from SLATE:

A History of Misunderstanding
In the largest study ever conducted, Israeli and Palestinian
researchers reveal that both sides need to take a closer look at the
books they teach.

By Emily Bazelon and Ruth Margalit

Posted Monday, Feb. 4, 2013, at 2:30 AM ET
88151790
Israeli schoolchildren in Jerusalem

Photo by Gali Tibbon/AFP/Getty Images

In the Israeli-Palestinian public relations wars, it’s conventional
wisdom that the textbooks used in schools in the West Bank and Gaza
breed hatred for Israel. “They have textbooks that say, ‘If there are
13 Jews and nine Jews are killed, how many Jews are left?” Newt
Gingrich said when he was running for the Republican presidential
nomination. “These textbooks don't give Palestinian children an
education, they give them an indoctrination," Hillary Clinton said in
2007, when she was a New York senator, based on criticism from an
Israeli media watchdog after the Palestinians produced their own full
curriculum of text books for grades 1 through 12 for the first time.
In 2011, an institute known as IMPACT-SE issued a report with similar
findings.

But what if it’s a lot more complicated—and less one-sided—than the
vehement criticism suggests? There’s been some evidence of this for
years. In 2004, a study by an Israeli and Palestinian researcher of 13
Israeli textbooks and nine Palestinian ones found flaws on both sides
relating to political messages, the omission of the other’s point of
view, and the presentation of maps. Other debunkers have pointed out
that the original accusations were based on textbooks from Egypt or
Jordan or incorrect translations.

Today marks the release of the largest study comparing Palestinian and
Israeli text books to date. Most of the experts who sat on an advisory
panel for the study said that it set “a new worldwide standard for
textbook analysis.” Funded with $500,000 from the U.S. State
Department and commissioned by the Council of Religious Institutions
of the Holy Land, a Jerusalem-based group of senior Islamic, Jewish,
and Christian religious figures, the study was conducted by a team of
Palestinian and Israeli researchers and designed by Yale psychiatrist
Bruce Wexler. The results are telling as much as for the good news
they bring as for the bad. And so is the reaction to them,  notably
from the Israeli Ministry of Education, which immediately denounced
them as “biased, unprofessional, and significantly lacking in
objectivity.” Hmm. Maybe for Benjamin Netanyahu’s government and the
Israeli right, on the subject of what kids learn in school, there is
no place for even-handedness.

The lead researchers are Israeli professor Daniel Bar-Tal of Tel Aviv
University and Sami Adwan of Bethlehem University. They trained a team
to analyze text books published in 2009 and 2011. On the Palestinian
side, the team began with 148 books used in virtually all West Bank
and Gaza schools (public, religious, and United Nations-run). On the
Israeli side, the researchers started with 381 books from the Israeli
state system, which included both secular and religious schools, and
55 books used in most schools attended by ultra-Orthodox children. The
list of subjects examined included literature, history, Arabic,
Hebrew, geography, civil and national education, and religion. In the
end, as the researchers homed in on the books with the most relevant
material, 74 Israeli books and 94 Palestinian books underwent close
analysis.

In other words, this study aimed for comprehensiveness. It also aimed
for rigor, with questions and ratings devised by Adwan and Bar-Tal.
The questions covered the portrayal of a range of topics: historical
events, war, conflict, peacemaking, reconciliation, religion,
discussion of both sides’ values, and photographs, illustrations, and
maps. And all the data was entered blindly into a Yale University
database, which meant that the researchers couldn’t see how their
entries were adding up as the study progressed.

