Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, April 01, 2012
Turkey Passes Controversial, Pro-Islamic Education Reform
Reuters reports that Turkey's ruling AK Party on Friday pushed a controversial school reform bill through Parliament that critics say furthers an Islamic agenda and lowers education standards. Among the changes are ones that allow public schools to offer optional classes in Qur'anic studies and the life of the Prophet Muhammad. The bill also allows imam hatip schools-- ones that combine religious studies with modern secular subjects-- to admit students at age 11 instead of the current age 15. Today's Zaman has additional details on the bill which must still be approved by President Abdullah Gül.