New York Daily News

X gets the AX

Flushing school bars reports on ‘bad’ Malcolm

- BY CLARE TRAPASSO

QUEENS PARENTS are using any means necessary to stop their children’s teachers from besmirchin­g Malcolm X’s name.

Teachers at Public School 201 i n Flushing told fourthgrad­ers last week that the controvers­ial activist was “violent” and “bad.” They also refused to let the kids write about the assassinat­ed icon for Black History Month.

Pa rent Cleat ress Brow n, 47, of Flushing complained to Principal Rebecca Lozada on Friday after a teacher forbade her fourth-grade son from writing a report on Malcolm X.

“I’m outraged,” said Brown. “As a teacher, you’re imposing your opinion on a bunch of kids.”

She had her son write about him anyway — and then turn the paper in to her. “That’s called learning,” she said.

Another parent, Angel Minor, said she was “ver y upset” after her son came home complainin­g he couldn’t do a report on Malcolm X for his technology class.

“It was disrespect­ful to our history,” said Minor, 33, whose son is not in Brown’s class.

Children were asked to pick from several prominent black leaders, including Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks and Malcolm X for the project, Minor said.

“I felt like when he grew up, he wanted to stop segregatio­n so everyone could be equal,” said her son Tyrese Minor, 9.

But his teacher quickly took Malcolm X off the list. The black leader defended the use of violence as a form of self-defense before his assassinat­ion in 1965.

About 43% of the 477 students at PS 201 are black, according to the school’s website. It earned a “C” on its last city report card.

City Department of Education officials said they were looking into the matter and

would not defend it.

“Malcolm X is a historical figure and a hero to many New Yorkers that we believe should be celebrated in our schools,” said agency spokesman Devon Puglia.

Lozada did not immediatel­y return calls for comment.

Eliakim Brown, 9, picked Martin Luther King, Jr. for his class project.

“Malcolm X did the same thing as Martin Luther King,” he said. “They both fought for the rights of the world.”

The civil rights movement wasn’t all about MLK, said Sylvia Cyrus, executive director of the Associatio­n for the Study of African-American Life and History.

“Malcolm X is a figure i n American history who helped make change,” she said. “Students should be allowed to write about him.”

This isn’t the first time PS 201 has come under fire.

In April 2012, a kindergart­en teacher gave kids a worksheet with a picture of a gun and a robber on it for a spelling lesson. The teacher later apologized.

ctrapasso@nydailynew­s.com

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 ?? SAM COSTANZA/DAILY NEWS ?? Frank, Eliakim and Cleatress Brown and Tyrese and Angel Minor (l.-r.) are upset at PS 201 policy banning reports on Malcolm X (top).
SAM COSTANZA/DAILY NEWS Frank, Eliakim and Cleatress Brown and Tyrese and Angel Minor (l.-r.) are upset at PS 201 policy banning reports on Malcolm X (top).

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