SOLDIER STUNNED BY LETTER KIDS' RANTS
An American soldier overseas is fuming over letters he received from Brooklyn middle-school children accusing GIs of destroying mosques and killing civilians in Iraq.
Pfc. Rob Jacobs of New Jersey said he was initially ecstatic to get a package of letters from sixth-graders at JHS 51 in Park Slope last month at his base 10 miles from the North Korea border.
That changed when he opened the envelope and found missives strewn with politically charged rhetoric, vicious accusations and demoralizing predictions that only a handful of soldiers would leave the Iraq war alive.
"It's hard enough for soldiers to deal with being away from their families, they don't need to be getting letters like this," Jacobs, 20, said in a phone interview from his base at Camp Casey.
One Muslim boy wrote: "Even thoe [sic] you are risking your life for our country, have you seen how many civilians you or some other soldier killed?"
His letter, which was stamped with a smiley face, went on: "I know your [sic] trying to save our country and kill the terrorists but you are also destroying holy places like Mosques."
The letters were written as a social-studies assignment.
The JHS 51 teacher, Alex Kunhardt, did not return phone calls, but the school principal, Xavier Costello, responded with a statement:
"While we would never censor anything that our children write, we sincerely apologize for forwarding letters that were in any way inappropriate to Pfc. Jacobs. This assignment was not intended to be insensitive, but to be supportive of the men and women in service to our nation."
This teacher failed to do his job. He should have proofread the letters before sending them. Anything that was objectionable or in poor taste should have been excluded. Failure to do so was irresponsible. The teacher should be reprimanded.
The claim that they don't censor is laughable. Have you ever heard of zero tolerance policies at schools? Do you remember two kids being suspended for drawing threatening stick figures? Give me a break! They censor when it suits their agenda.
2 Comments:
Amen brother! Kids can't draw a picture of a gun and say bang without getting expelled.
I would really blame the parents on this one though. I know at that age I simply parroted my home beliefs re: politics. Fortunatly I was raised in a Republican home.
Did the teacher advocate these anti-military positions to his class? Many people will assume that that is exactly what he did, if he continues to refuse to comment.
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