Audio By Carbonatix
Muslim cleric, Sheikh Aremeyaw Shaibu says the Chief Imam, Osmanu Nuhu Sharubutu has expressed deep concern about the recent news of alleged mistreatment of Muslims in certain Christian missionary schools.
According to him, the recent incident involving the Wesley Girls’ Senior High School’s refusal to let Muslim students partake in the ongoing Ramadan fast has caused the Chief Imam so much worry.
“Anytime Chief Imam hears this he feels disappointed, he feels worried, and when he calls and talks to me he’s like ‘these are the people that they hail praises on me, they show me great respect anytime, but my grandchildren are in their schools, and my grandchildren are not treated well,” he told Benjamin Akakpo on AM Show, Friday.
Sheikh Aremeyaw Shaibu, who is the spokesperson of the Chief Imam says following reportage of mistreatment of Muslim students across the country, the office of the Chief Imam has started recording the names of schools where the abuse of Muslim students occur in order to go into talks with their school heads to find an amicable solution.
He said, “Meek as he is, the Chief Imam will never tell you go and shout, go and do that but he feels disappointed and I feel disappointed.”
Speaking on JoyNews’ AM show, Sheikh Aremeyaw stated that it was of the essence that the mistreatment against Muslims be stopped.
He said the continued mistreatment of Muslim students could have psychological implications on them.
“I have been a teacher, and I understand the psychological implication of this, any child you mistreat within the school system, the psychological impact on his being as he grows further, just like a child who is abused in the house for too long or a child who is exposed to abuse or he sees his father slapping his mother, kicking his mother, that child will grow to become a violent person when he gets married.
“The same thing any child who is mistreated, treated with indignity, disrespect, his rights are abused, that child will grow never to see anything wrong with abuse of human rights,” he said.
He thus called on teachers to show compassion to the students even as they try to uphold the highest discipline in their various schools.
“And I think that as teachers even within the mission, we’re told that compassion is something that we all uphold, and I find a contradiction when Muslim children are in Christian schools and Christians who uphold the virtues of compassion and respect for human dignity will not be able to look at within the frame of their discipline to also respect the diversity in it,” he said.
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