Special Report
http://www.nad-plo.org/textbooks/wtextbook.html
Israeli Textbooks and Children’s Literature Promote Racism and Hatred Toward Palestinians and Arabs
By Maureen Meehan
SEPTEMBER 1999, pages 19-20
Israeli school textbooks as well as children’s storybooks, according to recent academic studies and surveys, portray Palestinians and Arabs as “murderers,” “rioters,” “suspicious,” and generally backward and unproductive. Direct delegitimization and negative stereotyping of Palestinians and Arabs are the rule rather than the exception in Israeli schoolbooks.
Professor Daniel Bar-Tal of
Tel Aviv University studied 124 elementary, middle- and high school textbooks on
grammar and Hebrew literature, history, geography and citizenship. Bar-Tal
concluded that Israeli textbooks present the view that Jews are involved in a
justified, even humanitarian, war against an Arab enemy that refuses to accept
and acknowledge the existence and rights of Jews in Israel.
“The early textbooks tended to
describe acts of Arabs as hostile, deviant, cruel, immoral, unfair, with the
intention to hurt Jews and to annihilate the State of Israel. Within this frame
of reference, Arabs were delegitimized by the use of such labels as ‘robbers,’
‘bloodthirsty,’ and ‘killers,’” said Professor Bar-Tal, adding that there has
been little positive revision in the curriculum over the years.
Bar-Tal pointed out that
Israeli textbooks continue to present Jews as industrious, brave and determined
to cope with the difficulties of “improving the country in ways they believe the
Arabs are incapable of.”
Hebrew-language geography
books from the 1950s through 1970s focused on the glory of Israel’s ancient past
and how the land was “neglected and destroyed” by the Arabs until the Jews
returned from their forced exile and revived it “with the help of the Zionist
movement.”
“This attitude served to
justify the return of the Jews, implying that they care enough about the country
to turn the swamps and deserts into blossoming farmland; this effectively
delegitimizes the Arab claim to the same land,” Bar-Tal told the Washington
Report. “The message was that the Palestinians were primitive and neglected
the country and did not cultivate the land.”
This message, continued
Bar-Tal, was further emphasized in textbooks by the use of blatant negative
stereotyping which featured Arabs as: “unenlightened, inferior, fatalistic,
unproductive and apathetic.” Further, according to the textbooks, the Arabs were
“tribal, vengeful, exotic, poor, sick, dirty, noisy, colored” and “they burn,
murder, destroy, and are easily inflamed.”
Textbooks currently being used
in the Israeli school system, says Bar-Tal, contain less direct denigration of
Arabs but continue to stereotype them negatively when referring to them. He
pointed out that Hebrew- as well as Arabic-language textbooks used in elementary
and junior high schools contain very few references either to Arabs or to
Arab-Jewish relations. The coordinator of a Palestinian NGO in Israel said that
major historical events hardly get a mention either.
“When I was in high school 12
years ago, the date ‘1948’ barely appeared in any textbooks except for a mention
that there was a conflict, Palestinians refused to accept a U.N. solution and
ran away instead,” said Jamal Atamneh, coordinator of the Arab Education
Committee in Support of Local Councils, a Haifa-based NGO. “Today the idea
communicated to schoolchildren is basically the same: there are winners and
losers in every conflict. When they teach about ‘peace and co-existence,’ it is
to teach us how to get along with Jews.”
Atamneh explained that
textbooks used by the nearly one million Arab Israelis (one-fifth of Israel’s
population) are in Arabic but are written by and issued from the Israeli
Ministry of Education, where Palestinians have no influence or input.
“Fewer than 1 percent of the
jobs in the Education Ministry, not counting teachers, are held by
Palestinians,” Atamneh said. “For the past 15 years, not one new Palestinian
academic has been placed in a high position in the ministry. There are no
Palestinians involved in preparing the Arabic-language curriculum [and]
obviously, there is no such thing as affirmative action in Israel.”
In addition, there are no
Arabic-language universities in Israel. Haifa University, Atamneh points out,
has had a steady 20 percent Arab student population for the past 20 years. “How
can that figure have remained the same after all these years when the population
in the north [of Israel] has grown to over 50 percent Arab?”
Answering his own question,
Atamneh rattles off statistics that reflect excellent high school scores among
Arab students which he contrasts to their subsequent lower-than-average
performance in Hebrew-language college entrance exams given by the state.
“No major scholarships have ever been awarded to an Arab; there are no dorms for Arabs and no college-related jobs or financial aid programs. They justify this legal discrimination by the fact that we do not serve in the army. There are numerous blatant and official methods used to keep Palestinian Arabs out of the universities.”
Absence of Palestinian Identity in Schoolbooks
Dr. Eli Podeh, lecturer in the Department of Islamic Studies and Middle East History at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, says that while certain changes in Israeli textbooks are slowly being implemented, the discussion of Palestinian national and civil identity is never touched upon.
