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Allegations Unfounded
There has been a flood of
accusations for several years over the content of Palestinian textbooks; that
the textbooks incite children to hatred and violence towards Israeli Jews, and
fail to promote the values of peace, tolerance and coexistence. This claim has
been widely accepted as a fact mostly in the United States and Israeli official
circles. Such claims are largely based on reports by the Center for Monitoring
the Impact of Peace (CMIP), a Jewish organization with links to extremist and
racist Israeli groups that advocate settlement activities in the Palestinian
territories, expulsion (transfer) of Palestinians from their homeland, and
claims that Palestinians are all "terrorists" that peace with them is not
possible. Israel's supporters now are intensifying their orchestrated crusade
against Palestinian education, in preparation for the House International
Relations Committee's planned consideration of the Foreign Relations
Authorization bill, FY 2006-2007.
The issue of Palestinian
incitement "is going to be a very big issue for Congress as we move ahead to the
next few years," said Ester Kurz, legislative strategy and policy director of
the influential pro-Israel lobby, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC),
according to Jewish American paper The Forward, 27 May 2005.
Senator Hillary Clinton has
continued to criticize Palestinian textbooks since her first Senate campaign.
“All future aid to the Palestinian Authority must be contingent on strict
compliance with their obligation to change all the textbooks in all grades—not
just two at a time,” she insisted five years ago. Unfortunately, she fails to
realize that leading the campaign against what she calls "new generation of
terrorists" is in itself an act of incitement to hate and racism. (“Hillary
Clinton: Link PA Aid to End to Antisemitism,” Jerusalem Post 26 September 2000)
A member of the United States
Congress wrote to The New York Times: "According to the Center for Monitoring
the Impact of Peace, today’s sixth-grade Palestinian students are required to
read the textbook 'Our Country Palestine,' which has a banner on the title page
of Volume I that reads, 'There is no alternative to destroying Israel.'" (Steve
Israel, letter to The New York Times, 10 June 2001, Section 4, p. 14). Had
Congressman Steve Israel checked his sources before making his declaration, he
would have found that there is no such banner in the textbook.
However, in their rush to
judgment, some American politicians repeated the allegations without bothering
to verify such claims. Thus, and consequently, victimizing the Palestinian
people and children further. In the words of Alice Rothchild, co-chair of
Visions of Peace with Justice, in a speech given at World Fellowship Center
August, 2001: "The campaign of the CMIP has created a self-fulfilling prophecy
that is devastating to the peace movement." And she asked: "What does this tell
us about our own stereotypes, racism, power relationships and knee jerk
responses?"
Criticism of Palestinian
textbooks has been largely based on claims by Israeli government sources and
CMIP, who's work has been criticized as "tendentious and highly misleading" by
Nathan Brown, Professor of Political Science at George Washington University,
and Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, who has
also published his own studies on this subject. According to Prof. Brown, CMIP's
"method was to follow harsh criticisms with quotation after quotation purporting
to prove a point…In short, the CMIP reports read as if they were written by a
ruthless prosecuting attorney anxious for a conviction at any cost… Exaggerated
rhetoric, charges of anti-Semitism and racism, and denial of the significance of
existing changes in the curriculum will hardly convince anyone further
improvements are worth the effort." (Nathan J. Brown, Getting Beyond the
Rhetoric about the Palestinian Curriculum, 1 January 2002)
CMIP's claim that the European
Union was funding Palestinian textbooks with anti-Semitic content infuriated
Chris Patten, on the Foreign Affairs Committee of the European Parliament, and
External Relations Commissioner. He declared: “It is a total fabrication that
the European Union has funded textbooks with anti-Semitic arguments within them
in Palestinian schools. It is a complete lie.”
The European Union, responding
to the false allegations, issued a statement on 15 May 2002 which asserted that:
"Quotations attributed by earlier CMIP reports to the Palestinian textbooks are
not found in the new Palestinian Authority schoolbooks funded by some EU Member
States; some were traced to the old Egyptian and Jordanian text books that they
are replacing, some to other books outside the school curriculum, and others not
traced at all. While many of the quotations attributed to the new textbooks by
the most recent CMIP report of November 2001 could be confirmed, these have been
found to be often badly translated or quoted out of context, thus suggesting an
anti-Jewish incitement that the books do not contain… Therefore, allegations
against the new textbooks funded by EU members have proven unfounded."
