SPARTA, Tenn. – Hundreds of parents attended a recent community meeting to demand school board members trash a seventh grade world history text that contains “Islamic indoctrination.”

A Tennessee parents group called White County Citizens Against Islamic Indoctrination held a community meeting at the Christian Life Assembly church in Sparta on Tuesday that drew roughly 350 people to discuss the text book and lessons on Islam in local schools, Fox 17 reports.

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The book is “My World History and Geography: The Middle Ages to the Exploration of the Americas” and parents are particularly concerned with the chapter “Islam Today,” which spans about 30 pages delving into the details of the religion. Parents at the meeting complained the book neglects to cover the full truth about the Muslim religion, paints Islam in a very positive light, and goes beyond merely discussing the religion in the context of world history, according to The Tennessean.

“When I first read the syllabus about what she was going to be studying, red flags were everywhere because it was all about Islam,” parent Frances Davis, who brought her kids along to the packed church, told News Channel 5. “I don’t care about them learning about different cultures, I’m not against that at all, but it does need to be true.”

And several local leaders, parents, and others who spoke at the gathering clearly do not think the text is accurate.

“This textbook is fiction!” Egyptian Christian ministry leader Usama Dakdok exclaimed.

White County Citizens Against Islamic Indoctrination member Ed Butler read a passage from the text he believes unfairly highlights only positive aspects of the religion.

“Sharia law forbids followers from gambling, stealing, eating pork or drinking alcohol. It also includes rules for resolving family issues and doing business ethically,” he read. “It sounds good and this is the indoctrination that I’m talking about.”

Butler and others pointed out the chapter doesn’t discuss the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, ISIS, or Muslim treatment of women that many view as sexist and oppressive.

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The latter directly contradicts passages in the text book that allege Islam centers on “equality,” Butler said.

“It’s wise to understand and have a better understanding of the world around you but you need to understand the truth. When you say Islam stresses the equality of all people, that is not true,” Butler said.

“It is our time, it is our place to stop it here,” speaker Steve Gill told the crowd.

The community meeting is the latest in a trend of widespread, growing parental outrage over lessons on Islam in public schools across the country, and in Tennessee in particular. Parents in other school districts in Tennessee and elsewhere have posted questionable assignments online, stormed school board meetings, contacted their elected representatives, produced viral videos to expose offending assignments, and demanded school officials rework the curriculum, EAGnews reports.

Local school boards have largely dismissed the complaints by pointing out lessons on all world religions are required by state world history standards, while state officials contend local districts are responsible for crafting the curriculum. Meanwhile, a Tennessee lawmaker has introduced legislation to delay lessons on religion until high school, while others have requested materials used to teach about Islam from public schools, which have thus far denied the request.

But parents in White County are getting organized, and they’re holding their local school board members responsible for what they’re children are learning.

Citizens Against Islamic Indoctrination recently presented the White County School Board with a request to select a different world history text book for seventh-graders, but board members quickly quashed that idea.

School board members noted the text is one of only two approved by the state.

“We voted not to get rid of the book because it’s a book about world history, not indoctrination,” board chairman Edd Cantrell told Fox 17.

Citizens Against Islamic Indoctrination disagree, and they don’t plan on letting up until board members “wake up and realize that parents and this community do not want this book,” said Bryan Wright, the group’s co-chair.

Citizens Against Islamic Indoctrination circulated petitions at the Tuesday meeting to demand board members who voted to keep the book immediately resign.

The group has another meeting scheduled for Nov. 4. In the meantime, members plan to continue to fund radio ads in opposition of the board’s decision, and to protest “individual school board members outside of their places of business,” News Channel 5 reports.

Citizens Against Islamic Indoctrination’s Facebook page currently has more than 2,000 “likes.” The group’s website, StopIslamicIndoctrination.com, also provides resources for parents who want to join the fight.