Hebrew University
Hebrew University - The
Palestinian's Tokyo Rose, Nurit Peled-Elhanan (Dept of Education),
continues to find reasons why Israel needs to be destroyed
Interview: Israeli
school books write out Palestinian, Arab story
The Palestinian
farmer is not presented with a kuffiyeh or anything specifically
Arab, just oversized, ratty clothes that evoke imagery of a poor
laborer that could be from anywhere. This is a different
perspective. There is no more glorification of the kuffiyeh here, or
of anything specifically Arab.
....
Do you think Jewish identity has become more racialized than it
was in the past?
Of course. I mean,
it came with Zionism -- they had not conceived of black Jews when
they started. But many of the early Zionists came from Eastern
Europe, and they were called the "Ost Judden." They were the
"Eastern Jews" and they were inferior to the "Western Jews," from
Western Europe.
So they
westernized themselves when they came, toward the other Jews. The
funny thing is, those early Zionists said they perpetuated a western
culture, but they had never met a western culture until they came
here. The only people who came with Western culture were the Jews
from Arab countries, because they studied in French and British
schools.
But when Jews came
from Arab countries, they had to give up their Arabness -- to give
up their culture, their music, their habits, their clothes, their
accent. They really worked on that. It is all part of the same
racism. It is white supremacy.
http://maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=505507
Interview:
Israeli school books write out Palestinian, Arab story
By Brandon Davis
Published Wednesday 18/07/2012
JERUSALEM (Ma'an)
-- Professor of language and education at Hebrew University Nurit
Peled-ElHanan recently released a book analyzing the portrayal of
Palestinians in 16 history, civics and geography textbooks
authorized by the Israeli Ministry of Education.
'Palestine in
Israeli School Books' argues that the textbooks legitimate Israeli
military policy in the eyes of young students, and prepares them for
military service upon graduation.
Ma'an spoke to
Peled-ElHanan about the ideas behind her latest book.
You write that
Palestinians are often portrayed as anonymous, primitive, so-called
"third-world" farmers -- do you think this imagery functions as a
kind of "imperialist nostalgia," as Renato Rosaldo calls it, a
"mourning for what one has destroyed"?
This colonialist
idea of the romantic Orient was there in the past, when the Israelis
wanted to be "indigenized," but today I don't think that is true
anymore.
In the textbooks I
studied, the Palestinians and Arabs are presented as a problem. It
is like Ehud Barak said, "We are a villa in a desert," so the
Palestinians are the desert. They look down on the desert. The
desert is an underdeveloped, backward, political mass.
You also see the
"Oxfam image" of the Palestinian farmer. These caricatures of the
Palestinians do not have any Arab characteristics; they are
primarily "non-Jews," problems or obstacles to progress.
The Palestinian
farmer is not presented with a kuffiyeh or anything specifically
Arab, just oversized, ratty clothes that evoke imagery of a poor
laborer that could be from anywhere. This is a different
perspective. There is no more glorification of the kuffiyeh here, or
of anything specifically Arab.
In the book,
you discuss how Israelis are now presented as "Jews and others,"
mainly referring to non-Jewish Russian immigrants. Why do you think
Russians have been incorporated like this?
Because they are
white, and they are Europeans. This is the complex. For Zionism, if
you are white and blonde then you can come here. The Russians are
going to help to purify the race. But when you look at the books and
you see pictures or drawings, you do not see black Jews.
When you speak
about integration of new immigrants, you speak about "Sasha" the
Russian girl who was integrated really well. You don't see the
Ethiopians. They are, after the Arabs, the ones who are excluded
completely.
If they are going
to be mentioned, it is as percentages, as problems to be solved,
like the Arabs. They are not going to be solved by being eliminated,
because they are important for demography. The way to solve their
problem is to ignore them completely.
Do you think
Jewish identity has become more racialized than it was in the past?
Of course. I mean,
it came with Zionism -- they had not conceived of black Jews when
they started. But many of the early Zionists came from Eastern
Europe, and they were called the "Ost Judden." They were the
"Eastern Jews" and they were inferior to the "Western Jews," from
Western Europe.
So they
westernized themselves when they came, toward the other Jews. The
funny thing is, those early Zionists said they perpetuated a western
culture, but they had never met a western culture until they came
here. The only people who came with Western culture were the Jews
from Arab countries, because they studied in French and British
schools.
But when Jews came
from Arab countries, they had to give up their Arabness -- to give
up their culture, their music, their habits, their clothes, their
accent. They really worked on that. It is all part of the same
racism. It is white supremacy.
Your book
discusses Israeli textbooks up until 2009. What has changed in the
last two years?
In 2010, when
Gideon Saar became Minister of Education, things became much worse.
There is a new subject now called "Israeli culture" that everybody
has to study. There are about 15 to 20 new textbooks on the subject
and they are compulsory.
And there are no
Arabs there at all. Even when they say "Jerusalem, the city of three
religions," you see "Christians and Jews," you do not see Arabs.
They all deal with democracy, human rights, and peace all over the
world -- Chinese, and Indian and African rituals of peace -- but it
is an Arab-less world.
They are
nonexistent. One geography book that talks about refugees used to
have a picture of the Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza, and they spoke
about Palestinian refugees a little bit. "Jewish and Arab refugees
as a result of the wars," something like that. Now they changed it,
and they speak about Darfur instead. This is the way to completely
de-Arabize the area.
Is it possible
to make a textbook in Israel that actually presents the Palestinian
narrative without refuting or marginalizing it, and allows Israeli
students to question the military and state's narrative?
I tried with a
Palestinian colleague to form a group, and write an alternative
book. But then the Gaza raid started and it fell apart. Now I got an
email from someone saying they want to revive it, and they want my
consultation. Of course it's possible.
What would such
a book look like?
The book should be
the history of the place. Here, students do not learn about the
Middle East at all. They learn about Europe because we are
supposedly part of Europe. I want to teach what happened here in the
last one hundred years, from all points of view.
Because today, it
is only about wars -- how many we killed of them, how many they
killed of us. But literature, culture, customs, history -- they do
not know anything. Palestinians do not know their own because they
are not allowed to learn their own, and Israelis do not know theirs.
Something has to
be done. There are several books that give the two narratives of
this place. One of the prominent ones is called "Learning the
Narrative of the Other." In that book, they show the Palestinian
narrative on one side, the Israeli narrative on the other side, and
the students can write whatever they think in the middle.
They study that
book all over the world. In France, 22,000 copies were sold to
schools after being published. It is a wonderful example of conflict
resolution. The UN gives a lot of money to schools that study
conflict resolution. Here they never heard of it.
When I teach about
this, my students say once they know they cannot un-know. But work
has to start from the bottom.
========================================
Op-Ed articles appearing on IsraCampus.Org.il are those of the writer and
do not necessarily represent the opinion of IsraCampus.Org.il
|