In "A Study of the Impact of
the Palestinian Curriculum", commissioned by the Belgian Technical Co-operation
at the end of 2004, and conducted by education experts, Dr. Roger Avenstrup and
Dr Patti Swarts, they found that: "In the light of the debate stirred by
accusations of incitement to hatred and other criticisms of the Palestinian
textbooks, there is no evidence at all of that happening as a result of the
curriculum. What is of great concern to students, teachers and parents alike is
that although they wish it, students find it difficult to accept peace and
conflict resolution as a solution to the conflict, and teachers find it
difficult to teach, while soldiers and settlers are shooting in the streets and
in schools and checkpoints have to be braved every day. It would seem that the
occupation is the biggest constraint to the realisation of these values in the
Palestinian curriculum."
In his evaluation of
Palestinian Civic Education, Dr. Wolfram Reiss, University of Rostock, Germany,
at the Conference on "Teaching for Tolerance, Respect and Recognition in
Relation with Religion or Belief," Oslo, 2-5 September 2004, Wrote: "[I]t must
be said first that, in general, the Palestinian textbooks cannot be considered a
“war curriculum”. At least these textbooks of Civics Education convey visions of
society, in which tolerance to other religions, human rights, peace, pluralism,
democracy and other values are encouraged and fostered much… There is no hatred
or incitement against Israel, the Israeli people or Judaism. The textbooks do
not contain anti-Semitic language."
Dr. Reiss added that "civics
education textbooks do not only avoid hatred and incitement against the West,
but foster very much Western values: democracy, human rights, the individual
rights, the education for peace and tolerance of all religions, the rights of
women and children, the civil society and the protection of nature… From a
Western perspective the civics education textbooks therefore have to be highly
praised indeed."
Finally, the Israel/Palestine
Center for Research and Information (IPCRI), in their June 2004 report,
"Analysis and Evaluation of the New Palestinian Curriculum" (30 books for Grades
4 and 9), commissioned by the US Congress and submitted to the Public Affairs
Office of the US Consulate General in Jerusalem, concluded that: "There is,
moreover, no indication of hatred of the Western Judeo-Christian tradition or
the values associated with it," and that "the textbooks promote an environment
of open-mindedness, rational thinking, modernization, critical reflection and
dialogue."
The report also confirmed that
the textbooks "promote civil activity, commitment, responsibility, solidarity,
respecting others’ feelings, respecting and helping people with disabilities,
and... reinforce students’ understanding of the values of civil society such as
respecting human dignity; religious, social, cultural, racial, ethnic, and
political pluralism; personal, social and moral responsibility; transparency and
accountability."
Palestinians welcome having
their own textbooks examined and scrutinized from an academic, not prosecutorial
stand point, but it is also fair and legitimate to ask those rushing to
prosecute to look at Israeli curricula and compare how each side views the
"other". Incidentally, the United States Congress has an ongoing program to fund
research on Palestinian school books, but is on record as refusing to pay a dime
for research on Israeli school books. Concern about Palestinian education and
curricula, however, can gain credibility if it is not seen as blatantly
one-sided and totally political.
Israeli Incitement
Those who are critical of what
Palestinian children are learning should try to find out how Israeli children
are taught to hate Arabs, and trained to kill them?
Israeli daily newspaper Yedioth
Ahronot, May 7th 2002, published a letter titled “Dear Soldiers, Please Kill a
Lot of Arabs,” that came from Israeli children who sent such letters to Israeli
soldiers serving in the Tulkarm area during the so-called “Operation Defensive
Shield”. The letters sent by Israeli school students encouraged soldiers to
disregard rules and regulations and to kill as many Arabs as possible. According
to “Yedioth Ahronoth”, dozens of the letters were sent to soldiers, mostly from
children in the 7th through 10th grades, attending religious schools.
Egyptian researcher Safa
Abdel-Aal studied the Israeli curriculum and media, and published her findings
in a new book entitled Racist Education in the Israeli Curricula in which she
found that Israel's educational curricula incite the new generation for war, and
racism against the Arabs. Abdel-Aal's book analyses eleven history and five
geography books for elementary school from grades three to six.
She thought that these books
deliberately paint distorted pictures of the Arabs, giving them such derogatory
descriptions as "Arab thieves" or "embezzlers", and saying they are "bastards,
thirsty for Jewish blood" or that they are "underdeveloped Bedouins" and
"vagrant highway robbers," and "house of Arab reptiles".
Abdel-Aal said that Arabs are
maliciously described as murderers and thieves. In one example she quoted the
following from one Israeli textbook, "despite a harsh climate and strange
environment full of attacks by Arab embezzlers, thieves and terrorists". And in
another citation that refers to the city of Tiberias where "a feeling of
insecurity and fear of the Arab murderers spread among the residents of the
city."
