Oman Daily Observer

MUST TRY HARDER: France vows to end school neglect of Arabic

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In the ethnically mixed Paris suburb of Kremlinbic­etre, a group of children sit quietly at their desks while outside their classmates frolic in the autumn sunshine.

“Ayna yaskunu Adel? (where does Adel live)” teacher Hanan asks the children, pointing to a textbook drawing of a boy and girl in a village with a school and a mosque.

Hands shoot up, and a little girl replies that he lives behind the “madrassa”, or school.

Welcome to Lissane, one of a growing number of private language schools where the children and grandchild­ren of North African immigrants go to learn classical Arabic on Wednesday afternoons, when schools are closed, and on the weekend.

While Hanan’s students, aged 7 to 10, study interrogat­ive pronouns in one of seven classrooms housed in a former office building, a group of four-yearolds next door is singing a nursery rhyme about the parts of the body.

So far, so normal, with the notable difference that female teachers wear the Muslim headscarf, a garment banned along with other religious symbols in state schools.

But it is not so much the headscarve­s as the “Islamic sciences”, or religion lessons, conducted at Lissane and many other private Arabic language schools, that have drawn scrutiny in a country that has an uneasy relationsh­ip with its Muslim minority, the largest in Europe at an estimated five million.

Lissane’s co-founder Abdelghani Sebata, a 37-yearold Algerian law graduate, says that the religious component of the course — which includes learning verses of the Quran — is “very light”.

“We leave the religious side to the families,” he said.

But at the many mosques that also teach children to read and write the Arabic used in official communicat­ions, literature and media across the Arab world, as well as in the Quran, Islam is the main focus. A report on radicalisa­tion last month by the Institut Montaigne, a respected liberal French think-tank, warned that Arabic classes had become “the best way for Islamists to attract young people into their mosques and (private) schools”.

In response, Education Minister Jean-michel Blanquer — one of centrist President Emmanuel Macron’s most combative ministers — announced plans to take back control.

Arguing that classical Arabic should be treated like all other “great languages” such as Russian and Chinese, he vowed to develop its teaching in state schools in order to combat “the drift towards self-ghettoisat­ion” in private institutio­ns.

His proposal drew a furious reaction from rightwinge­rs who view the use of Arabic by North African immigrants with hostility, seeing it as evidence of a failure to integrate.

Luc Ferry, was education minister under former centrerigh­t president Jacques Chirac, questioned whether the government was bent on “fighting Islamism or bringing it into public education” — suggesting that by giving Arabic more prominence it was doing the latter.

“We’re in a logic of submission,” fumed Louis Aliot, a lawmaker from the far-right National Rally (formerly National Front) party, echoing the title of a novel by controvers­ial author Michel Houellebec­q, “Submission”, which imagines a France ruled by Islamists. drives them a bit mad,” El Karoui, a Tunisian-born geography scholar and former government adviser, said.

He points to the increasing scarcity of schools offering Arabic — France’s second-most spoken language, and one used by over 430 million people worldwide — as evidence of their reluctance to teach a subject associated with “problemati­c” immigrants.

Only 567 primary schoolchil­dren studied Arabic last year, a third of the number who took Chinese as their mandatory second language. Most chose English.

In secondary school, just 11,200 pupils studied Arabic, which is offered in a handful of schools in each city, mostly elite city-centre colleges.

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