Hebrew University
Hebrew University - Nurit
Peled-Elhanan (Dept of Education) Blames the settlers for the
Palestinians murdering her daughter
“Terrorist attacks
like this are the direct consequence of the oppression, slavery,
humiliation and state of siege imposed on the Palestinians,” she
told TV reporters in the aftermath of Smadar’s death.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/aug/07/israeli-school-racism-claim
Academic claims
Israeli school textbooks contain bias
Nurit Peled-Elhanan of Hebrew University says textbooks depict
Palestinians as ‘terrorists, refugees and primitive farmers’
Harriet Sherwood in
Jerusalem, The Observer
Sunday 7 August 2011
Nurit Peled-Elhanan,
an Israeli academic, mother and political radical, summons up an
image of rows of Jewish schoolchildren, bent over their books,
learning about their neighbours, the Palestinians. But, she says,
they are never referred to as Palestinians unless the context is
terrorism.
They are called Arabs.
“The Arab with a camel, in an Ali Baba dress. They describe them as
vile and deviant and criminal, people who don’t pay taxes, people
who live off the state, people who don’t want to develop,” she says.
“The only representation is as refugees, primitive farmers and
terrorists. You never see a Palestinian child or doctor or teacher
or engineer or modern farmer.”
Peled-Elhanan, a
professor of language and education at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, has studied the content of Israeli school books for the
past five years, and her account, Palestine in Israeli School Books:
Ideology and Propaganda in Education, is to be published in the UK
this month. She describes what she found as racism– but, more than
that, a racism that prepares young Israelis for their compulsory
military service.
“People don’t really
know what their children are reading in textbooks,” she said. “One
question that bothers many people is how do you explain the cruel
behaviour of Israeli soldiers towards Palestinians, an indifference
to human suffering, the inflicting of suffering. People ask how can
these nice Jewish boys and girls become monsters once they put on a
uniform. I think the major reason for that is education. So I wanted
to see how school books represent Palestinians.”
In “hundreds and
hundreds” of books, she claims she did not find one photograph that
depicted an Arab as a “normal person”. The most important finding in
the books she studied – all authorised by the ministry of education
– concerned the historical narrative of events in 1948, the year in
which
Israel fought a war to establish itself as an independent state,
and hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled the ensuing conflict.
The killing of
Palestinians is depicted as something that was necessary for the
survival of the nascent Jewish state, she claims. “It’s not that the
massacres are denied, they are represented in Israeli school books
as something that in the long run was good for the Jewish state. For
example, Deir Yassin [a pre-1948 Palestinian village close to
Jerusalem] was a terrible slaughter by Israeli soldiers. In school
books they tell you that this massacre initiated the massive flight
of Arabs from Israel and enabled the establishment of a Jewish state
with a Jewish majority. So it was for the best. Maybe it was
unfortunate, but in the long run the consequences for us were good.”
Children, she says,
grow up to serve in the army and internalise the message that
Palestinians are “people whose life is dispensable with impunity.
And not only that, but people whose number has to be diminished.”
Peled-Elhanan
approaches her subject from a radical political background. She is
the daughter of a famous general, Matti Peled, who became convinced
that Israel’s future lay in a dignified peace with the Palestinians.
After leaving the army, he became active in the peace movement.
When Peled-Alhanon’s
only daughter, Smadar, was two, her face appeared on billboards in a
political poster for Labour. It’s message was that all children
deserve a better future.
Then, in 1997, Smadar
was killed by a Palestinian suicide bomber while shopping in
Jerusalem. She was 13. Peled-Elhanan declines to talk about her
daughter’s death apart from once or twice referring to “the
tragedy”.
At the time, she said
that it would strengthen her belief that, without a settlement to
the conflict and peaceful coexistence with Palestinians, more
children would die. “Terrorist attacks like this are the direct
consequence of the oppression, slavery, humiliation and state of
siege imposed on the Palestinians,” she told TV reporters in the
aftermath of Smadar’s death.
Her radical views have
exacted a professional cost. “University professors stopped inviting
me to conferences. And when I do speak, the most common reaction is,
‘you are anti-Zionist’.” Anybody who challenges the dominant
narrative in today’s Israel, she says, is similarly accused.
She hopes her book
will be published in Hebrew, but is resigned to it being dismissed
by many in the political mainstream.
Asked if Palestinian
school books also reflect a certain dogma, Peled-Elhanan claims that
they distinguish between Zionists and Jews. “They make this
distinction all the time. They are against Zionists, not against
Jews.”
But she concedes that
teaching about the Holocaust in Palestinian schools is “a problem,
an issue”. “Some [Palestinian] teachers refuse to teach the
Holocaust as long as Israelis don’t teach the Nakba [the Palestinian
“catastrophe” of 1948].”
Perhaps not
surprisingly for someone of such radical views, Peled-Elhanan is
deeply pessimistic about her country’s future. Change, she says,
will only come “when the Americans stop providing us with $1m a day
to maintain this regime of occupation and racism and supremacy”.
She said that within
Israel, “I only see the path to fascism. You have 5.5 million
Palestinians controlled by Israel who live in a horrible apartheid
with no civil and no human rights. And you have the other half who
are Jews who are also losing their rights by the minute,” she says,
in reference to a series of attempts to restrict Israelis’ right to
protest and criticise their government.
She dismisses the
Israeli left as always small and timid, but especially now. “There
has never been a real left in this country.” She believes that the
education system helps to perpetuate an unjust, undemocratic and
unsustainable state.
“Everything they do,
from kindergarten to 12th grade, they are fed in all kinds of ways,
through literature and songs and holidays and recreation, with these
chauvinistic patriotic notions.”
• This article was
amended on 7 and 8 August 2011. The original credited Matti Peled as
the designer of a poster featuring Nurit Peled-Alhanan’s daughter,
Smadar. This was corrected to read that the family produced the
poster. This in turn is incorrect and has been corrected at the
request of the family.
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