Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are dealing with that at our school now. Three new Muslim kids in the classroom and their parents are extremely conservative. The kids can't eat rice krispy treats, for example, because commercial marshmallows are made with gelatin, which is likely pork-derived. And many of the parents aren't sure how to deal with that. And the kids DON'T get invited for play dates.
Would it be a problem if it were Jewish kids that would not eat marshmallows because of the gelatin? They do make kosher marshmallows, which should be fine with Muslims.
It's not a problem, per se, it's that the parents had never run into it (the parents who provided the rice krispie treats were Jewish, FWIW). It's that the parents get nervous that they will offend or cause trouble, so they don't reach out as much as they may otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are dealing with that at our school now. Three new Muslim kids in the classroom and their parents are extremely conservative. The kids can't eat rice krispy treats, for example, because commercial marshmallows are made with gelatin, which is likely pork-derived. And many of the parents aren't sure how to deal with that. And the kids DON'T get invited for play dates.
Would it be a problem if it were Jewish kids that would not eat marshmallows because of the gelatin? They do make kosher marshmallows, which should be fine with Muslims.
Anonymous wrote:We are dealing with that at our school now. Three new Muslim kids in the classroom and their parents are extremely conservative. The kids can't eat rice krispy treats, for example, because commercial marshmallows are made with gelatin, which is likely pork-derived. And many of the parents aren't sure how to deal with that. And the kids DON'T get invited for play dates.
Anonymous wrote:My 9 year old kid talks like this. She thinks she's not in the in-crowd because we don't dress like the super preppy parents of the "cool" kids and we don't live in the "right" neighborhood or drive the "right" cars. I don't get why the PPs think this can't be?
Anonymous wrote:
Would you still push the friendship if his parents weren't doctors? What if the dad had a long, unkempt beard? What if they weren't so assimilated?
Welcome to the world of profiling. Black people deal with profiling everyday; it is far reaching. And organizing forced playdates is temporary but it will probably make you feel better.
Anonymous wrote:
Would you still push the friendship if his parents weren't doctors? What if the dad had a long, unkempt beard? What if they weren't so assimilated?
Welcome to the world of profiling. Black people deal with profiling everyday; it is far reaching. And organizing forced playdates is temporary but it will probably make you feel better.