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Darul Uloom, Birmingham

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Type
  
Islamic School

Principal
  
Maulna Dr. Abdur Rahim

Phone
  
+44 121 688 6507

Founded
  
1984

Established
  
1984

Campus
  
Birmingham

Number of students
  
175

Location
  
Birmingham, United Kingdom

Address
  
521-527 Coventry Rd, Birmingham B10 0LL, UK

Similar
  
Small Heath, Edgbaston High School fo, Small Heath Islamic C, Small Heath Lower Sc, Hall Green Secondary School

The Darul Uloom Birmingham Islamic High School (Arabic: دارالعلوم الاسلامية العربية برمنجهام - Urdu: دارالعلوم برمنگهم) is an Islamic school in Birmingham, England. It was established in 1985 by Jami Masjid and Islamic Centre Birmingham.

Contents

2011

The school was inspected in May 2011, following a Channel 4 documentary Dispatches filming teaching sessions within the school. Ofsted found that it was "good" with regards to the behaviour of pupils, "satisfactory" with regards to how well the curriculum and other activities met the range of needs and interests of pupils and quality of provision for pupils’ spiritual, moral, social and cultural development, but "inadequate" in overall quality of education, how effective teaching and assessment were in meeting of pupils’ needs, how well pupils made progress in their learning, and the overall welfare, health and safety of pupils.

The report followed the Dispatches documentary, entitled Lessons in Hate and Violence, on February 14, 2011, which filmed undercover inside the school, alleging some students and teachers were preaching intolerance to other students. Some of the footage showed a preacher making offensive remarks about Hindus and ranting: "Disbelievers are the worst creatures".

The school released an official statement about the programme on its website, stating that it had been grossly misrepresented and that comments had been taken out of context. Local MP John Hemming made comments supporting the school. The school said it was targeted by hate calls following the broadcast.

The DfE ruled that the Dispatches programme found a "substantial amount of evidence" of intolerance and contempt for other cultures, religions and mainstream society and "a culture of intolerance where adherents to other faiths are despised and considered inferior". It said that the school promoted a "wholesale repudiation of mainstream society"; and that the headmaster, deputy headmaster, and religious studies teacher were among the speakers secretly recorded "denigrating or belittling members of other religions" and promoting the view that Muslims must remain separate from mainstream society.

In one lesson, a teacher "appears to be advocating war against America and/or Jews, and to be repudiating democracy"; children were taught to refer to non-Muslims using terms "used on extreme websites such as those operated by Al Qaeda". The headmaster had given lessons "condemning all non-Muslims and all aspects of their behaviour", as well as promoting Islamic punishments, including the chopping of hands for stealing and stoning for adultery, with no reference to a British context, which "may not be enabling pupils to distinguish right from wrong ... and to respect British law. The DfE said the "combined effect of these speeches is to emphasise to the pupils that they should not have any contact with people who belong to other religious groups; indeed contact should be hateful... and to discourage them from living in harmony with members of British society". It also said that a separate Ofsted inspection in the wake of the programme had found "serious regulatory failings".

The DfE strongly backed the editing of the Dispatches programme. It said: "There was no other teaching that DfE saw that presented other religions, cultures or cultural traditions in a positive light. There was no evidence in the footage that was viewed to support the school's contention that its teachings were likely to prepare students to integrate, interact with and contribute beneficially to wider society.

The school has written back to the DfE with an action plan, promising "a significant transformation of the school structure". The school said the headmaster had been replaced by an acting head, and all teachers identified in the film as making "inappropriate comments" had been dismissed. One was imprisoned. The governing body had also been disbanded and all members of its Senior Management Team had been dismissed. It said it was taking a number of other steps to combat extremism and improve community cohesion. The DfE has accepted the action plan, but warned that the school may still be struck off the register for independent schools if it did not adhere to regulatory standards.

2015

In 2015 the school was subject to another critical Ofsted report, this time after further expressions of concern which led to an unannounced inspection. It was found that a female governor sat in a different room to male governors when conducting a governance meeting. The school responded saying it was the female governor's choice to sit apart, and that segregation was not routinely practiced at the school. Ofsted also reported that the school's "policy states that the biggest timetable weighting has been given to English and mathematics, but inspection evidence and school timetables show that pupils study Arabic for approximately half of the school day." A large number of leaflets were found with highly concerning comments, such as "Music, dancing and singing are acts of devil and prohibited" in areas used by pupils, staff, and the mosque next door. The Darul Uloom Islamic High School said the leaflets - described by Ofsted as evidence of safeguarding weakness - were not found on its premises but at the rear door of an adjacent mosque where they had been 'dumped' by a member of the public.

References

Darul Uloom, Birmingham Wikipedia