"Gulf-Bound Troops Get Primer on
Islam"
by John Curran (AP, April 8,
2003)
It isn't enough to learn how to salute and
shoot. Today's soldier also has to know where Mecca is, how to behave
around
Muslim women and how customs in the Arab world vary from those in the
United
States.
A three-hour "Islam Cultural
Awareness" class is mandatory for all units at Fort Dix, not just
those
headed to the Persian Gulf. Ditto for Army troops being deployed from Fort
Benning, Ga., Fort Hood, Texas, and other bases.
"Yes, we're there to accomplish a
mission
and win a war," said Maj. Steve Stover, an Army spokesman.
"Whether
it's in Afghanistan, fighting terrorism, or in Iraq, liberating that
country,
it's just in our best interest to not insult any of the locals
unnecessarily."
At Fort Dix, a major reserve center that
deploys
U.S. Army Reserve and National Guard units for duty overseas, the training
comes in a classroom-style session at the base theater.
Standing before about 300 camouflage
fatigue-clad soldiers on a recent morning, Master Sgt. Connie Penner
conducted
a presentation using an overhead projector.
Beginning with Islam, she told them that
the
Quran is to Muslims as the Torah is to Jews and the Bible is to
Christians.
Ramadan, the ninth month in the Islam lunar calendar, is a time for soul
cleansing and faith deepening.
After discussion about the religion, the
subject
matter turned to differences in customs between the Arab world and Western
countries. In the West, youth is valued, Penner said, while in Arab
culture
wisdom grows with age.
When the presentation progressed to
guidelines
for dealing with Muslim women, the overhead projector showed a photograph
of an
attractive Western woman, wearing a skirt. This triggered a cascade of
wolf
whistles from the mostly male audience. Penner grinned, but continued on.
She explained that Arab women are keepers
of the
family home who have restrictions on behavior, dress and other personal
displays. Then she quieted the crowd with a real-life example, telling
them
that a GI during the Persian Gulf War had sex with a Muslim woman.
"He got shipped out of the country
before
anything bad could happen to him. She got beheaded," Penner said.
To some, like Sgt. Ronnie Stiles, 34, a
military
policeman who was in the Gulf War in the Navy, the presentation was old
hat.
Others were hearing it anew.
"It's interesting just learning about
the
culture, and the way we might think something is nothing that's very
important
to them," said Capt. Thomas Lewis, 34, a National Guardsman.
Similar training has been given in various
forms
to U.S. servicemen since World War I, when GIs were given instruction on
what
to expect "over there," according to historian Jeffery Charlston
of
the Army Center of Military History. Soldiers headed to Europe in World
War II
and Vietnam also were given training on customs, according to Charlston.
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