
Pennsylvania teacher accused of calling Muslim student ‘terrorist' placed on leave
A Pennsylvania middle school teacher has been placed on administrative leave after allegedly calling a Muslim seventh grader a 'terrorist.'
The alleged incident took place Jan. 16 at Central Dauphin Middle School in Harrisburg after the student asked the teacher to change seats, according to a news release from the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a civil rights group.
'I do not negotiate with terrorists,' the teacher allegedly told the student, according to CAIR, which described the student as Palestinian Lebanese American.
At a press conference Monday evening, Adam Rahman, the boy's father, said his son is doing 'OK' but that the incident will 'always resonate in his head' and he'll 'wonder if the next teacher will say the same thing.'
'He felt like the room was spinning and he was the only one and there was nobody to help him,' Rahman said. 'These teachers are supposed to be the mentors, the people who you look up to, and if that fails, there's nothing.'
The Central Dauphin School District said it was aware of the allegations that the teacher 'made a derogatory comment' to the student during an after-school program at the middle school.
The district did not identify the educator but said the alleged incident goes against the district's values and the policies set for staff members.
'Central Dauphin School District has zero tolerance for hateful and racist speech, and we have launched an internal investigation into this matter,' the district said in a statement. 'While we cannot comment publicly on personnel matters, the teacher involved in the alleged incident is on administrative leave pending our investigation.'
Rahman said this is not the first time his family has experienced 'red flags' in the school district, but that this was the 'tipping point.'
'When teachers say it, that's when I have to go to the school and confront this,' he said.
Rahman called for more education on geopolitics in the district so that students can 'learn more about different backgrounds, especially in the Middle East.'
At Monday's press conference, community leaders demanded cultural sensitivity and anti-bias curriculum and training.
In a statement, the Harrisburg Palestine Coalition said the teacher's alleged "deeply embedded racism" may partially stem from "exposure to misinformation and war propaganda by mainstream news coverage of Palestine."
"Central Dauphin School District must do more to ensure that education on Palestine is correctly taught in its classrooms," the coalition said.
In a statement, CAIR's Philadelphia branch called the incident a 'racist, anti-Palestinian verbal assault' that made the teacher 'unfit to teach any students.'
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Northern Ireland has experienced an increase in immigration in recent years but on a small scale, remaining the least diverse part of the UK. Only 6.3 per cent of the population was born outside the UK and Ireland in 2021, compared to 4.5 per cent a decade earlier. 'Filipinos live here' The proportion of foreign-born residents among Ballymena's estimated 31,000 population is higher than the wider picture in Northern Ireland. But at 16 per cent, it is almost exactly in line with the average across the UK. The wave of anger that swept through Ballymena this week prompted many locals with links abroad to take drastic precautions. Residents from the Philippines, who are vital in staffing the health and social care sector, placed signs on their doors reading 'Filipinos live here'. The efforts were futile. Iveta Bajanova, 41, a Slovakian who has lived in the area for 14 years, was sitting at home with her children when her windows were smashed and front door kicked through. 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