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Saturday, December 19, 2015

One Palestinian And One White Teacher Showed The Same Movie. Here's What Happened Next. | ThinkProgress

One Palestinian And One White Teacher Showed The Same Movie. Here's What Happened Next. | ThinkProgress:

One Palestinian And One White Teacher Showed The Same Movie. Here’s What Happened Next.

Malala Yousafzai poses for photographers upon arrival at the screening of the film 'He Named Me Malala' in London, Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2015.


Two Hunterdon County, New Jersey high school teachers showed a movie clip about Nobel Peace Prize Winner Malala Yousafzai in their history classrooms. Now, one of them — a Muslim woman of Palestinian descent — alleges that decision contributed to her being fired in June, despite the fact that she showed the clip at the suggestion of her white coworker.
Sireen Hashem alleges that the movie was referenced by school administrators as one example of mounting tensions between her and school administrators due to her identity. When Hashem pointed out that her coworker Lindsay Wagner had also shown the same clip, she says that the superintendent responded by referencing her ethnicity and religion.
“You are not Lindsay,” said Christina Steffner, the school superintendent according to a lawsuit filed by Hashem against school administrators. The court document noted, “Lindsay Wagner is not Arab, not Palestinian, and not Muslim.”
In a statement emailed to ThinkProgress, Steffner said that the statements attributed her are “factually wrong” and that they “may even be defamatory.”
Hashem alleges she faced a years’ long effort by school administers to have her “removed from her teaching position, solely because of her heritage and religion.”
The next issue arose in March 2014 when a student’s parents complained after Hashem participated in a discussion of Lemon Tree, a book about an unlikely friendship between a Palestinian man, Bashir Al-Khayri, and an Israeli woman named Dalia Ashkenazi Landau. Hashem was asked to translate a discussion with Al-Khayri by the teacher who taught the book. Even though it was not her classroom, her participation in the class drew scorn of the student, who later wrote a post on Facebook that called Hashem’s brother a terrorist and said that she was “attempting to instill anti-Semitic views in students,” according to the complaint.
After that, Susan Cooley, principal of Hunterdon Central Regional High School, told Hashem “that she should not mention Islam or the Middle East in her class. Defendant Cooley further stated that Plaintiff should not bring her culture, life experience or background into the classroom.”
Hashem was again remanded in May 2014, when she asked students to compare the actions of John Brown’s raid at Harpers’ Ferry, West Virginia to the attacks on New York City and the Pentagon on 9/11. Hashem’s lawyers contend that the question was “commonly used by teachers throughout the United States.”
In April 2015, Hashem was handed a “poor evaluation” and told that her contract could not be renewed because of her performance. She asked that the decision be overturned at a Regional Board of Education meeting in June. About 60 parents and students showed up to support her.
Two days later, she was informed in writing that the Board would not overrule the decision to suspend her contract.
Superintendent Christina Steffner uniformly denied the allegations brought by Hashem.
“I respect the personnel confidentiality rights of all employees, and it would be inappropriate for One Palestinian And One White Teacher Showed The Same Movie. Here's What Happened Next. | ThinkProgress: