Indonesian School Apologizes After Dressing Young Girls as Jihadists for a Parade A kindergarten in Indonesia has apologized after a âcult...
A kindergarten in Indonesia has apologized after a âculturalâ parade featuring girls dressed in jihadist-style costumes and carrying cardboard rifles caused an uproar, the Guardian reports.
At an event celebrating the countryâs Independence Day late last week, the veiled girls marched in lines down the street toting replica guns. Images and videos of the parade in Probolinggo, East Java, quickly stirred controversy on social media.
Teachers from the school insisted, contrary to the criticism, they were not trying to âinstill violenceâ in kindergarten students.
âWe raised the theme of the struggle of the Prophet to increase faith and devotion to Allah,â said TK Kartika kindergarten principal Hartatik.
Asked to explain the attire and the use of cut-out guns as props, Hartatik said the school had reused costumes from a previous function to save money, but did not elaborate on the original purpose for the outfits.
â[We] never thought about the impact. The important thing is to take part in the parade, that the children were happy, using the existing property,â Hartatik said, offering a deep apology for any offense.
The area military commander, Lt.-Col. Kav Depri Rio Saransi, likewise argued that the parade was about educating students on the âstruggle of Islam,â not about radicalizing children.
âThere is not the slightes t bit of radicalism,â he said.
But the speaker of Indonesiaâs parliament, Bambang Soesatyo, was less forgiving in his assessment, dubbing it an âinappropriate spectacle.â
âOrdering children to wear black veiled costumes and carry replica weapons gives a poor perception,â he told the Guardian, âTreatment like that could damage childrenâs ideas.â
The controversy comes as Indonesia tries to present a clean image as host of the 18th Asian Games, the largest multi-sport competition outside the Olympics.
The parade also follows a trio of church bombings in Indonesiaâs second-largest city in May that were linked to the Islamic State. The attacks targeted Christian church services and were carried out by families with children as young as 9-years-old in tow.
For y ears, analysts have warned of festering militancy in Indonesia that could set off a homegrown insurgency in the worldâs largest Muslim-majority country.
Source: Google News Indonesia | Netizen 24 Indonesia
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