Monday 18 February 2013

UK Catholic primary school set to convert to Islamic faith school

A Roman Catholic primary school in the heart of an Asian community in Lancashire, England looks set to become the first in the country to convert to an Islamic faith school.
Just a decade ago, Sacred Heart RC Primary School in Blackburn was a flourishing Catholic community, with 91 per cent of its pupil intake professing the faith. Now that number has dwindled to no more than 3 per cent.
As a result, the Diocese of Salford – which is responsible for the running of the school – has concluded it is no longer “appropriate” for the Catholic Church to remain in charge. Instead, its future is the subject of a consultation, with the local mosque a leading contender to take over the day-to-day running of the school.
The 197-pupil school is in the centre of Blackburn and its pupils are largely from ethnic minority groups, with Indians and Pakistanis in the majority. In all, around 97 per cent of its intake is Muslim. Nearby, there is already an established and successful Muslim secondary, the Tauheedul Islam Girls’ High School, which caters for 383 pupils and is repeatedly listed in the top 10 non-selective state schools based on its exam performance. It has already expressed an interest in taking over Sacred Heart.
Whether this would mean running it as a Muslim faith school or in partnership with another institution has yet to be determined.
Hamid Patel, Tauheedul’s headteacher, said: “We are the only outstanding [as rated by Ofsted] Muslim school and we are the only outstanding secondary school in the area.
“We’re very keen on collaboration. We will consider both options [running it as a faith school or becoming a lead partner in the running of the school].”
According to a report presented to Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council’s executive, if Sacred Heart became a Muslim school it would “provide increased diversity… and offer a faith school that matches the population of the town”.
Just exactly who will end up running the school will be decided by open competition, a mechanism put in place by the previous Labour government to give parents more of a say.

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