Muslim teacher is suing a school for 'race discrimination' after she was sacked for objecting to a video of 9/11 being shown to 11-year-olds

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[h=1]Muslim teacher is suing a school for 'race discrimination' after she was sacked for objecting to a video of 9/11 being shown to 11-year-olds[/h]
  • Suriyah Bi was assisting the class at Heartlands Academy in Birmingham
  • The pupils were shown the horrifying video which was rated for over-18s
  • Ms Bi said the clip was inappropriate as it could distress the youngsters
  • She claims she was dismissed after expressing concerns to headteacher
By ALEX MATTHEWS FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 16:16, 25 September 2016 | UPDATED: 17:13, 25 September 2016

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Teaching assistant Suriyah Bi claims she was sacked for objecting to children being shown a clip of the 9/11 attacks





A Muslim teacher is taking legal action against a school over claims she was sacked for objecting to children being shown a video of the 9/11 terror attacks.
Suriyah Bi, 24, lost her job at Heartlands Academy in Birmingham, after just a week of being a teaching assistant in a year seven class there.
She claims that she was shown the door after she complained it was not appropriate for the 11 and 12-year-olds in her class to watch the 'X-rated' clip - that showed the horrors of the attacks on World Trade Center in New York, in September 2001.
Ms Bi, an Oxford University Graduate, from Yardley in Birmingham, is now pursuing claims against the school for unfair dismissal and religious discrimination.
The video was not mentioned in detail during the brief preliminary hearing which dealt with technical and legal matters.
But outside the hearing, Ms Bi said: 'It was shown to some 30 children during class. I understand the video was shown without the permission of the authorities.



 

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'It raised questions about what safeguards there are in schools to protect children.
'These were children aged 11, of whom many knew little, or nothing, about the 9/11 horror.
'They were subjected to graphic scenes and some were shocked and upset. The video not only showed the plane crashing into the Twin Towers but also showed people committing suicide by jumping to their deaths from the tower blocks.
'Such young children should not been shown things like that because it is well-known that it can play on their minds and even induce them to kill themselves.
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Ms Bi, an Oxford University Graduate, from Yardley in Birmingham, is now pursuing claims against Heartlands Academy for unfair dismissal and religious discrimination

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Ms Bi said footage of the 9/11 attacks was too upsetting to show the year 7 class she was helping at Heartlands (stock picture of the tragic incident)

'I was in the classroom when the video was shown and I quickly objected. Later, I was told to leave the school.
'There was an investigation into the matter but I was dismissed for making a whistle blowing complaint.'
Ms Bi said she believed no action was taken against the teacher who screened the video, but some people regarded the showing as 'misguided'.
The class had been studying a poem called Out of the Blue, by Simon Armitage, about a victim of the 9/11 terrorist attack. The poem is part of the AQA GCSE syllabus.
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E-Act, who run the Heartlands Academy, told the tribunal judge Ron Broughton that the teacher left because she no longer wanted to work for them

E-Act, who run the academy, told the tribunal judge Ron Broughton that the teacher no longer wanted to work for them.
They complained there had been no need for the preliminary hearing and were considering making a claim for costs against Suriyah for causing delays.
Mr Broughton said she could go ahead with her legal claims at a full hearing later this year and he would not consider a claim for costs at this stage.



 

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Indignant face, play the race card, guranteed to get you into paper and its a certainty no one will want to employ you!




Why work in England in a school


Well I saw it on about 20 TV screens in Argos when I was 10. It didn't do me any harm, it's a part of history get off your high horse.





I saw it in Argos too and for about a minute I thought I was watching a disaster movie..until I noticed how quiet the shop had gone...shocking but history and children need to be shown it...




I remember watching it in school and writing a news article about it for homework that same evening ... as a 10 year old.





Teaching assistant amazed to discover she doesn't actually run the school. :):)


 

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She's exactly correct. Such graphic horror should not be shown to 11 and 12 year olds. Friends of mine who saw it live have never been the same. Now that my Company is back at the new WTC, many of them were not able to psychologically go back, and had to be re-located.
I don't know or care about her lawsuit, but her larger point is correct. An edited version can and should be shown for teaching purposes.
 

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