“Passages from ‘experts’ about
the existence of a Palestinian identity were introduced, but in general it
appeared that the textbook authors were not eager to adopt it,” said Dr. Podeh,
adding that “the connection between Palestinians in Israel and Arabs in Arab
countries is not discussed. Especially evident is the lack of a discussion on
the orientation of Palestinians to the [occupied] territories.
“While new textbooks attempt
to correct some of the earlier distortions, these books as well contain overt
and covert fabrications,” said Dr. Podeh. “The establishment has preferred—or
felt itself forced—to encourage the cover-up and condemn the perplexity.”
One Israeli public high school
student told the Washington Report that the contents of the schoolbooks
and the viewpoints expressed by some teachers indeed have a lasting negative
effect on youngsters’ attitudes toward Palestinians.
“Our books basically tell us
that everything the Jews do is fine and legitimate and Arabs are wrong and
violent and are trying to exterminate us,” said Daniel Banvolegyi, a 17-year-old
high school student in Jerusalem.
“We are accustomed to hearing
the same thing, only one side of the story. They teach us that Israel became a
state in 1948 and that the Arabs started a war. They don’t mention what happened
to the Arabs—they never mention anything about refugees or Arabs having to leave
their towns and homes,” said Banvolegyi.
Banvolegyi, who will be a high
school senior this fall, and then will be drafted into the Israeli army next
summer, said he argues with his friends about what he regards as racism in the
textbooks and on the part of the teachers. He pointed out a worrisome example of
how damaging the textbooks and prevailing attitudes can be.
“One kid told me he was angry
because of something he read or discussed in school and that he felt like
punching the first Arab he saw,” said Banvolegyi. “Instead of teaching tolerance
and reconciliation, the books and some teachers’ attitudes are increasing hatred
for Arabs.”
Banvolegyi spoke about his schoolmates who, he says, “are dying to go into combat and kill Arabs. I try to talk to them but they say I don’t care about this country. But I do care and that’s why I tell them peace and justice are the only ways to work things out.”
Racist Israeli Upbringing
Considering what the schools have to offer, both Banvolegyi and Atamneh agree that the oral tradition is one of the few ways to get the story straight.
“Unfortunately Israeli
children’s books are not an option for promoting equality in this society,” said
Atamneh, citing a book written by Israeli writer/researcher Adir Cohen called
An Ugly Face in the Mirror.
Cohen’s book is a study of the
nature of children’s upbringing in Israel, concentrating on how the historical
establishment sees and portrays Arab Palestinians as well as how Jewish Israeli
children perceive Palestinians. One section of the book was based on the results
of a survey taken of a group of 4th to 6th grade Jewish students at a school in
Haifa. The pupils were asked five questions about their attitude toward Arabs,
how they recognize them and how they relate to them. The results were as
shocking as they were disturbing:
Seventy five percent of the
children described the “Arab” as a murderer, one who kidnaps children, a
criminal and a terrorist. Eighty percent said they saw the Arab as someone dirty
with a terrifying face. Ninety percent of the students stated they believe that
Palestinians have no rights whatsoever to the land in Israel or Palestine
Cohen also researched 1,700
Israeli children’s books published after 1967. He found that 520 of the books
contained humiliating, negative descriptions of Palestinians. He also took pains
to break down the descriptions:
Sixty six percent of the 520
books refer to Arabs as violent; 52 percent as evil; 37 percent as liars; 31
percent as greedy; 28 percent as two-faced; 27 percent as traitors, etc.
Cohen points out that the
authors of these children’s books effectively instill hatred toward Arabs by
means of stripping them of their human nature and classifying them in another
category. In a sampling of 86 books, Cohen counted the following descriptions
used to dehumanize Arabs: Murderer was used 21 times; snake, 6 times; dirty, 9
times; vicious animal, 17 times; bloodthirsty, 21 times; warmonger, 17 times;
killer, 13 times; believer in myths, 9 times; and a camel’s hump, 2 times.
Cohen’s study concludes that
such descriptions of Arabs are part and parcel of convictions and a culture
rampant in Hebrew literature and history books. He writes that Israeli authors
and writers confess to deliberately portraying the Arab character in this way,
particularly to their younger audience, in order to influence their outlook
early on so as to prepare them to deal with Arabs.
“So you can see that if you
grew up reading or studying from these books, you’d never know anything else,”
said Atamneh.
“But in the case of
Palestinians, we grow up 500 meters away from what used to be a town or village
and is now a Jewish settlement. Our parents and grandparents tell us all about
it; endlessly they talk about it. It’s the only way.”
Maureen Meehan is a free-lance journalist who covers the West Bank and Jerusalem.