PUBLIC
SCHOOLS - PAGAN RELIGION INDOCTRINATION CENTERS
By
Joel Turtel
August
17, 2007
NewsWithViews.com
Many
public schools have become pagan religion indoctrination centers.
These schools now teach children anti-Judeo-Christian beliefs and
pagan religions, and try to mold children's minds through the
latest techniques in behavioral psychology.
Here
are two examples of how schools now use spirit religions as
brainwashing techniques in classrooms across America, from Berit
Kjos’s book, “Brave
New Schools:” “Come to the medicine wheel!” the
teacher's cheery voice beckoned the Iowa fourth graders to a fun
Native American ritual. “And wear your medicine bags.”
Jonathan
grabbed his little brown pouch and hurried to his place. His
favorite teacher made school so exciting! She brought Indian
beliefs about nature into all the subjects: science, history, art,
reading. She even helped the class start The Medicine Wheel
Publishing Company to make writing more fun.
She
taught Jonathan to make his own medicine bag, a deer-skin pouch
filled with special things, such as a red stone that symbolized
his place on the medicine wheel astrology chart. This magic pouch
would empower him in times of need, such as when taking tests.
Jonathan wanted to show it to his parents, but his teacher said
no. He didn't know why.
Sitting
cross-legged in the circle, the class sang a song to honor the
earth: “The Earth is our Mother. We're taking care of her. . . .
Hey younga, ho.” Then the teacher read an Indian myth from the
popular classroom book, Keepers of the Earth. It told about a
beautiful spirit woman who came to save a starving tribe of Sioux
Indians. This mystical savior brought sage to purify the people,
and she showed them how to use the sacred pipe, a symbol of “the
unity of all things” for guidance and prayer to the Great
Spirit.
When
Rachel Holm, a Minnesota mother, visited Mounds Park All-Nations
School, she found magic dream-catchers in every classroom,
mystical drawings of a spiritualized earth, and a ring of stones
in the schoolyard for medicine wheel ceremonies. She heard
politically correct assumptions about the evils of Western culture
and the goodness of pagan spirituality. How can public schools
promote Native American rituals but censure Christianity? she
wondered.”
What's
wrong with these seemingly innocuous classes, aside from the issue
of separation of religion and schools? The kids were having fun as
they learned, so what could be wrong? Plenty. By teaching
religious mysticism, public schools throughout the country are
filling impressionable young minds with group think,
multiculturalism, paganism, Earth worship, astrology, polytheism
(belief in many gods), and pantheism (belief in spirit gods that
exist in trees, rocks, and water). The God of Moses is out in our
public schools, and Earth worship is in.
Many
teachers in public schools across the country now stress feelings
and mystical experiences, not facts and reason, much less critical
reading and thinking. Their behavior modification techniques
indoctrinate children with emotion-driven group think and
anti-Western, anti-Judeo-Christian values.
In
classrooms throughout the country, Judeo-Christian beliefs are
cast aside or ridiculed. Multicultural studies, environmental
propaganda, and arts-education classes now indoctrinate children
with New Age religious beliefs, often without parents’
knowledge. Public schools sometimes try to sneak offensive spirit
or new age religions into their curriculum without parents’
knowledge.
In
January, 2003, a group of parents sued a Sacramento Unified School
District because certain teachers at their local elementary school
were aggressively, and secretly, teaching anthroposophy, a
religion that combines traditional Western religion with astrology
and New Age religion. Pacific Justice Institute lawyers
representing the parents indicated that many other public schools
in California are now adding New Age and Eastern religions,
including Islam, to their curricula.
What
follows is only a small sample of the flood of “spiritual”
sessions taking place in classrooms throughout the country (from
Berit Kjos’s brilliant book, “Brave
New Schools”) :
1.
“Altered states of consciousness: Teaching students to
alter their consciousness through centering exercises, guided
imagery, and visualizations has become standard practice in
self-esteem, multicultural, and arts programs. They often
encourage contact with spirit guides.”
