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          IT'S TIME FOR ISRAELIS TO LEARN JESUS WAS JEWISH

   [Excerpts from HA'ARETZ newspaper, Thursday, 23 December 1999]
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 Israeli pupils hear about Jesus only once during 12 years of
 schooling, so they know nothing about Christianity, and don't have
 a key to understanding the history and culture of the western
 world. The education system prefers ignorance to being suspected of
 missionary activity.

 Ninth-graders at a high school in Bat Yam were asked last Friday, a
 week before Christmas, what they knew about Jesus. According to the
 high school history teacher who dared ask the question, most knew
 nothing - not even the most basic details: when he was born, where
 he lived and preached, when he died and how.

 They did not know that he was a believing Jew, who was born,
 according to historians in the year 4 BCE (and not in the year 0),
 in Bethlehem, and that his mother's name was Miriam, that is, the
 Virgin Mary.

 Some thought that Mary Magdalene, the prostitute, was the mother of
 Jesus. They did not know of the decision by the Sanhedrin to turn
 him in on the grounds that he pretended to be "the king of the
 Jews," or of his trial before the Roman governor, Pilate. As for
 the Sermon on the Mount, the values he preached, the dispute
 between him and the Pharisees and the Sadducees over the
 interpretation of the law and the concept of the Messiah, and the
 connection between Jesus and the Essene sect - the students knew
 nothing.

 History lecturers believe that this ignorance is not a negligible
 matter. Israeli students who do not know anything at all about the
 figure of Jesus are unable to understand the faith of the
 approximately two billion Christians in the world and they have no
 key to the understanding of the history, music, painting, sculpture
 and architecture of the western world. Moreover, they lack basic
 knowledge of the history of Judaism and society in the land of
 Israel 2000 years ago.

 This ignorance comes as no surprise. According to the official
 curriculum, students in the government education system hear about
 Jesus at best only once during 12 years of schooling - and only in
 passing, at the beginning of their sixth grade history course, in a
 brief chapter on "Jesus and the First Christians" in the history
 text "During the Days of Greece and Rome."

 According to Michael Yaron, the supervisor of history instruction
 at the Education Ministry, Jesus is not studied again in high
 school, because in high school the curriculum concentrates mainly
 on the 19th and 20th centuries, and not everyone is even required
 to study the chapter in the sixth grade, as elementary schools have
 the autonomy to pick and choose in the curriculum.

 In the government-religious system, students learn even less: in
 the seventh grade textbook "From generation to generation" there is
 a brief and laconic treatment of Jesus in the chapter "Sects in
 Judaism." Sarah Weider, the supervisor of history instruction in
 the government-religious educational system, notes that religious
 teachers teach about Jesus with great reservations - for example,
 they do not mention his name explicitly. The reason: "Because it is
 impossible to ignore what Christianity did to the Jews, and
 attribute to the man what was done in his footsteps, even if he was
 not to blame."

 According to history teachers, even on class outings from
 government schools to Jerusalem and the Galilee, Christian holy
 sites are totally ignored. Weider says about religious school
 trips, "They don't go into Catholic churches, because there is a
 halacha that prohibits this, but they do look at them from the
 outside."

 Now and then, some teachers, like the history teacher in Bat Yam,
 find it important to deviate from the regular program of studies
 and teach their students something about the traditions and beliefs
 of others. But they, according to their own testimony, are an
 infinitesimal minority.

 History lecturers at the universities in Israel say that high
 school graduates arrive at university "totally ignorant" about
 everything concerning Jesus and Christianity. "They know nothing at
 all," says Dr. Aviad Kleinberg of Tel Aviv University, the author
 of the book "Christianity from its Beginnings to the Reformation,"
 a ministry of defense publication for the University of the
 Airwaves.

 "I encounter a great deal of rejection, hostility and ignorance
 with respect to Jesus and Christianity in general. They live two
 meters away from places that many Christians in the world only
 dream of visiting, and they know nothing about them."

 According to Kleinberg, this is the result of "neglect and
 conservatism in the educational system, which must be changed. The
 Israeli educational system must be less concentrated within itself
 and more open to the study of the other. It would not hurt children
 if they read a chapter from the New Testament and the Koran. This
 is not only important morally, but also for their Jewish identity:
 they should know what is similar and what is different. It is
 important for Israeli students to know something about Jesus, and
 that they should read at least something about the Sermon on the
 Mount."

 In his classic text, "The Jewish Sources of Christianity,"
 Professor David Flusser wrote a great deal about the importance of
 the Sermon on the Mount to the understanding of the Jewish
 traditions of Jesus's time.

 "In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus interprets the words of the
 Torah with moral strictness," he wrote. For example, Jesus preached
 (in Hebrew and Aramaic): "Blessed are the poor in spirit: for
 theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are those who mourn: for
 they shall be comforted. Blessed are the meek: for they shall
 inherit the earth- Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be
 called the children of God" (Matthew 5:3-5,9).

 In this, according to Flusser, Jesus represented a strain of
 thought in Jewish thinking at a time when it was necessary to pay
 more attention to morality and love of one's fellow men, and he
 placed less value on external rituals.

 Jesus also expressed a view contrary to the Judaism and established
 Christianity of our day, that views success and wealth as evidence
 that an individual has observed the commandments, and failure or
 poverty as punishment for sins.

