A/HRC/31/18/Add.2
C.
Madrasas
67.
A significant number of students attend Islamic schools, generally known as
madrasas. The madrasa system is divided into two branches: “Alia madrasas” and “Qaumi
madrasas”. Both include an emphasis on Islamic teaching, i.e. the Koran, Hadith and other
religious subjects. The Ministry of Education has integrated the Alia madrasas into the
national curriculum and has furthermore established training programmes for madrasa
teachers.
68.
Those madrasas that comply with the national curriculum educate their students in
various disciplines, including natural sciences, social sciences, mathematics, languages
(Bangla, English and Arabic) and information and communications technology. Many of
the madrasas coeducate boys and girls, who sit together in the same classroom. During his
visits to Alia madrasas in Dhaka and Bandarban, the Special Rapporteur had discussions
with principals and teachers and enjoyed some spontaneous interaction with students in
classrooms.
69.
While perhaps half of the madrasas follow the national curriculum, a large number
of Qaumi madrasas, with their own curriculum, continue to operate outside of the Ministry
of Education. Members of religious minorities have frequently expressed their fears that the
madrasas, in particular Qaumi madrasas, promote extremist views, such as stigmatizing all
non-Muslims as “infidels”. The spread of madrasas, in particular those not operating in line
with the national curriculum, seems to be a main source of anxiety among religious
minorities. The Government affirms that it is committed to gradually offering a uniform
curriculum for all students in the country.
D.
Other religious schools
70.
Other religious communities also run their own religious schools, sometimes
connected with dormitories and orphanages. In the Chittagong Hill Tracts region, the
Special Rapporteur visited a school operated by the Buddhist community, in which students
from Hindu, Buddhist and Christian backgrounds — mostly from indigenous families —
learn together. The Christian community also runs quite a number of schools, usually called
“missionary schools”, all of which follow the national curriculum. The vast majority of
students in the Christian schools come from non-Christian religious backgrounds. Some
interlocutors complained that the Christian communities face increasing problems in
preserving their internal autonomy, as local administration reportedly interferes arbitrarily
in the selection of principals or other governing positions concerning those schools.
E.
Interreligious dialogue
71.
In 1999, the University of Dhaka established the Department of World Religions and
Culture, in which students learn about various religions, their common features and values,
their relevant differences, and the ways to nurture interreligious relations. The professors
and lecturers expressed their commitment to promoting modern interpretations of the
sources and traditions of various religions, thereby encouraging reforms, not least in the
sphere of gender equality. Some of the professors have also served as advisors to the
Ministry of Education. A few years ago, the Department also founded a centre for
interreligious and intercultural dialogue, which pursues more practical projects concerning
interreligious communication in Bangladesh.
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