves  some young Muslims feeling rootless and . . . can lead them to this  extremist ideology."
Kanwar actually credits German Chancellor  Angela Merkel for being among the first of the world's democratic  leaders to take the courageous step in October to say that official  multiculturalism had "failed totally."
It appears leaders are  getting bolder. During an interview with TFI channel on Feb. 10, French  President Nicolas Sarkozy declared that the government policy that  encourages immigrant groups to foster distinct societies within France  "is a failure."
"If you come to France, you accept to melt into a  single community, which is the national community, and if you do not  want to accept that, you cannot be welcome in France," he said.
"We  have been too concerned about the identity of the person who was  arriving and not enough about the identity of the country that was  receiving him," Sarkozy added.
Kanwar says for years, some  "non-whites like me" have felt comfortable pointing out the failings of  official multiculturalism. What's encouraging is that now "whites" or  the majority culture and its leaders are starting to sound the alarm.
Cameron  ended his speech by saying: "This terrorism is completely  indiscriminate and has been thrust upon us. . . . We need to confront it  with confidence.
"At stake are not just lives, it's our way of life. That's why this is a challenge we cannot avoid - and one we must meet."
That  democratically elected leaders are at long last starting to sing a  different tune is sweet music to Kanwar. Here's hoping those poor kids  in Winnipeg will get to hear some of it.
 
 
 
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