Is it any wonder that the half formed brains of children cannot find an
answer for what our adult minds are impotent to solve.   Truth and
Reconciliation is tough within groups.    Across the Divide it shows us for
how half developed we all are. 

 

REH <http://www.nytimes.com/> 

 




  _____  

August 27, 2012 NYTimes


After Attacks, Israeli Schools Confront Hate


By
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/jodi_rudoren/i
ndex.html> JODI RUDOREN and ISABEL KERSHNER


JERUSALEM - Tamer Jbarah, a 17-year-old
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/palestinians
/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> Palestinian student who speaks accentless
Hebrew after years in a bilingual school that is about half Jewish, said he
was not at all surprised when a mob of Jewish teenagers beat an Arab
teenager unconscious this month while hundreds watched and did nothing to
help.

"People are taught to hate," he said, "so they hate."

Tamer attends an unusual school, one that seeks to bridge the Arab-Jewish
divide. But on the first day of classes Monday, when his teacher opened a
discussion about the attack, the smoldering anger and distrust came through,
even there. "From the age of 5, they say, 'Death to Arabs,' " he said.

When the teacher countered, recalling a film in which Palestinian children
chanted, "Death to Israel, death to Jews," Tamer appeared defeated. "There
is no hope when you see things like that," he said.

The classroom conversation, as some two million Israeli children started
school on Monday, was part of national hand-wringing over the Aug. 16
beating in Zion Square, which was described as an attempted lynching that
left 17-year-old Jamal Julani near death. The education minister instructed
all junior high and high schools to conduct a lesson on the episode, which
revealed festering wounds regarding race, violence and extremism.

Israel has been struggling with myriad internal conflicts involving identity
and pluralism. As the ultra-Orthodox population has grown, battles have
erupted over the role of women in the public sphere and whether Yeshiva
students should remain exempt from military service. A surge of illegal
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/i/immigration_
and_refugees/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> immigration by African
workers led to a fierce backlash this spring, raising questions of
tolerance. And a spate of mosque burnings and vandalism has hit Palestinian
villages in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Monday's effort to draw a lesson, perhaps a healing moment, came as the
nation was shocked again when a court held two 12-year-olds and a
13-year-old in connection with the firebombing of a Palestinian taxi on the
same day. The youths live in Bat Ayin, a religious Jewish settlement, and
the taxi was hit on a nearby road. The driver and his five passengers were
wounded, two seriously. The youths' lawyer on Monday denied their
involvement; the father of one called the case "a modern-day blood libel."
Eight teenagers, ages 13 to 19, have been arrested in the Zion Square
attack, and several are expected to be formally charged on Tuesday with
criminal conspiracy and grievous bodily harm by two or more people.

Parents of the teenagers, many wearing ultra-Orthodox garb and quietly
reciting Psalms, waited anxiously outside a courtroom here Sunday during a
succession of hearings. The mother of one suspect and several of the
teenagers' lawyers painted a portrait of an aimless group of youths, some of
them troubled or having drifted from their religious upbringing with few
social outlets, particularly during the long summer break.

"These are kids who do not have the patience to study," said the mother,
whose 18-year-old son has denied participation in the beating. She spoke on
the condition of anonymity to protect his identity. "They have nothing to
do, no money to spend and nowhere to go."

Some knew each other well, others only by sight from hanging out in downtown
Jerusalem's Hahatulot Square, notorious for late-night, alcohol-fueled
brawls. The Zion Square episode began in Hahatulot Square, where a crowd was
singing racist, anti-Arab songs when, according to the police, a girl
announced that she had recently been sexually assaulted by an Arab, sending
the boys off on a rampage.

Only one suspect, identified as O. because of his age, has admitted beating
Jamal; he is believed to have delivered the critical blow that caused the
youth's heart to stop. Shortly after his arrest, he said to reporters
outside court, "For my part he can die; he's an Arab." O.'s defense lawyer,
Itzhak Bam, described him as the only child of a quiet ultra-Orthodox
couple, who he said found it hard to cope with their child's behavioral
problems and took him to a psychiatrist in the days before the assault.

A Jewish medical student administered CPR to Jamal, who was released from
the hospital a week after the attack.

O., who is 14, spent the last school year at a boarding school and then a
home for at-risk youth in a West Bank settlement, Mr. Bam said. Home for the
summer, he removed his skullcap and gravitated to Hahatulot Square. His
lawyer denied that racism was the primary motive. "I'm not sure that he
could intelligently discuss the differences between right and left in
Israeli politics," Mr. Bam said.

Right and left alike have been shaken by the attack. Reuven Rivlin, the
speaker of Israel's Parliament, called it "a microcosm of a national problem
that could endanger Israeli democracy," and said the government itself is
responsible.

"This evil comes from insufficient education," Mr. Rivlin, a leader of the
right-leaning Likud Party, said after visiting Jamal in the hospital last
week. "Unfortunately, more and more youth think that hate and racial
violence are permissible."

In ordering schools to confront the episode, the education minister warned
that some pupils might speak in support of the perpetrators. Educators were
told to let the youngsters express themselves, but that "the unequivocal
message must be a condemnation of racism and violence."

Chaim Dajczman, principal of Thelma Yellin High School for the Arts in Tel
Aviv, said he would bring the topic up in his weekly meetings with students
in grades 10, 11 and 12. "We can't pass an event so extreme and go on as
usual," Mr. Dajczman said.

The vast majority of these discussions will take place in something of a
vacuum, since Israel has separate school systems for Arabs and Jews (and,
indeed, distinct ones for secular, religious and ultra-Orthodox Jews). The
rare exception is Tamer's school, Hand in Hand, which runs three campuses
enrolling a total of 950 students. After some brief words about the schedule
Monday and a required volunteer program, the 12th-grade teacher turned
quickly to Zion Square.

The discussion started out hopefully enough, with Yael Keinan, 17,
announcing that her Jewish youth group would return to the scene of the
crime the next afternoon to try to initiate conversations about racism and
violence.

But that was quickly overcome by her classmates' personal experiences.

Rasha Masalha recalled a Jewish 4-year-old telling her it was important to
learn Hebrew and English - "Hebrew because it's the language of the Bible
and English because the Americans saved us from the Arabs."

Kevin Kahkedjian said that when he and a Jewish friend traveled together
through Ben-Gurion International Airport a couple of years ago, "I had to
strip to my underwear and he just went through."

Tamer told of hanging out with a group of Tel Aviv teenagers who were
shocked to discover he was Arab because, he said, "I didn't look like a
terrorist or a rapist."

Yael, one of 6 Jewish students among the 19 in the class, clammed up.

"You want to say a lot of stuff, but you can't because people here don't
want to change their minds," she said after class. "If people here are so
depressed, how can you ever take that beyond? How can you ever dream more?
It's only the first day of school."

Danielle Ziri contributed reporting from Tel Aviv, and Irit
Pazner-Garshowtiz and Myra Noveck from Jerusalem.

 

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