by Ruthie Blum
As soon as the findings
of a three-year study on Palestinian and Israeli textbooks were
released on Monday, it became clear why the powers that be in Ramallah
were as pleased as punch. In one fell swoop, decades’ worth of proof
that Palestinian children are taught to deny the existence of the State
of Israel and to commit jihad against the Jews was erased.
The study was initiated
by the Council of Religious Institutions in the Holy Land, funded by
the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor,
and conducted by political psychologist Daniel Bar-Tal of Tel Aviv
University, director and cofounder of the Peace Research Institute in
the Middle East Sami Adwan of Bethlehem University, and professor of
psychiatry Bruce Wexler of Yale University.
Given the title of the
study ("Victims of our own narratives?"), one need not have waited three
years to read the conclusions of the "experts" whose goal is achieving
peace between Israel and the Palestinians through education. Indeed, as
its name suggests, the study finds that, while neither Israel nor the
Palestinians are guilty of "dehumanizing and demonizing
characterizations of the other," each side presents "the other as a
violent enemy bent on destroying or dominating the self-community ..."
One example of the
latter is that Israeli textbooks depict Palestinians "negatively" by
linking them to the massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich
Olympics. (How this particular piece of history could be portrayed
otherwise without rewriting it is beyond me.)
It is no wonder, then,
that the Israeli Education Ministry decided not to cooperate in the
study at its outset and now denounces its outcome. Just like the
infamous 2009 Goldstone Report on Operation Cast Lead in Gaza, the
Israeli government realized that this was going to be yet another
"balanced" document equating the democratic Jewish state with its
hostile counterparts.
Nor is it entirely
surprising, as was reported in the Jerusalem Post, that many members of
the Scientific Advisory Panel set up to review the study, and the
Council of Religious Institutions of the Holy Land, say they were not
shown final drafts of the document prior to the press conference
announcing its release.
But it is interesting
that even the State Department is now distancing itself from the study,
by saying that it funds all kinds of such research, and has no horse in
the race, so to speak. This probably has more to do with the fact that
the study was conducted during Hillary Clinton’s term as secretary of
state, and its findings fall on a just-instated John Kerry — who is
undoubtedly certain that he will be the one to "get the Israelis and the
Palestinians to resume talks at the negotiating table."
And this brings us back
to the initial impetus for the study. As long as a certain premise
remains intact — that there are two peoples who can't get along due to
mutual mistrust and a lack of societal awareness of each other's
legitimacy — there is hope for a solution. This premise has been
repeatedly revealed to be utterly false, but not enough to convince
academia, a realm in which "science" is all-too-often employed to blur,
rather than get at, the truth.
George Orwell wrote
that "people can foresee the future only when it coincides with their
own wishes, and the most grossly obvious facts can be ignored when they
are unwelcome."
That the “grossly
obvious” goings-on in the Fatah-run Palestinian Authority and in the
Hamas-led Gaza Strip are "unwelcome" is clear. But ignoring them serves
only to perpetuate a situation that peace-seekers are desperate to
rectify. And while Israel is left with no choice but to keep its weapons
cocked and Iron Domes on the ready to defend its populace from
terrorists and missiles, the Palestinians have no protection whatsoever
against the poison they are being fed by their own leaders.
It is venom that is
purposefully injected into every walk of their lives. Not a day goes by
without messages from mosques and magazines, during parades and sports
events, in crossword puzzles and cartoons — and, of course, at summer
camps — glorifying martyrdom. Many schools in the Palestinian Authority
are even named after suicide bombers.
Any study that says
otherwise not only oils the cogs of the Palestinian propaganda machine,
but takes moral relativism to new heights of immorality.
Ruthie Blum is the author of " To Hell in a Handbasket: Carter, Obama, and the 'Arab Spring.'"
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3384
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
What is beyond me is how the israeli government can tolerate the fifth column that Tel-Aviv University seems to have become
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