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Friday, February 17, 2012

"I don’t want to come across as a bigot or a racist, but I really don’t feel it is appropriate for students in a public high school to be singing an Islamic worship song”

Unfortunately James Harper will suffer the name-calling and accusations, that is part of standing up to Islamic supremacism.  His choice will have consequences, I hope young Mr. Harper will stand firm and not bow to PC pressure.  I doubt he will give in, he seems level-headed and knowledgable and with solid principles.  Let's hope other students will take his example to heart and stand tall in the face of creeping Islamic hegemony.

Bravo James Harper, we are with you.


From FOXNews Feb 15

Colorado student quits high school choir over Islamic song praising 'Allah'


A Colorado high school student says he quit the school choir after an Islamic song containing the lyric "there is no truth except Allah" made it into the repertoire.


James Harper, a senior at Grand Junction High School in Grand Junction, put his objection to singing "Zikr," a song written by Indian composer A.R. Rahman, in an email to Mesa County School District 51 officials. When the school stood by choir director Marcia Wieland's selection, Harper said, he quit.


"I don’t want to come across as a bigot or a racist, but I really don’t feel it is appropriate for students in a public high school to be singing an Islamic worship song,” Harper told KREX-TV. "This is worshipping another God, and even worshipping another prophet ... I think there would be a lot of outrage if we made a Muslim choir say Jesus Christ is the only truth."


Ya think?


But district spokesman Jeff Kirtland defended the decision to include the song.


"Choral music is often devoted to religious themes. ... This is not a case where the school is endorsing or promoting any particular religion or other non-educational agenda. The song was chosen because its rhythms and other qualities would provide an opportunity to exhibit the musical talent and skills of the group in competition, not because of its religious message or lyrics," Kirtland told FoxNews.com in an email while noting that the choir "is a voluntary, after-school activity."


(...)The song is written in Urdu, but one verse translates to "There is no truth except Allah" and "Allah is the only eternal and immortal." Although the choir sang the original version, Wieland distributed translated lyrics.


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