Students.
(photo credit: Ariel Jerozolimski)
Yossi, a 15-year-old boy from Holon, is not sure what the term “settlements”
means. Efrat, 17, from Haifa, exchanges perplexed glances with her classmates
and me when asked to explain the difference between African refugees and
Palestinian ones. There has never been a school program that presents
Jerusalemites Hanna and Tal with the alternatives proposed by Israeli and
Palestinian leaders for settling the rival claims to their hometown. Nor was
there a teacher bold enough to take the initiative and explain concepts such as
the “1967 borders,” a “demilitarized Palestinian State,” a “binational state” or
“two states for two peoples”; all are all crucial terms for any Israeli citizen
to get to know, discuss and debate. The ideal opportunity for such a measured
and responsible learning process is in the course of our school
days.
This is the context which prompted the OneVoice Movement in Israel
to take on the mission of offering two-hour workshops to high school across the
country which delve into precisely such difficult and important issues. Dozens
of such workshops took place in the past two years, conducted by a trained group
of devoted volunteers from various universities and colleges. We were encouraged
by a growing number of schools that approached us with an invitation to come and
lead a similar discussions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Moreover,
we were determined to continue our investment in training more students to bring
this content to the Israeli education system, as a growing number of school
children sought us online after going through such workshops, and asked what
they can do to help end the conflict with our neighbors.
Considering that
for all of these people, the conflict was something they were born into and
never chose to get into, their sense of responsibility for resolving it is
nothing less but inspiring.
This activity placed OneVoice in line with a
long list of other NGOs which partner with schools. All of these NGOs provide
content that goes beyond the core curriculum dictated by the Education Ministry.
However, the ministry has singled out our work.
Last week, OneVoice was
targeted by the ministry in a series of reports on national media about our
work, in which it implied that what we do “is not authorized” and declared that
it requires a “thorough examination.”
While this targeting was severely
criticized by center-left MKs Daniel Ben- Simon and Nitzan Horowitz for being
“politically motivated,” it was actually encouraged by the (far right) chair of
the State Control Committee MK Uri Ariel and the former chair of the Knesset
Education Committee, MK Alex Miller, who, respectively, called our work
“dangerous” and accused us of “brainwashing the minds of innocent
children.”
This was and still is alarming for several reasons. Firstly,
on a very general note, because Education Minister Gideon Sa’ar’s (Likud) people
in the ministry know very well that the relationship between schools and NGOs
does in fact empower school principals to determine what is taught in class,
beyond the core curriculum dictated by the ministry. Any attempt to reset and
redefine this principle might potentially turn school principals into
bureaucrats, and subject school children everywhere across the country to the
shifting political whims of education ministers from the Left or Right, who use
their mandate all too often to score points with their political
base.
Such was the case with the hasty introduction of the Palestinian
“Nakba” into school books by former education minister Yuli Tamir (Labor), and
with minister Sa’ar’s organized tours of Hebron and other sites in the West Bank
which are led by some of the more far-right NGOs out there.
Therefore, an
attempt to subjugate the local management to a unified and strict code for
interacting with civil society would not only undermine the authority of school
principals, it could completely deprive the education system of its essential
pluralism.
Secondly, the politics should not be ignored. When taking into
account the political context of how civic studies coordinator Adar Cohen was
fired, how the West Bank college Ariel was upgraded into a university, or the
way in which Ben-Gurion University’s department for Politics and Governance is
currently facing the threat of full closure, this assault on an NGO such as
OneVoice by the Education Ministry is particularly disturbing.
However,
the most important cause for alarm is that if OneVoice’s workshops are banned
from schools, they are not likely to be replaced by any other learning
opportunity about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. As an Israeli citizen, a
soldier in the reserves, and a future parent in this country, it is my belief
that every citizen, young or old, has the right to learn about the issues that
the political leadership is facing when negotiating an end to this decades long
conflict. This right must not be abused by the education minister confronting
OneVoice on this issue, even if some of his personnel see a potential political
gain in that, ahead of general elections.
The writer is executive
director of OneVoice Israel. The OneVoice movement leads parallel grassroots
efforts in Israel and in Palestine toward the solution of two states for two
peoples.