Two textbooks, two stories as Palestinian parents protest Israeli
curriculum
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[October 03, 2022]
By Roleen Tafakji and Sinan Abu Mayzer
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Outside an East
Jerusalem school, the trestle tables were piled high with textbooks that
Palestinian parents protesting what they call an Israeli censorship
campaign handed out to arriving students.
The books, covering several subjects, contained passages removed from
the edited texts mandated by Israeli authorities that the students,
growing up in the mainly Arab part of the city, are given in class.
The protest, part of decades-long struggle between Israelis and
Palestinians over Jerusalem's - and their own - identity, took place on
Saturday and followed a one-day school strike in mid-September.
"The Palestinian curriculum represents us, our heritage, religion and
history," said parent Um Yazan Ajlouni as she handed out the unedited
texts in an outbuilding outside Iman Elementary School in the Beit
Hanina neighbourhood.
"We do not accept another curriculum that changes all of that."
Dozens of parents had demonstrated outside the school last Monday
carrying banners with slogans including: "No to the Israelization of
education".
Examples shared by Palestinians on social media of sections removed from
textbooks by Israeli edits included: a verse mentioning Israeli
checkpoints from a poem from a Arabic language book; illustrations of a
key - the symbol of Palestinian refugees - from a math book; and a
paragraph on treaties that divided the Middle East from a geography
book.
Israel says the Palestinian textbooks contain content that amounts to
incitement against the state and its security forces, and in July sought
to revoke the licences of Iman and five other schools, having given them
a year to switch to an approved and redacted version of the Palestinian
Authority's curriculum that they teach.
TRADITIONS AT LOGGERHEADS
Israel captured East Jerusalem in 1967 and later annexed it in a move
not recognised internationally. It declared the whole city as its
eternal and indivisible capital, citing biblical, political and
historical links.
Palestinians, who make up 38% of Jerusalem's population and of whom only
about 5% are Israeli citizens, seek East Jerusalem as the capital of a
future Palestinian state that would include the occupied West Bank and
Gaza.
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A woman distributes unedited textbooks
as part of a protest by Palestinian parents of what they say is
Israeli censorship of school textbooks in Shuafat refugee camp in
East Jerusalem October 1, 2022. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
Successive attempts since 1967 to introduce an Israeli syllabus in
East Jerusalem schools were blocked by parents and teachers, and
that part of the city adopted a Palestinian curriculum in the 1990s.
Israeli Education Minister Yifat Shasha-Biton wrote on Twitter last
month that schools there "that portrayed Israeli soldiers as
murderers and that glorified terrorists were made to fix their
content" or lose their license.
Among mandated edits enforced by East Jerusalem's Israeli
municipality and cited by it were: changing an exercise asking
children to name Palestinians held in "the occupation's prisons"
with one that asks them to name the peace bird; and changing a text
accusing Israel of destroying Palestinian heritage and stealing
artefacts accompanied by a map that did not label Israel.
A municipality official said it supported the use of textbooks "that
adhere to UNESCO standards and do not incite violence". The official
also said authorities offered schools the option of using the
Israeli syllabus rather than imposing it - a contention the
Palestinian side says is misleading.
According to a 2016 report by the Palestinian Academic Society for
the Study of International Affairs, an independent Jerusalem-based
think tank, Israeli authorities have consistently used financial
incentives to pressure East Jerusalem schools to teach the Israeli
curriculum.
According to the municipality official, 15% of East Jerusalem's
student population is taught the Israeli curriculum compared with
around 3% ten years ago.
For concerned parent Tareq Akash that shift is part of a process he
fears may end with the erasure from memory of the seminal event
underpinning his community's identity: the Nakba - or catastrophe -
of the displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians during
the 1948 war surrounding Israel's creation.
"We will not allow the brainwashing of our children," he told last
Monday's demonstration.
(Reporting by Roleen Tafakji and Sinan Abu Mayzer; Additional
reporting and writing by Henriette Chacar; editing by John
Stonestreet)
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