Dear Marjorie Gann,

I appreciate your close look at books for young readers about Israel and
the Palestinian people, and your invitation to comment.

In my work as librarian at Temple Beth Emeth in Ann Arbor, I have curated a
collection of books for young Jewish people that includes diverse
Palestinian points of view and I am pleased that our library offers diverse
points of view from Jewish, Israeli, and Palestinian writers that help our
young people become critical thinkers. My library includes, several books
on your list:

The Cat at the Wall (2014)

Naomi Shihab Nye:  Habibi (1997)

Golbarg Bashi: P Is for Palestine: A Palestine Alphabet Book (2018)

Leanne Lieberman, The Book of Trees (2010)

Pamela L. Laskin, Ronit & Jamil (2017)

I was surprised that you called several titles "distortions of history or
complicit in stereotyping or demonizing," specifically Tasting the Sky
(which is on my to order list), Habibi, and Ronit and Jamil. I would
appreciate seeing a list of titles from a Palestinian point of view that
you would recommend.

I'll never forget a lecture I attended by Marc Tessler, author of the
massive *A History of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict*, when he told the
story of a several year convening of Jewish and Palestinian historians in
which the participants never came to agreement on the facts.

Last year I taught our high schoolers a class on looking at points of view
in Jewish and Palestinian children's books on Israel/Palestine. The class
was wiser than me at the time. They pointed out that readers should not
expect books to be "fair" and "balanced," particularly when involving
difficult issues. Rather, readers should expect and be aware of bias.

I hope you understand that I am not saying the Jewish narrative we are
familiar with is false, but it leaves out the Palestinian experience. A
book including a Palestinian child whose only experience of Jews is as
fully armed soldiers may be a true reflection of a Palestinian child's
experience. It's our crucial (and even sacred) responsibility as educators
to fill out the picture, but suppressing pieces of it that are truthful
within their own sphere doesn't help children who need to deal with a
complex world when they grow up.

I also have had the experience of being asked by a public school teacher
who had assigned A LITTLE PIECE OF GROUND, to teach a class on the book.
That was a very challenging experience, as I was tempted to try to give a
lecture on the whole Israeli/Palestinian conflict.

I am very interested in hearing from others about experiences applying the
values of critical reading of these books in the public school setting.

L'shalom,

Clare Kinberg, Temple Beth Emeth Library, Ann Arbor, Michigan

On Sun, Aug 23, 2020 at 11:46 AM Marjorie Gann via Hasafran <
hasafran@lists.osu.edu> wrote:

> Hello, Safranim,
>
> I am working on a presentation -- a spinoff from a session I gave at the
> 2019 AJL Conference-- on anti-Israeli propaganda in novels and memoirs for
> children and young adults. I am concerned that some books extremely hostile
> to Israel may be in use in schools.
>
> I am aware of one school in the U.S. in which Elizabeth Laird’s *A Little
> Piece of Ground*, with its toxic anti-Israel message and its demonization
> of Israeli soldiers, has been used for class study.
>
> I was wondering if anyone else on this list might be aware of the use of
> this or other anti-Israel books in schools (or in public readings for
> children) in the U.S. or Canada. Below you’ll find my list of some of the
> titles which, following detailed analysis, I’ve found to contain factual
> errors, distortions of history, or instances of demonization and
> stereotyping of Israel or Israelis. If anyone is aware of the use of any of
> these books,  *or of public controversies surrounding the use of these or
> any other anti-Israel books*, I’d appreciate your contacting  me off-list
> at marjoriega...@gmail.com.
>
> Thank you.
>
> Marjorie Gann
>
> *Children’s and YA Novels or Memoirs which contain distortions of the
> Arab-Israeli conflict:*
>
> Elizabeth Laird:  *A Little Piece of Ground* (2003)
>
> Anne Laurel Carter:  *The Shepherd’s Granddaughter* (2008)
>
> Deborah Ellis:    *Three Wishes:  Palestinian and Israeli Children Speak*
> (2004)
>
>                                 *The Cat at the Wall* (2014)
>
> Cathryn Clinton:               *A Stone in My Hand* (2002)
>
> Michael Morpurgo:        *The Kites are Flying! *(2009)
>
> Ibtisam Barakat:               “Marked for Destruction,” in several
> anthologies
>
>                                             *Tasting the Sky: A
> Palestinian Childhood (2007)*
>
> William Sutcliffe:              *The Wall:  A Modern Fable *(2013)
>
> Randa Abdelfattah:         *Where the Streets Had a Name* (2008)
>
> Naomi Shihab Nye:          *Habibi* (1997)
>
> Leila Abdelrazaq:              *Baddawi *(2015)
>
> Anthony Robinson & Annemarie Young:  *Young Palestinians Speak:  Living
> Under Occupation* (2017)
>
> Golbarg Bashi:                   *P Is for Palestine: A Palestine
> Alphabet Book *(2018)
>
> Leanne Lieberman:         *The Book of Trees* (2010)
>
> Pamela L. Laskin:             *Ronit & Jamil*  (2017)
>
>
> --
> Marjorie Gann
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> *                   by Janet Willen and Marjorie Gann*
> *                   Penguin Random House/Tundra, 2015*
>
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>
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>
> *Five Thousand Years of Slavery, *
> *                            by Marjorie Gann and Janet Willen*
> *                            Tundra Books, 2011*
>
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>
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>
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> <http://www.fivethousandyearsofslavery.com/>, to steal a peek at both
> books!
> __
> Messages and opinions expressed on Hasafran are those of the individual
> author
> and are not necessarily endorsed by the Association of Jewish Libraries
> (AJL)
> ==================================
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-- 
Clare Kinberg


-- 
Clare Kinberg
__
Messages and opinions expressed on Hasafran are those of the individual author
and are not necessarily endorsed by the Association of Jewish Libraries (AJL)
==================================
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