And the findings? Here’s the good news: “Dehumanizing and demonizing
characterizations of the other were very rare in both Israeli and
Palestinian books.” The research team found 20 extreme negative
depictions in the Israeli state books, seven in the ultra-Orthodox
books, and six in the Palestinian books. An example of this rare
occurrence from an Israeli book: A passage saying that a ruined Arab
village “had always been a nest of murderers.” And an example from a
Palestinian book: “I was in ‘the slaughterhouse’ for 13 days,”
referring to an Israeli interrogation center. This could be a lot
worse, right? Think of the recent revelation that Egyptian President
Mohammed Morsi called Jews “descendants of apes and pigs,” or former
Deputy Prime Minister of Israel Avigdor Lieberman’s call in 2003 to
drown Palestinian prisoners in the Dead Sea. Apparently there is
nothing like that in any of the Palestinian or Israeli textbooks—which
is something to be thankful for.

On other fronts, there is work to be done. And it’s important to say
that the Palestinian and ultra-Orthodox books are more consistently
flawed than the Israeli books in significant ways. For example, 84
percent of the literature pieces in the Palestinian books portray
Israelis and Jews negatively, 73 percent of the pieces in the
ultra-Orthodox books portray Palestinians and Arabs negatively, and
only 49 percent of the pieces in Israeli state schools do the same. In
an Israeli state school text, a passage reads: “The Arab countries
have accumulated weapons and ammunition and strengthened their armies
to wage a total war against Israel.” In the ultra-Orthodox, it
ratchets up: “Like a little lamb in a sea of 70 wolves is Israel among
the Arab states.” In the Palestinian case: “The enemy turned to the
deserted houses, looting and carrying off all they could from the
village that had become grave upon grave.”

These statements aren’t necessarily false, but they are just one-sided
and fearful—and they are rarely balanced by anything sunnier.
Palestinians and Arabs are portrayed positively 11 percent of the time
in Israeli state schoolbooks and 7 percent in ultra-Orthodox books.
Jews and Israelis are portrayed positively 1 percent of the time in
Palestinian books. The photographs and illustrations in the
Palestinian books were far more likely to be negative than the ones in
the Israeli books; there were also far fewer of them.

One striking difference between the Israeli state books on the one
hand, and the ultra-Orthodox and Palestinian books on the other, is
their willingness to engage in self-criticism. For the Israelis, this
is an evolution that began in the late 1990s, after many historians
began to re-evaluate early Israeli history, and a left-wing member of
the Knesset became education minister. Israeli state textbooks began
to admit that some Palestinians left their land within Israel because
they were expelled. And they began to make reference to the Arabic
name for Israel’s War of Independence in 1948: the Naqba, or
Catastrophe. They also began ask Israeli Jewish students how they
would have felt about Zionism if they’d been in the place of the
Palestinians. There is still far less of this in either the
ultra-Orthodox or Palestinian books. For example, the Palestinian
texts don’t deal in any significant way with the Holocaust or its
relationship to the founding of Israel.

Next, the maps. The research team found that 58 percent of Palestinian
textbooks published after 1967 (the year in which Israel took control
of the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan, Gaza and Sinai from
Egypt, and the Golan Heights from Syria) made no reference to Israel.
Instead, they referred to the entire area between the Jordan River and
the Mediterranean Sea as Palestine. In the Israeli state system, 65
percent of maps had no borders and made no mention of Palestine or the
Palestinian Authority, while in the ultra-Orthodox system that number
was a staggering 95 percent. Comparing the maps in these education
systems, the researchers note “might suggest they were of different
worlds altogether.”

This captures just how politicized the teaching of history and
geography has become for Israelis and Palestinians—with both sides at
times quite literally wiping each other off the map. Not that Israelis
and Palestinians are alone on this score. Think of Cyprus, where for
decades Greek and Turk Cypriotes did not consider themselves part of a
single people, or Northern Ireland, where even the name used to
describe the territory continues to be highly charged. (Is it a
province? A state? A region?) The process of ending such
misrepresentations, the authors of the study find, is therefore
“exceedingly difficult and requires deliberate and courageous effort.”
It also takes time.