Ruth Firer and Sami Adwan, an
Israeli and a Palestinian scholar, who conducted research comparing Palestinian
and Israeli textbooks, March 2002, wrote that the Israeli books "strongly
emphasizing the collective values connected to the history of the Jewish nation
in 'their land' and God's promises to the Jews that give them an absolute right
on the land. The land of Eretz Israel described in the books includes the
territories of the PNA from 1967."
A study by Daniel Bar-Tal of
Tel-Aviv University reviewed 124 Hebrew language books approved for use in 1994
by the Ministry of Education. The study concludes that "the majority of [Israeli
school] books stereotype Arabs negatively." In one children’s book, Bar-Tal
offers this sampling, "We were lonely… pioneers surrounded by a sea of enemies
and murderers." In elementary school books, according to Bar-Tal, Arabs are
often stereotyped negatively and portrayed as "uneducated people and enemies."
In a report titled "Israeli
Textbooks and Children’s Literature Promote Racism and Hatred toward
Palestinians and Arabs," journalist Maureen Meehan concluded that "Israeli
school textbooks as well as children’s storybooks, portray Palestinians and
Arabs as 'murderers,' 'rioters,' 'suspicious', and generally backward and
unproductive. Direct delegitimization and negative stereotyping of Palestinians
and Arabs are the rule rather than the exception in Israeli schoolbooks."
(Washington Report for Middle East Affairs September 1999)
In a study presented at the
hearing of the political committee of the European Parliament, 24 October 2003,
titled "The attitude towards Palestinians in Israeli textbooks," Dr. Nurit
Elhanan, of the Hebrew University, revealed that "the Palestinians are absent
from all textbooks, The Occupation is never mentioned, and the area where
Palestinians live is presented in the maps either as an empty space referred to
as 'an area without data' (Man and Space maps) or it is incorporated into the
state of Israel (The Geography of the land of Israel maps). In both cases use of
the term 'occupation' is out of the question, since you cannot occupy illegally
what is yours anyway and you cannot occupy illegally an empty space."
Dr. Elhanan added: "When
reference is made to date in the West Bank it is only to Jewish colonies or to
main cities like Nablus, Hebron or Beth Lehem as Israeli tourist sites…In Israel
today there is already a second generation of children who don’t know there are
occupation, illegal domination and illegal settlements."
A report by an Israeli research
institution, The New Profile, entitled Child Recruitment in Israel, 29 July
2004, by: Amir Givol, Neta Rotem, Sergeiy Sandler, reveals the extent of the
militarization of the Israeli education system. It states:
"To begin with, militarised
education naturally feeds on the militarism prevalent in society at large. In a
country where various kinds of weaponry are permanently displayed in public
places and the status of the military is used to promote anything from cheese to
political candidates, militarised education comes natural. One absorbs
militarism at home and on the street. The military is physically present in
schools and school activities. Soldiers in uniform are stationed in schools,
many of them are actually teaching classes. Other teachers, and especially
principals, are recently retired career officers, without proper teacher
training. High schools normally have a display on one of the walls in the school
building with the names and photographs of “the fallen” among their graduates.
School field trips, at all ages, are often made to military memorials set up on
former battlegrounds. "Official curricula and textbooks also reflect the
militaristic attitudes inherent in the Israeli educational system, all the way
from kindergarten to the last years of high school, where there is a mandatory
programme for all Jewish state-run schools called “preparation for the IDF,”
that in most cases includes actual military training. Whole curricular subjects
are often described to the pupils, and in official documents, as having the aim
of preparing pupils, or some of them, to military service. Glorifications of the
military and military conquest, and negative or skewed representation of
Palestinians, are to be found in many Israeli textbooks."
Education Under Occupation
Roger Avenstrup, who is an
international education consultant and has worked in various countries in
conflict and post-conflict situations, wrote in the International Herald
Tribune, December 18, 2004, that the "biggest constraint, in the words of a
Palestinian parent, is that Israeli tanks and soldiers are shooting in the
streets outside while teachers are trying to promote peace in the classroom."
Since September 2000, according
to the Palestinian State Information Service (SIS), Israel has killed over 4,032
Palestinians, including 750 children; and wounded over 45,000 as of April 30,
2005. Denial of access to medical facilities at checkpoints caused the death of
131 civilians. Of a population of 3.5 million, the Israeli occupation still
imprisons 8,500 Palestinians, including 350 minors; 69,843 homes were damaged,
7,438 of those were completely destroyed.