2.
“Dreams and visions: After studying a pagan myth,
students are often asked to imagine or visualize a dream or
vision, then describe it in a journal or lesson assignment”
3.
“Astrology: Countless teachers across the country require
students to document their daily horoscopes. Others help students
discover their powers and personalities through Aztec calendars
and Chinese.”
4.
“Other forms of divination: Through palmistry, I Ching,
tarot cards and horoscopes, students learn to experience other
cultures and tap into secret sources of wisdom. Students in Texas
were told to create a vision in their minds and “describe in
your best soothsayer tones the details of your vision.”
5.
“Spiritism: While pagan myths and crafts show students
how to contact ancestral, nature, and other spirits, classroom
rituals actually invoke their presence. California third-graders
had to alter their consciousness through guided imagery, invoke or
“see” their personal animal spirits, write about their
experience . . . and create their own magical medicine shields to
represent their spirit helper.”
6.
“Magic, spells, and sorcery: Many parents consider magic
and spell-casting too bizarre and alien to pose a threat, yet
gullible students from coast to coast are learning the ancient
formulas and occult techniques.”
7.
“Occult charms and symbols: Dreamcatchers, Zuni fetishes,
crystals, and power signs like the quartered circle and Hindu
mandala are only a few of the empowering charms and symbols
fascinating students today.”
8.
“Solstice rites: After seating themselves “according to
their astrological signs,” Oregon students who traded Christmas
for a Winter Solstice celebration watched the “sun god” and
“moon goddess” enter the auditorium to the beating of drums
and chanting. “Animal spirits” . . . . followed.”
9.
“Human sacrifice: Students are given lessons on death
education with assignments like the “Fallout Shelter.” Other
lessons advocate the cultural endorsement of abortion and
euthanasia as a way to prepare the new generation to accept many
new forms of human sacrifice, such as the notion of sacrificing
oneself for the “common good.”
10.
“Sacred sex: Students get lessons about pagan
societies’ appreciation for the “unifying power of
promiscuity.” By studying these pagan notions on sexuality,
children get the idea that promiscuity is normal and
acceptable.”
11.
“Serpent worship: Many ancient or primitive cultures
throughout history have worshipped snakes, which have symbolized
occult power, wisdom, and rebirth. Public school multicultural
history classes that celebrate these primitive societies can
idealize cultures that worshipped serpents.”
Dreams,
visions, magic, spells, sorcery, astrology, spirit worship,
divination, solstice rites, human sacrifice, sacred sex, and
altered states of consciousness? Is this what our children should
be learning? Should schools turn children into Earth-and
spirit-worshipers? Should parents pay property taxes for public
schools that promote pagan religions that can affect their
children's ability to tell facts from spirit dreams?
Teaching
pagan beliefs and religions can harm children. Author Aldus Huxley
wrote about ‘new-think’ indoctrination in Brave New World, his
frightening novel about a future totalitarian society. In his
book, school authorities molded children’s minds so that as
adults, they lost their ability to think critically or judge the
policies of their leaders.
Indoctrinating
children with pagan beliefs in our public schools could have a
similar effect. If a child believes he or she can turn into a bird
or pass a math test by rubbing a voodoo necklace, then facts,
reason, hard work, and dedication go out the window.
Pagan
mysticism can warp a child's ability to think critically and to
grasp and deal with reality. Are state-controlled public schools
deliberately trying to cripple children’s ability to reason and
deal with facts? School authorities would say that they are simply
trying to get children to appreciate other cultures and religions.
What they are really doing is to indoctrinate children with the
notion that all cultures and religions are “equal” and
“harmless,” when they are not.
Parents,
I can think of no better way to corrupt your children’s mind’s
than by keeping them in government-controlled, public-school
indoctrination centers. When was the last time you visited your
children’s classrooms and heard what they are really teaching
your children?
© 2007 Joel Turtel
- All Rights Reserved