Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Educating Omar Khadr: 'Just doing what we do,' Christian university says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2015 10:41 AM

    TORONTO — Taking in former Guantanamo Bay inmate and government-branded terrorist Omar Khadr as a student would dovetail perfectly with how King's University sees itself, the school says.

    The small Christian-principled university in Edmonton, which has developed a relationship with the prisoner over the past six years, has offered admission as part of Khadr's bail application.

    "This completely matches what we're about: Our mission is about inspiring and educating learners to be agents of reconciliation and renewal," Dan VanKeeken, the school's vice-president, said in an interview in Toronto this week.

    "We don't have a position on Omar. We're just doing what we do."

    Khadr, 28, pleaded guilty in 2010 before a widely maligned U.S. military commission to five war crimes he was accused of committing as a 15-year-old in Afghanistan in July 2002. He is now serving out the rest of his eight-year sentence in Bowden, Alta,. as a medium security prisoner.

    He is applying for bail — to be heard in March — pending an appeal of his conviction based on U.S. legal rulings that what he did was not a war crime under either international or American law.

    King's would be happy to have him among its 715 students and 50 professors as long as he meets admission requirements as a mature student and pays the relevant tuition — about $11,000 a year for a full course load, VanKeeken said. Khadr's lawyer, Dennis Edney, has offered to foot the bill.

    The school has, or has had, Muslim, Sikh or Jewish students.

    It's "awesome" that King's would be fulfilling its mission as a Christian-based institution, Brenna Hansen, a biology student, said on campus.

    "I actually haven't heard a student who is nervous or uneasy," Hansen said. "For the most part, the students are actually proud to attend a university that carries out what it believes in."

    Detractors, the federal Conservative government among them, insist Khadr is an unrepentant and murderous jihadist. Some have not been shy about voicing their views.

    "You always have the radical reactionary response of: 'Why are you giving a university education to a terrorist?'" VanKeeken said.

    "(But) a huge message of our faith is not to be motivated by fear. I hope the government doesn't intervene and foment that fear."

    Even some of the school's supporters aren't thrilled at the prospect of Khadr as student, VanKeeken admits.

    "Except for a very small percentage of cases, it's not caused donors to stop giving. It's not like, 'Multimillionaire donor walks away from King's'," he said.

    "If you're not into social justice and doing the right thing, you don't go to King's and you don't support King's."

    Students familiar with Khadr's situation said they would have no problem with him as a classmate.

    "Everybody deserves an opportunity for education and it's good of King's to do that and be so public about it," said Erica Prins.

    King's began dealing with Toronto-born Khadr during his imprisonment in Guantanamo after students organized a justice-issues conference on his case. Some faculty, most notably English professor Arlette Zinck, put together a special curriculum he could follow from his cell.

    Tutoring him, she said at one point, was about a "gesture of mercy and compassion to a young man who has had precious little of that."

    About half a dozen King's professors have since joined the voluntary effort, with some visiting him in his Canadian prisons. All consider him intelligent and a diligent student. None believes he is dangerous.

    "We're not all like starry-eyed," VanKeeken said. "These are realistic, well-educated, grounded people, who aren't being fooled, who have good judgment."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mother Dies, Seven-month-old Son Critical After Being Pulled From Frigid B.C. River

    Mother Dies, Seven-month-old Son Critical After Being Pulled From Frigid B.C. River
    COURTENAY, B.C. — A dramatic rescue effort to pull a woman and her infant son from a frigid Vancouver Island river has ended in tragedy, as the 26-year-old mother has died.

    Mother Dies, Seven-month-old Son Critical After Being Pulled From Frigid B.C. River

    B.C. Conservative MP Randy Kamp Announces He Will Not Seek Re-election

    B.C. Conservative MP Randy Kamp Announces He Will Not Seek Re-election
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia Conservative MP has decided not to seek re-election, saying it is time for him to move on to a new chapter of his life.

    B.C. Conservative MP Randy Kamp Announces He Will Not Seek Re-election

    Four Men Rescued After Fishing Vessel Capsizes In Waters Off Nova Scotia

    Four Men Rescued After Fishing Vessel Capsizes In Waters Off Nova Scotia
    YARMOUTH, N.S. — Four men are back on shore after a fishing vessel capsized off Nova Scotia's southwest coast early Saturday morning.

    Four Men Rescued After Fishing Vessel Capsizes In Waters Off Nova Scotia

    London Man Charged For Impersonating A Police Officer With Fake Cruiser

    London Man Charged For Impersonating A Police Officer With Fake Cruiser
    LONDON, Ont. — A 50-year-old London, Ont., man is facing charges after police say he equipped his vehicle to look like a police cruiser and pulled over numerous drivers.

    London Man Charged For Impersonating A Police Officer With Fake Cruiser

    Montreal Blocks Imam Hamza Chaoui's Project To Open Islamic Community Centre

    Montreal Blocks Imam Hamza Chaoui's Project To Open Islamic Community Centre
    MONTREAL — The Islamic community centre that controversial imam Hamza Chaoui had hoped to open in east Montreal will not see the light of day, local officials said.

    Montreal Blocks Imam Hamza Chaoui's Project To Open Islamic Community Centre

    John Baird in U.S. applauds 'truly historic' rapprochement with Cuba

    John Baird in U.S. applauds 'truly historic' rapprochement with Cuba
    BOSTON — Canada's foreign affairs minister used a trip to the United States to applaud that country's reopening of relations with Cuba.

    John Baird in U.S. applauds 'truly historic' rapprochement with Cuba