Education Ministry bans textbook that offers Palestinian narrative
Education Ministry summons principal of Sderot area high school after school was found to be using book that offers both the Israeli and Palestinian narratives of the Middle East conflict.
By Or KashtiThe Education Ministry summoned the principal of a Sderot area high school for consultations after the school was found to be using a banned textbook that includes material on the Palestinian narrative of the Israel-Arab conflict.
The ministry recently instructed the Sha'ar Hanegev high school to cease using a history text that offers both the Israeli and Palestinian narratives of the conflict. The material in the book is taught as part of an enrichment, five-unit history class initiated by the school.
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A classroom in an Israeli high school. |
| Photo by: Alberto Denkberg |
According to Sha'ar Hanegev teachers, the head of the ministry's pedagogic secretariat, Zvi Zameret, made the decision without consulting school officials. Sha'ar Hanegev's history courses encompass instruction on controversial subjects, including the events surrounding the War of Independence and the Nakba (Catastrophe ) - the Palestinians' term for what has happened to them after 1948 - as seen from the Israeli point of view. The textbook was banned from use by then-education minister Limor Livnat. Last year, Education Minister Gideon Sa'ar banned instruction about the Nakba in Arab schools.
Work on the textbook, which is entitled "Learning the Historical Narrative of the Other," began 10 years ago as part of a joint project initiated by (the late ) Professor Dan Bar-On of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and Professor Sami Adwan of Bethlehem University, with input from numerous Israeli and Palestinian history teachers.
The completed edition of the textbook was published last year. It includes material on the genesis of the Zionist movement in the 19th century through events of the past decade. Each page in the book is divided into three sections of equal size. The Israeli narrative is presented on the right, the Palestinian narrative on the left, and down the middle are empty lines in which the students are asked to fill with their thoughts.
Last year, Michal Wasser, a history teacher at Sha'ar Hanegev, began using the textbook in specialized and expanded lessons for students who opted for the five-unit track. The class consisted of 15 11th-graders who will submit a final paper on the topic of their choice. The course work is in addition to the regular curriculum that is geared toward the matriculation exam. Last month, Haaretz ran an article about the experimental history course at Sha'ar Hanegev. During that period the head of the Sha'ar Hanegev regional council, Alon Shuster, hosted a delegation of Swedish mayors who sought to advance a joint educational initiative based on the textbook, a venture to encompass students from Israel, the Palestinian Authority and Sweden.
Israel's ambassador in Sweden, Benny Dagan, wrote to Shuster: "We are trying to get the Swedes to also donate to joint projects that will help in bringing the two peoples together."
Dagan said: "Reading about your project warmed my heart. This is the right direction to which Swedish resources should be allocated, and this example will help in advancing dialogue with official and non-official representatives here and in expanding support and activity for projects that encourage understanding and reconciliation between the two peoples."
Despite the Foreign Ministry's support for the initiative, numerous officials said the media exposure prompted pedagogic secretariat head Zameret to order the immediate halt of the textbook's use.
"On the second day of the school year, the instruction came down not to use the book because it was not approved," said a Sha'ar Hanegev teacher. "Nobody in the Education Ministry bothered to see for themselves how the material was taught in practice nor did they bother to see what the results were from a moral and educational standpoint. This was a knee-jerk response, almost Pavlovian, to any attempt by the educational system to tackle the Palestinian side. This is a response that attests primarily to narrow-mindedness and an unwillingness to explore new modes of thinking."
Another school official involved in teaching the contents of the textbook denied that it contained material that could be construed as "anti-Zionist."
The official said: "It's really funny when people talk to us [in terms of anti-Zionism] when our children have for years been living under Qassam rocket fire and the rate of enlistment into the IDF is among the highest in the country. This is a genuine, worthy project that tries to understand the other side, even under the pressure of the security situation."
Shuster said he supports the use of the textbook. "It is inconceivable that we can enrich our students with music and chemistry, but we do not grant them the opportunity to expose them to other writings and viewpoints," he said.
The Education Ministry said in response: "It is the ministry's policy to enforce school instruction only from textbooks that are approved. Five years ago, the [expanded course] and the textbook upon which it is based were rejected. As such, the head of the pedagogic secretariat, Dr. Zameret, has summoned the principal of Sha'ar Hanegev for clarifications after the Sukkot holiday."
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This reminds me of the saying: "I've already made up my mind - don't bother me with the facts!" Only when more people have the benefit of knowledge and understanding will we be able to get out of the morass we are stuck in!
the children of Sderot learn why the other side shoots rockets over their heads. better they should grow up in fear and ignorance so when they join the IDF they'll be ready to shoot first, ask questions never.
results and bad attitudes in the students. And now they are making it worst by doing this ridiculous thing.
Israeli education in high school (like in every country) is required to teach the tribe's view of its history, not the defeated enemy's view of the tribe's history. Let the students read about the events of 1948 later on when they have left school. However, as most arab writers today would affirm the 'falsehood' of the Holocaust and brand it a hoax I can seriously ask for the name of an arab author/historian on this matter who is worth the time to read. If I am wrong and there are arab authors/historians who can be taken seriously on historical matters where Jews are involved, my apologies. I would like their names, please. In the meantime, Israeli school children can confidently read Jewish authors concerning matters that occurred in the 1940s. Ziv is wrong and it is the Palestinians who are dishonest in their accounts of the events of 1948.
How about inserting a chapter about how the IDF rescued George Washington's armies at Valley Forge. And the bible could use some new chapters too.
Perhaps not when taqiyyeh still remains the final stage of the PA's filtering and editing production pipeline.
Which is exactly as it is supposed to be. Instead of looking into why this particular textbook wasn't approved five years ago when it was submitted to Education Ministry, this sensationalist journalist is outraged by the fact that Education Ministry is enforcing policy of only allowing approved textbooks in schools (which is exactly as it is supposed to be).
to brain wash the new generations to come ...
On the same day that UNRWA schools in Gaza included the Holocaust in the school curriculum, the same day, the Israeli Education Ministry removed all reference to the Nakba from Israeli history text books.
This was an excellent choice by the education ministry to show national maturity(Jews have been back in Independent nation less than 70 years and are getting more comfortable controlling their own destiny. Even Castro agrees!!!! Tell PLO,Hamas and 5th column Israeli arab legislators where they can put their nakba. Long Live the People of Israel.Jewish pride,might and honor before political correctness toward those who hate Israel .
Heaven forbid someone should actually learn something other than the official "truth"?
gag me. this censorship is getting absurd. shall we scrub all references to the native american struggle from our own textbooks out of respect for the colonists that got scalped?
ziv, what's involved here is not the suppression of "facts". Rather, it is the presumption that there are no facts, that we are only speaking of competing narratives, neither of which has greater merit. It is not surprising, therefore, that the text's authors give equal prominence to the Israeli side and the competing Palestinian claims. I'd be curious, for example, to know how the text deals with the events in Jenin during operation Defensive Shield. If the Palestinian column claim "massacres" and "mass graves" while the Israeli column claims 50 or so Palestinians killed (mostly militants), those students being invited to "fill in the blank column" are being done a disservice. But here's something else to consider. The Palestinian residents of the territories aren't learning their own as well as the Israeli narrative. Neither are the people of Jordan or Lebanon, and certainly not the Shiites of southern Lebanon. They are learning only their "truth", preparing to face Israelis now unsure of why they should put their lives on the line because, there's always the other "truth".