 According to Jesus, it is precisely the rich who need to examine
 themselves: "For it is easier for a camel to go through a needle's
 eye, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven" (Luke
 18:25). That is, in order to be saved, a person must give up his
 assets in this world, and thus, blessed are the poor.

 Israeli students who study this could perhaps perceive the beliefs
 that prevail today and lie at the basis of western capitalism in a
 more critical light.

 Professor Michael Harsegor, who has discussed Jesus in recent weeks
 on his program "History Hour" on army radio, says: "Jesus was the
 most famous Jew in the world, and students must know why he was
 famous and why he was a Jew."

 Harsegor says that students should know that "the greatest
 invention of Paul, the man who spread Christianity, was to give up
 two things in the Jewish tradition that frightened the gentiles of
 the time: the dietary restrictions of kashrut, and circumcision.

 Yet, adds Harsegor, "Jesus said several times that nothing in the
 Law (Torah) must be changed," and "Jesus was a double figure. On
 the one hand he was soft and very passive ) 'Whosoever shall smite
 thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also" (Matthew 5:39)
 - and on the other, a dictator: believers were exhorted to love him
 more than members of their own family."

 According to Harsegor, students should also know that all of his
 "evangelists and disciples came from the Galilee, and were
 considered in snobbish Jerusalem to be primitive, and therefore,
 when Jesus came to Jerusalem, they scorned him. Only Judah
 Iscariot, who betrayed Jesus, came from Judea, from the more
 intellectual sect."

 He says that students in Israel should also learn the parable of
 the good Samaritan: a Cohen and a Levite pass by a man who lay
 dying by the side of the road after thieves attacked him, and they
 do not come to his aid.

 "But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was: and
 when he saw him he had compassion on him, and went to him, and
 bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine, and set him on his
 own breast, and brought him to an inn, and took care of him"
 (Luke 10:33-34).

 The lesson is clear, says Harsegor: "It is wrong to cling to the
 Torah, like Cohen and the Levite, and do nothing more. You have to
 be humane, like the Samaritan, who is not a religious Jew."
 Harsegor regrets that "Israeli students see the cathedrals of
 Europe and don't know anything. They are ignorant because the
 schools are still afraid that any study of Jesus is connected to
 missionary activity."

 Professor Guy G. Stroumza, chairman of the Center for Study of
 Christianity at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, says that
 "Jesus was a good Jew. There were a few things that the rabbinical
 establishment at the time didn't like, but he wasn't an especially
 great revolutionary either.

 "However, he was a uniquely interesting and important figure in
 western culture, a key figure in the land of Israel in the 1st
 century, at a time of political ferment. Students in Israel have a
 huge gap in their education. Altogether, the interest in religions
 is a new thing in the Israeli academy, perhaps because Zionism
 arose as an anti-religious movement. There is no doubt that it is
 necessary to study the New Testament.

 Dr. Ninmrod Aloni, who teaches an advanced seminar on humanist
 education at Seminar Hakibbutzim, says that he tries to teach Jesus
 as an example of the way, "the figure of a wonderful individual,
 the main point of whose teaching was love and charity and pity and
 solidarity and all the beautiful things, was exploited by the
 religious establishment - the Christian church, the Crusades and
 the Inquisition, which up until the 17th century burned people in
 his name.

 "I talk about the Jesus I know mainly from three sources - the New
 Testament, A.A. Kabak's 'In the Strait Path' and 'Gospel According
 to Jesus Christ' by Jose Saramago - in order to explain to people
 how religion can be opium for the masses, how it can make people
 forget its origins and encourage its exact opposite."

 Dr. Eyal Naveh, whose book on the history of the 20th century
 aroused debate recently, believes there "apparently was a decision
 in the educational system not to go deeply into the study of
 Christianity, but this does not mean that students know anything
 about Judaism, even though there is a decision to go deeply into
 the study of Judaism.

 "For students to remember anything of what they have learned
 depends on the way they are taught. If they teach them something
 that is relevant to the contents of their own world, if the
 learning is an experience, they will remember.

 "My children learned about Jesus at the Democratic School in Kfar
 Sava in the context of art, and now they know a fair amount about
 Christianity and Jesus as a prophet or false prophet. If it is
 decided that this is relevant to the children's world, and they
 teach them in an interesting way, there is no reason why they
 should not remember."

 "Ignoring Jesus is part of the tendency to concentrate only on
 ourselves, as if we had sprung up outside a universal context. In
 the case of Jesus, this is especially absurd, because Jesus is
 linked to our development. I hope that things will change, and that
 the system will realize that history is not just a collection of
 facts, but is about substantial issues that shape our world. The
 connection between Judaism and Christianity is definitely one of
 the issues that shapes our world."

 This year, says Weider, "out of sensitivity to the year 2000, we
 held a continuing education program this summer for teachers, and
 the relation between Judaism and Christianity was one of the
 subjects. We realized that this year educators have to be sensitive
 to this issue."

 Dr. Nili Keren of Seminar Hakibbutzim says that students from the
 college are going on field trips this year to the Judean desert,
 around the Dead Sea, in the footsteps of John the Baptist. But
 Michael Yaron, the education ministry's chief supervisor for the
 teaching of history says that nothing will change: there is no
 possibility for expanding and going more deeply into the study of
 Jesus in Israeli schools, because in any case there are not enough
 study hours," and, he adds, "considering the number of hours we do
 have to teach our students, I would not eliminate other subjects in
 order to add this subject.

 posted December 28, 1999.



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