Subscribe to Print Edition | Thu., July 31, 2008 Tamuz 28, 5768 | | Israel Time: 02:05 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Rosner's Domain
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Car Rental
Books Haaretz Magazine Business Real Estate Easy Start Travel Week's End Anglo File
Knesset centrifuges
By Dan Ben-David
Tags: israel

Last week there was another head-on collision between Israel's two largest public failures. Barreling down from one side was a public education system that is rapidly destroying the future prospects of our next generation. Plummeting down from the other direction was a system of government that has been rudderless for years.

The collision became inevitable when a small minority of Knesset members (39 MKs, representing one-third of the Knesset, voted in favor, and this was enough; six voted against, while 75 MKs, a vast majority of the Knesset, simply evaporated) decided to legalize - against all social, economic and moral logic - the ability of a large and rapidly growing segment of the population to prevent its children from receiving a basic educational toolbox that would enable them to function in a competitive economy and a modern democracy.

With this act, Israel relinquished its sovereignty over the ultra-Orthodox schools and officially announced that they are not required to teach core curriculum subjects, which account for over 90 percent of the instruction time in Western countries with whom the children of Israel will have to compete when they become adults.
Advertisement
Until now, the government had preferred to turn a blind eye toward the unsanctioned curricula. From now on, they are official and will continue to be funded by our tax money.

Not only in Iran are centrifuges operating. They have been spinning at full speed for quite a while in Israel's Knesset - with similar implications for the nation's future. Instead of coming together in the face of growing threats, our representatives are pulling farther and farther apart.

Between this coming September - with the election of a new head by the country's ruling party - and the officially scheduled elections in about two years, Israel will enter an interim period. The heads of the three largest parties, with a total number of MKs equaling just 50 percent of the entire Knesset, are requested to elevate themselves beyond the trees and see the forest that is burning. They must put aside their lethal and destructive rhetoric, restrain their personal ambitions, and cooperate with one another in formulating and implementing policies that will save the country's future: significant and widespread electoral and educational reforms together with an educated decision on what is or isn't possible to do within a nuclear Iranian hourglass that will empty in a few months.

The year is 1948, plus 60. Decisions that will be made today by the country's leadership will determine the strength and character of a country that needs to be reborn and must redefine for itself the kind of a future that it wants for the next 60 years - if it intends on reaching its 120th birthday.

Among the necessary changes that must be implemented: beginning with the next election, MKs must be elected directly and personally by their constituencies on election day, as must the president who will lead the country. These should be elections to fixed terms of office that will enable vision, planning and implementation of strategies that extend over the immediate horizon. The president must be able to choose cabinet ministers whose claim to fame is not as representatives of political parties, but as professionals in their respective ministries who report directly to the president. The time has come to stop the centrifugal political forces, to fortify and stabilize the pillars of governance, and to enact norms of personal public accountability among the country's elected representatives.

In the area of education, a true reform mandates far-reaching changes in the way that teachers are chosen, trained and compensated, changes in the managerial realm - from the way that the entire system is run and down to the level of managing individual schools - and institutionalization of uniform and egalitarian principles for determining educational content and school budgets.

This country is home to many heterogeneous life styles, but there is only one economic market for all, and it requires a common minimum toolbox of basic skills for survival. Just as no parent is allowed to use religious beliefs as an excuse to deprive their child of life-saving medication, no child may be deprived of his or her's innate right to a basic educational toolbox.

These are the central issues that will determine the ability of the country to confront the huge challenges still ahead of us, issues that must be seriously dealt with in a systemic and thorough manner within the window of opportunity that is still open. This is one of the final hours of strength in which the still-existent Zionist majority has to unite and save the country through democratic means.

These are also the final months for deciding what can or can't be done about those other centrifuges - the real ones. In order to save our parents' dream and our children's future, get your act together.

The author teaches economics in the Department of Public Policy at Tel-Aviv University.
Bookmark to del.icio.us  
 
Internal fighting
Human rights groups say torture is widespread in Palestinian lockups.
Danger looms
Pentagon chief Robert Gates warns: War with Iran would be 'disastrous.'
 Read & React
Abbas vows to dismantle PA if Israel frees Hamas prisoners for Shalit
Responses: 187
Palestinian boy, 11, killed during protest at West Bank fence
Responses: 254
Haaretz TV: Hamas summer camp teaches Gaza kids to hate and kill
Responses: 135
Barak: U.S. to provide Israel with defense systems against Iran strike
Responses: 85
Olmert: I'll quit once new Kadima leader chosen
Responses: 52


More Headlines
01:19 Olmert: I'll quit as PM when Kadima picks new leader
02:02 Peace talks to continue despite Olmert declaration, say PA and U.S
01:32 ANALYSIS: Crushed and battered, Olmert finally broke
22:20 Poll: Netanyahu is public's preferred choice for next PM
01:01 Report: Obama 'gets the feeling' Israel to strike Iran if sanctions fail
01:56 Palestinians: IDF troops wound 9 at boy's funeral in West Bank
23:38 Israeli defender Tal Ben-Haim signs with Manchester City FC
22:25 Background / Scandals linked to Olmert
16:46 Syria and Israel end 4th round of indirect talks, more set for Aug.
18:05 State panel of inquiry to probe treatment of evacuated settlers
10:51 Can a 14-year-old computer geek be the CEO of a startup company?
17:38 Study: Both Hamas and Fatah guilty of human rights violations
17:35 Court orders squatters to quit East Jerusalem property at once
19:10 German broadcaster shuts Gaza office to protest camerman's arrest
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
Fattal Hotel Chain
Perfectly located hotels on best resorts of Israel.
MBA in Israel in English
APPLY NOW! Limited spaces available
Israel's Premier Real Estate Website
www. israel-property.com
Yossi Avrahami Presents:
New Luxurious Projects in North Tel Aviv & Eilat
Your vacation starts here
Israel Travel Center Guaranteed Lowest Rates
Hebrew Summer courses
From $39.95
ISRAEL BONDS Build Israel
Israel bonds - a multi-purpose way to celebrate Israel's 60th
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
Junkyard
Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | Underground | Site rules |
Real Estate in Israel | Travel to Israel with Haaretz | Hotels Israel | Restaurants Israel | Tourist attractions Israel | Shops Israel
birthright Israel | Search engine marketing
Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved