The 'extremist' schools we can't close: Four Muslim colleges ordered to shut down by the Government use the courts to defy ministers

  • Schools were ordered to close following fears of extremism or pupil safety
  • They continue to operate after launching legal appeals against closure
  • One school allegedly taught girls that men are allowed to beat their wives

Blowing the whistle: Sara Adam says it made her feel a prisoner

Four Islamic schools ordered to close following fears over extremism or pupil safety continue to operate because the Government is powerless to shut them down, the Daily Mail can reveal.

One allegedly taught girls that men can beat their wives. Another distributed leaflets saying music is an ‘act of the devil’.

They could continue operating for months, if not years, after launching legal appeals against closure. The four fee-paying independent establishments include a girls’ boarding school, Jamia al-Hudaa in Nottingham, that was ordered to close last month after Ofsted found books in the library by individuals banned from entering Britain.

Ministers told the 237-pupil school it must close its boarding facilities immediately and stop accepting new pupils. But in a letter seen by the Mail, Jamia al-Hudaa defiantly told parents it will ‘take a stand’ against its closure and has launched a £300,000 appeal to fund its legal costs. Parents were told to ‘unite’ against the ‘biased and unfair’ Government.

One former student says she is disgusted that it can continue to operate, saying it was ‘like a prison’ where girls were isolated from the outside world. She says girls were taught they can be beaten and raped by their husbands, in order ‘to make Allah happy’ and that music is the voice of the devil.

A spokesman for the school claimed it is a victim of a ‘highly politicised agenda’ against Islamic schools across the UK.

Several Islamic schools were ordered to close by the Department for Education after a series of critical Ofsted reports. But the four appealed to the courts, which allows them to continue operating until a ruling is made.

At Darul Uloom in Birmingham, inspectors found a large number of leaflets ‘containing highly concerning and extremist views’. It remains open five years after concerns were first raised, when a preacher was filmed making racist remarks about Hindus and ranting that ‘disbelievers are the worst creatures’.

The school, which has more than 100 pupils, said it disputes the Ofsted reports and has criticised the conduct of inspectors.

At Darul Uloom in Birmingham, pictured, inspectors found a large number of leaflets ‘containing highly concerning and extremist views’

At Darul Uloom in Leicester, a boys’ boarding school with nearly 150 pupils, inspectors found that ‘pupils hold stereotypical views on gender and careers’ and are not prepared for life in modern Britain. The school, which did not respond to a request to comment, has already received £176,000 from parents and other supporters in an online campaign to keep it open.

Jamia al-Hudaa boys’ boarding school in Sheffield was ordered to close after inspectors criticised its limited curriculum and unsafe facilities. It, too, did not respond to requests to comment.

Tory MP Philip Hollobone said: ‘Readers will be shocked that there is a loophole that allows these schools to carry on as if nothing has happened.’

His colleague Peter Bone called for emergency legislation to close the schools immediately while fellow Tory Andrew Bridgen said: ‘It is of great concern that schools which have been identified by Ofsted with such systemic failings are using our legal system to continue to “educate” children.’

The DfE confirmed the schools were taken off the register but closure is automatically lifted when an appeal is launched. It said: ‘Extremism has no place in our society and when we find schools promoting twisted ideologies or discrimination in classrooms, we will take action.’

OFSTED'S DAMNING VERDICTS ON THE FOUR

JAMIA AL-HUDAA, NOTTINGHAM

Girls’ secondary school. Ofsted said it does not promote balanced views. Pupils can access books written by an author who is banned from Britain. Pupils have been suspended for possessing a mobile phone. Maintenance is inadequate and poses a risk to students.

DARUL ULOOM, BIRMINGHAM

Boys’ secondary school. Ofsted said staff have not ensured that pupils are protected from extremism. A leaflet containing extremist views such as ‘Music, dancing and singing are acts of the devil’ was discovered. The school does not promote pupils’ understanding of fundamental British values. The curriculum is narrow. Pupils’ safety is at risk.

DARUL ULOOM, LEICESTER

Boys’ secondary boarding school. Ofsted said social, moral, spiritual and cultural education is weak and the school does not prepare pupils for life in modern British society. Pupils hold stereotypical views on gender that go unchallenged. The premises are unsafe, shabby and dirty with poor hygiene. Boarders have no access to television and very limited access to the internet.

JAMIA AL-HUDAA, SHEFFIELD

Boys’ boarding school. Ofsted said it lacks basic standards of cleanliness. Resources are inadequate, limiting pupils’ learning in a range of subjects, including science. There is limited teaching of other cultures and boarders are restricted in their ability to integrate into the community.

 

They taught us it was OK for a wife to be raped

By Mail Investigations Reporter

A Former pupil at Jamia al-Hudaa school in Nottingham says she was taught that women can be raped and beaten by their husbands and that music is the voice of the devil.

Sara Adam – not her real name – says the girls’ boarding school was ‘like a prison’ where girls are ‘entirely isolated from the outside world’ and simply ‘trained to become subservient housewives’.

She said: ‘We were not taught geography, history or music and in art we just did knitting. We were banned from drawing anything with eyes.

The four fee-paying independent establishments include a girls’ boarding school, Jamia al-Hudaa in Nottingham, pictured, that was ordered to close last month after Ofsted found books in the library by individuals banned from entering Britain

‘There was no sex education and we were taught that evolution was a belief of devil worshippers and atheists. Most of our day was spent doing Islamic studies.’

Miss Adam, who does not want her face pictured for fear of retribution from within her community, left Jamia al-Hudaa more than a decade ago. But the school, which has 237 pupils, continues to operate under the same leadership, despite whistleblowers repeatedly raising concerns.

Last month Aliyah Saleem, now 27, told the Mail how she was expelled from the school for owning a disposable camera.

She said she was taught that Jews and Christians ‘make God angry’.

Miss Adam recalled how when she was a pupil, two girls aged 14 and 16 were put into solitary confinement for three weeks after teachers suspected they were lesbians.

 There was no sex education and we were taught that evolution was a belief of devil worshippers and atheists. Most of our day was spent doing Islamic studies
Sara Adam 

When she was 13, Miss Adam fell and broke her collarbone but no doctor was called and her parents were not informed. She was given paracetamol and told to ‘sleep it off’. This, she claims, was because her teachers did not want outsiders in the school.

Teachers would carry out regular spot-checks of the girls’ dormitories, and ‘lift up our mattresses and look underneath like they do in prisons’.

‘They found my personal diary,’ Miss Adam said. ‘I was told off by teachers because in the summer holidays before I joined the school, I wrote that I fancied a boy I saw on the Disney Channel.

‘The teacher said it was forbidden to like boys at my age – especially if they are “kuffars” [a derogatory term to describe non-Muslims].’

Her diary was eventually returned with a third of the pages torn out.

Miss Adam said: ‘We were basically trained to be mindless zombies who submit to their husbands. I was lucky because, after calling my parents every night in tears, they eventually pulled me out of the school.

‘It is disgusting that a school like this is still open – and my fear is there are many more.’

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