Haim Yavin, Israeli Popular TV
Anchor since 1968, commenting in the first segment of a five-part documentary he
produced, after listening to settlers insisting that God gave them the lands,
admitted: "Since 1967, we have been brutal conquerors, occupiers, suppressing
another people…We simply don't view the Palestinians as human beings." And "At
one point, according to AP report "Yavin shifted the camera toward the Israeli
soldiers to ask why they weren't letting people through. 'I look for danger in
these people and I can't find it,' Yavin said in the film." (Associated Press,
May 31, 2005) Fouad Moughrabi, director of the Qattan Center for Educational
Research and Development, Ramallah, Palestine, wrote, “I find no evidence of
brain washing or anti-Jewish incitement in the new texts produced by the PA.” He
noted that “Israel’s occupation of Palestinian lands breeds more hatred and
mistrust than any schoolbooks can."
The Convention on the Rights of
Child of November 1991, Article 2, obliges State Parties to “respect and ensure
the rights set forth in the present Convention to each child within their
jurisdiction.” Israel has repeatedly violated these rights and ignored it
obligations. In its 20 November 2004 press release, Defense for Children
International (DCI), appealed "to the international community and world leaders
to abide by their declared commitment to protect the rights of all children,
including the children of Palestine. We urge them to bring pressure on the
Israeli government, to abide by international law and end the occupation which
is incompatible with any declared commitment to promoting and protecting the
basic human rights of all."
In the same press release (20
November 2004) DCI reported that: "Since the start of the second Intifada on 29
September 2000, Palestinian children have borne the brunt of the upsurge in
Israeli violence. Over the course of the past four years, more than 660
Palestinian children have been killed and almost 9,000 injured – hundreds of
whom have been left with permanent physical disabilities. Many thousands more
are suffering psychological trauma from the daily horrors they witness. An
estimated 3,000 children have been arrested during this Intifada, while
currently there are still 335 children being held in Israeli prisons and
detention centers."
Conclusion
The First Palestinian
Curriculum Plan of 1998 stated that the principles of the Palestinian curriculum
are that Palestine is a democratic state, ruled by a democratic parliamentary
system; Palestine is a peace-loving state, working towards international
understanding and cooperation based on equality, liberty, dignity, peace and
human rights; Palestinian national and cultural identity must be fostered and
developed; social justice, equality and the provision of equal learning
opportunities for all Palestinians, to the limits of their individual capacity
must be ensured without discrimination on grounds of race, religion, color, or
gender; opportunities must be provided to develop all Palestinians
intellectually, socially, physically, spiritually and emotionally, to become
responsible citizens, able to participate in solving problems of their
community, their country and the world.
Palestinian opposition to
Israel must be understood in the context of their opposition to Israeli
occupation and oppression, their quest for freedom and self-determination, self
preservation, and national liberation. Ruth Firer, of the Hebrew University, who
carried out research on Palestinian textbooks was quoted in Americans for Peace
Now published interview as saying "we were surprised to find how moderate the
anger directed toward Israelis in the Palestinian textbooks is, compared to the
Palestinian predicament and suffering."
Experience has shown that
changes in school textbooks and syllabi are not at all the necessary ingredients
for the fulfillment of a meaningful peace agreement between states in conflict,
but rather the sincere will and commitment of both parties for achieving such an
agreement. For over fifty years Palestinians have tried reconciliation and
compromise. They declared a state on 22 percent of their original country for
the sake of peace and security, through the Palestine National Council
Conference of 1988 in Algiers, and accepted all U.N. resolutions regarding the
Palestinian issue.
In 1993 the PLO signed the Oslo
Agreement which called for ending the Israeli occupation and implementing the
two-state solution. The Israelis responded by expanding settlement activities,
in violation of international law and the Oslo Agreements at a frantic rate,
with more violence, more land expropriation and house demolitions, incitement,
demonization, and eventually the cantonisztion of the Palestinian population in
apartheid-like ghettos. More recently, the (apartheid) Wall, which was condemned
by the International Court of Justice at The Hague and by the international
community, has added to the inciting nature of measure taken by the Israeli
government against the Palestinian population under occupation.
As long as Israel continues to
look for excuses attacking Palestinian institutions to smoke screen it brutal
military occupation, and to deny the Palestinians' self-determination, freedom,
and human rights, in violation of international law, and all U.N. resolutions,
the conflict will continue. Palestinians need peace more than any other nation
on earth, but peace must be based on mutual respect and justice for all.