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Publish Date: Wednesday,8 April, 2009, at 10:26 PM Doha Time


Lessons in tolerance and amity
By Rachelle Kliger /The Media Line News Agency 
 


Yarrow: new initiative

Legendary American folk singer and civil rights activist Peter Yarrow gave a 
moving presentation in Jerusalem last week when he revealed his educational 
programme, Operation Respect (OR), to a select group of Israeli and Palestinian 
journalists under the auspices of The Mideast Press Club, an initiative of The 
Media Line news agency. 

Yarrow created the non-profit project in 2000. Since that time, OR curricula 
teaching coexistence and tolerance among school children have been implemented 
in more than 22,000 American schools and in schools in Hong Kong, South Africa 
and Croatia.Yarrow, of the famed American folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, is 
now venturing into the complicated waters of Israel and the Palestinian 
territories, hoping he can make a change in attitudes among Israeli Jewish, 
Israeli Arab and Palestinian schoolchildren through the project. 

Parallel to its introduction into Israeli schools, Yarrow and foundation 
co-founder/chairwoman Dr Charlotte Frank, who is travelling with him, had 
planned to introduce the project separately into Palestinian schools, with a 
view toward eventually combining the two programmes to encourage 
Israeli-Palestinian dialogue at a later stage.  But Yarrow was unable to visit 
the Palestinian territories on this trip, which was sponsored by the American 
embassy. The US consulate in Jerusalem, which has responsibility for the 
American presence in the Palestinian territories, felt that post-Operation Cast 
Lead, the timing for the visit was not appropriate. 

But Yarrow was nevertheless able to reach Palestinians by presenting and 
discussing his programme with Palestinian journalists who came to Jerusalem to 
meet Yarrow and hear about Operation Respect alongside their Israeli 
counterparts.  Undaunted, Yarrow appealed to the journalists present at the 
Mideast Press Club session to give the programme a chance and to help spread 
word of the initiative. The idea was received, particularly by the Palestinian 
audience, with a mix of scepticism and hope. Some of the Palestinians said they 
see complications that did not exist in the cases of black Americans that 
Yarrow frequently drew references to.

For decades, Yarrow has fought for equal rights for minorities in the United 
States. He believes that where adults who have experienced the hardships of a 
conflict have become cynical and lost faith in the possibility of peaceful 
coexistence, children are the natural targets and disseminators of nonviolent 
ideas. 

To make a point of the specific difficulties encountered in this region, one of 
the Palestinians, a journalist with the popular daily Al-Ayyam, explained that 
he was held up for more than two hours at the Israeli army co-ordination office 
in Ramallah where he went to pick-up a permit to enter Jerusalem to attend the 
Yarrow event. The permit had already been approved, but the sluggish 
bureaucracy nearly prevented him from attending the event altogether. "I have 
an eight-year-old son who wants to see Al Aq'sa Mosque, but he can't come to 
Jerusalem because he needs a permit," the journalist said. "Some kids in the 
West Bank need permits just to get to school, so how do you think that changing 
an idea can work in this situation?"

Yarrow, had referred to his decades of experience in the civil rights movement 
that included producing and co-ordinating events for the anti-Vietnam War 
movement; festivals for peace at Madison Square Garden and Shea Stadium; and 
the "March on Washington" in 1969 that some historians see as the turning point 
in public opinion of the war. Other issues where he has contributed his time 
and talent include combating hunger, homelessness, and the nuclear threat; and 
in support of education and equal rights.

Responding to the Palestinian's suggestion that the Palestinian situation is 
not analogous to the American Civil Rights movement, Yarrow, in an exasperated 
voice, replied that, "Of course there are impediments (to success in improving 
lives in this region). We're living with the reality and we have to change 
that. If you want to break it, don't expect the parents to do it and don't 
expect the leaders to do it. Expect the leaders and the parents to be inspired 
by the children who are ready to do something that the (leaders) are not ready 
to do. Understand that extraordinary things have happened."

Yarrow challenged the sceptics, insisting that, "I've seen this happen in the 
US and in the civil rights movement.let them do it with each other and then 
meet. Just let them live it. It happened in America. How did we get Obama? 
Because the kids went to school together and if we hadn't have done that - 
never." The declared aim of Operation Respect is to "promote the infusion of 
character education and social and emotional learning principles into school 
curricula."

It envisions a learning climate where children can develop without fear of 
bullying, ridicule and violence. Yarrow frequently refers to a startling 
statistic that at least 160,000 American school children stay home every day 
because of their fears of being bullied in the classroom or school yard.

More than 150,000 copies of the programme have been distributed to educators 
since Operation Respect's inception through the assistance of the McGraw-Hill 
publishing company, where Frank serves as a senior vice president. Operation 
Respect traces it routes to a song called Don't Laugh At Me: a song Yarrow says 
"changed my life". The haunting melody and poignant words make the point 
unmistakably, frequently touching a nerve with the listeners.   I'm that kid on 
every playground/ Who's always chosen last/ A single teenage mother / Tryin' to 
overcome my past/ You don't have to be my friend/ But is it too much to ask/ 
Don't laugh at me/ Don't call me names/ Don't get your pleasure from my pain. 

The programme uses the power of music to help children make a heart connection 
with those different from them, and makes them more receptive to lessons 
offered through the activities in the accompanying curriculum. "As an 
educational activist I believe that all children can learn. What makes 
Operation Respect different from other programmes is the music," said Dr Frank. 

Frank, who possesses a remarkable background in education and leadership, said 
children often came to school with all the problems they had at home and in the 
community. "Operation Respect is designed to have the music and activities to 
talk about how we should be honest, respectful and responsible," she said. 

Yarrow's involvement with the US embassy began when Andrew Koss, Counselor for 
Public Affairs, saw the reference to Operation Respect in an op-ed piece 
written by The Media Line's Felice Friedson following the Acre riots last fall. 
The editorial had appeared simultaneously in the Israeli newspaper the 
Jerusalem Post and in the Palestinian newspaper, Al Quds. 

Friedson made the introductions and the trip was planned to coincide with the 
dedication of an "American Corner" in the old city of Acre. The cultural and 
education centre received a rousing kick-off when city leaders from the Jewish 
and Arab communities joined US Ambassador James Cunningham for the Corner's 
grand opening.  Israeli superstar David Broza joined Peter Yarrow on-stage to 
augment the musical celebration that featured a classical trio comprised of 
Israeli Jewish and Arab teenage musicians.- The Media Line
 

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