Israel is a relatively young country compared to many other nations;
the Palestinian Authority, of course, is even younger. Over four
iterations of textbooks, the study shows Israel’s education system has
become increasingly self-reflective. By contrast, Palestinian
textbooks are still in their first generation. Until 1967, Jordan
controlled the education system in the West Bank and Egypt controlled
the education system in Gaza. Following the 1967 war, Israel took
charge of Palestinian education issuing the same Jordanian and
Egyptian textbooks, while also serving as a censor—banning some of the
books, and blackening out passages in others. Palestinians finally
assumed control in 1994, on the heels of the Oslo Accord, in which the
Palestinians promised to pursue “confidence building measures” that
included a revamp of their education system.

These explanations for the shared problems and differences between the
textbooks do not seem to satisfy the Israeli Ministry of Education.
“The attempt to create a parallel between the Israeli education system
and the Palestinian education system is completely unfounded and lacks
any basis in reality,” the Netanyahu administration’s ministry
declared. Adwan, Bar-Tal, and Wexler responded by defending their
methodology.  On Sunday, Bar-Tal issued a letter to the Israeli
ministry threatening to sue for defamation if the ministry doesn't
apologize for its statement within 48 hours. “The sad thing, to me, is
that it seems the Israeli ministry would rather maintain a propaganda
point they know to be false than to get real change in the Palestinian
books and in their own books,” Wexler said. By contrast, he’s been
told that a Palestinian official told the U.S. State Department that
“these are the facts he needs to fix their books.”

The research team also answered, one by one, a series of complaints
from one of their advisory panel members, Arnon Groiss, former
research director at IMPACT-SE. It’s worth reading in full if you’re
interested. Groiss pointed to a number of quotes he said the research
team had missed. The most egregious-sounding one allegedly from a
Palestinian text—“your enemies killed our children, split open your
women’s bellies, took your revered elderly men by the beard and led
them to the death pits”—refers to a seventh century war that did not
involve Jews. Several other purportedly omitted passages are Hadiths,
or teachings ascribed to the Prophet Mohammed, which aren’t included
in the Palestinian textbooks and may not be taught in the schools at
all, Wexler said. “If this is what he says we left out, I’m very happy
to have that confirmation from him,” he told us. Groiss’ response is
here, along with a reply from Wexler.

Sociologist Sammy Smooha of Haifa University, who conducts an annual
survey of Arab and Jewish relations, says that the goal now should be
to write textbooks that do more to expose each side to the other’s
narrative. “You have to engage with the other side’s arguments in a
serious manner and not just build up a straw man in order to break
it.” Eyal Naveh, a professor of history at Tel Aviv University and the
author of several textbooks for middle-school and high-school
students, agrees. “If you ignore it, it’s as if it doesn’t exist,” he
said.

And there is still little control over what goes on in the classroom:
Just because something no longer appears in a book doesn’t mean that
some teachers won’t teach it. Smooha pointed out the obvious: It’s
hard to deal with any of this until the two sides break their
political impasse and reach a compromise. “Confidence building
measures” are hard to achieve, he said, when “both sides are showing
anything but confidence in each other.”

A few years ago, Naveh and Adwan, along with Israeli historian Dan
Bar-On, tried to write a different kind of textbook. The three
co-authored a book called Side By Side that included a “dual
narrative” of all major events in the region since 1917, through the
Second Intifada in 2000. Naveh calls the book “a successful failure:”
Though it had been lauded by the international press and continues to
sell abroad, the book was banned by both the Israeli and Palestinian
education ministries. Naveh now believes that getting such a textbook
to become part of the Israeli and Palestinian curricula is
“impossible.”

Perhaps this helps explain the study’s modest recommendations. In the
end, the authors call only for the creation of committees on both
sides to examine current and future textbooks. “It’s a long process to
think that someday they will come up with a common narrative, or even
a collaborative process,” Wexler said. “We’re just asking each
ministry to look at our report, to look at their books, and to see if
there are some things they might want to consider changing.”
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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