A cinematic educational archive — discussion guides, parent and teacher materials, classroom prompts, free downloads and curated Journal collections on religion, extremism, parenting and world events.
A calm, age-aware framework for parents and teachers — what to say, what to avoid, and how to hold the conversation without leaving children alone with fear.
How to introduce belief, ritual, and difference at the kitchen table — without dismissing faith and without endorsing extremism.
A documentary-style guide to reading the news with children — separating events, motives, and propaganda.
Why headlines hijack the nervous system — and how to teach young readers to slow down, verify, and think.
An investigative reflection on how empathy, evidence, and patient education quietly disarm extremist narratives.
Twelve gentle opening questions for parents — designed to invite honesty rather than shut it down.
A guided journal for families and book clubs — turning difficult world topics into structured, age-appropriate conversations.
A teacher-facing structure for introducing religion, extremism, and current events in secondary classrooms.
Companion notes for educators using the children's book in primary classrooms — themes, questions, follow-up activities.
Ten classroom prompts that turn a charged subject into a calm, evidence-led investigation.
Questions designed to surface students' own assumptions about religion, identity, and community.
A curated thread of essays for parents navigating fear, faith, and world events with their children.
Long-form investigative essays tracing the line between faith as lived experience and ideology weaponised for violence.
Why fear travels faster than facts — and what education can do about it.
A documentary reading list across borders, oil, propaganda, and belief.
The editorial mission of the series, in essay form — what education can quietly accomplish that policy cannot.
Twenty-five years of field method, translated into a way of reading the world.
A cinematic timeline tracing how belief, empire, and fear have shaped the modern world.
How a single idea travelled from a Cairo schoolroom to the towers of Manhattan.
The flagship adult investigation — religion, extremism, and the human motives behind two thousand years of violence.
The illustrated children's companion — empathy, friendship, and understanding across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
Every essay in the Journal is freely available to read — no subscription, no paywall, no advertising.
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