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PMW op-ed in JPost: "The Whitewashing of Hate"

Itamar Marcus  |
The following op-ed is PMW’s rejection of the findings of the recent US-funded report on Palestinian schoolbooks.

In 2007, PMW published a report on PA schoolbooks whose findings are still valid today. At the press conference to release the PMW report, then Sen. Hillary Clinton said about PA education and media aimed at children that they are "profoundly poisoning the minds of these children."


The following is the PMW op-ed published today, Feb. 10 2013, in the Jerusalem Post:


The Whitewashing of Hate
PMW responds to the recent report
on Palestinian and Israeli schoolbooks


by Itamar Marcus (Feb. 10' 2013)

It is hard to imagine a more flawed analysis of Palestinian Authority schoolbooks than the recent report of the Council of Religious Institutions of the Holy Land, led by Sami Adwan, Bethlehem University and Daniel Bar-Tal, Tel Aviv University.

The report's inaccuracies start with its methodology of systematically citing all quotes from Israeli and Palestinian schoolbooks under the same headings - forcing the appearance of symmetry even when none exists. Another major flaw is giving as much weight to the fringe, ultra - Orthodox school system in Israel as it does to mainstream state schools. This artificially inflates the number of problematic examples on the Israeli side to support the report's misleading attempt to demonstrate equivalence.

But the ultimate failing of the report is that it intentionally masks the hate and violence promotion that are central to the Palestinian Authority educational system. This hatred, together with the hate and terror glorification expressed by the daily actions and messages of the PA leaders and through their controlled institutions, is rapidly condemning the next generations to continued conflict.

What did the Adwan-Bar Tal report hide from the world?

The overall message that permeates the PA's teachings about Israel throughout the school system is its total rejection of Israel's most fundamental right - its right to exist.

This is how Palestinian schoolbooks teach kids to see Israel:

"... the Nakba [Catastrophe] that took place in 1948, when the Jews occupied Palestine and established their state on its land, and banished the Palestinian nation into exile and to neighboring states, after they tortured it, massacred, and stole its land, its homes and its holy sites." [Arabic Language, Analysis, Literature and Criticism, Grade 12, pp.74-75, Revised Experimental Edition, 2012.]
 
And like this:

"Palestine's war ended with a catastrophe that is unprecedented in history, when the Zionist gangs stole Palestine and expelled its people from their cities, their villages, destroyed more than 500 villages and cities, and established the so-called the State of Israel." [Arabic Language, Analysis, Literature and Criticism, Grade 12, p. 104]
 
When Palestinian Media Watch published a report on Palestinian schoolbooks in 2007, the text cited above ended with the words: "...and established the State of Israel." According to the PA Ministry of Education's website accessed today, Palestinian children are now being taught about the "so-called State of Israel." Such changes are not coincidental. PA education, as a reflection of PA society in general, may be getting even more hateful.

Adwan and Bar-Tal list "four primary findings". The first is, "Dehumanizing and demonizing characterizations of the other were very rare in both Israeli and Palestinian books."

This is unequivocally false. The lack of pictures of hook-nosed Jews in the PA schoolbooks does not mean there is no demonization. Certainly, denying Israel its right to exist is the ultimate demonization. This is the foundation upon which the PA builds its entire political ideology and political education.

Another critical component of the PA's demonization is a 12th-grade book's definition of Israel as a racist, foreign, colonial implant:

"The phenomenon of Colonial Imperialism is summarized by the existence of foreigners residing among the original inhabitants of a country, they [the foreigners] possess feelings of purity and superiority, and act towards the original inhabitants with various forms of racial discrimination, and deny their national existence. Colonial Imperialism in modern times is centered in Palestine, South Africa and Rhodesia [Zimbabwe]." [History of the Arabs and the World in the 20th Century, Grade 12, 2006 and 2007, p. 6, and Revised Experimental Edition, 2011, p. 5]
 
The PA's defining Israel as 'racist', 'foreign' and a 'colonizer' is not merely crude defamation; it is the Palestinian Authority's justification for all killings of Israelis by terror since 1948. In another 12th-grade book, the children learn that "international law" grants people living under precisely these three types of regimes the inalienable right to fight the regimes:
 

"The General Assembly announced a number of basic principles related to the judicial status of fighters against the colonial rule, foreign rule and racist regimes: The struggle of the nations under colonial rule, foreign rule and racist regimes, for their right to self-determination and independence, is a legitimate struggle, fully complying with the principles of international law." [Contemporary Problems, Grade 12, 2006 p. 105, and Second Experimental Edition, 2009, p. 101]

The schoolbook goes on to state that not only is this "armed struggle" protected by international law, but any attempt to stop this violence is a violation of international law:

"Any attempt to suppress the struggle against colonial and foreign rule and racist regimes is considered as contrary to the UN convention and the declaration of principles of international law... The armed struggles that are an expression of the struggle of the nations under colonial rule, foreign rule and racist regimes are considered as international armed conflict." [Contemporary Problems, Grade 12, 2006, p. 105, and Second Experimental Edition, 2009, p. 101]
 
The PA's promotion of nationalistic "armed struggle" as a right is exacerbated by its mandating violence against Israel as mandatory in the name of Islam - "until Resurrection."

Islamic Education for Grade 12 teaches that the conflict with Israel is a "Ribat for Allah," which it defines as "one of the actions related to Jihad for Allah and it means being found in areas where there is a struggle between Muslims and their enemies." [Islamic Education, Grade 12, 2006 and 2012, p. 86].

And whereas Ribat can also mean a non-violent struggle, the PA schoolbook makes sure that children understand that their obligation against Israel is military by comparing the Palestinian Ribat to other Islamic wars of the past:

"The reason for this preference [for Palestinian Ribat] is that the momentous battles in Islamic history took place on its land, therefore, its residents are in a constant fight with their enemies, and they are found in Ribat until Resurrection Day: History testifies that: The battle of Al-Yarmuk decided the fight with the Byzantines, and the battle of Hettin decided the fight with the Crusaders, and the battle of Ein Jalut decided the fight with the Mongols." [Ibid, p. 87]
 
Alarmingly, the book teaches Palestinian children that their war over Palestine is not going to end with a secular peace treaty, but is an eternal war for Islam "until Resurrection Day." [Ibid, p. 86]

It is significant that neither this legitimization of "armed struggle" "against colonial and foreign rule and racist regimes" - the PA's definition of Israel - nor the mandating of eternal religious violence against Israel was even mentioned in the Bar-Tal-Adwan report.

Had the authors included this area of research, they would have been forced to concede that there is no corresponding defense of terror and promotion of violence in Israeli textbooks.

The failure to cite these significant and dangerous messages in the PA's schoolbooks -- messages which have been promoted actively by PA leaders since 2000 to justify their terror against Israel and killing of Israelis -- is indicative of the report's flawed methodology and fundamental errors.

These and the many other omissions and misrepresentations necessitate immediate and public rejection of the findings by the US State Department, whose funding in 2009 launched the project. Should the US adopt these findings, the chance for a peaceful future for children on both sides of the conflict will decrease dramatically.

At a press conference in the US Senate building to release PMW's 2007 report on PA schoolbooks, then-Senator Hillary Clinton introduced the report:

"These textbooks do not give Palestinian children an education; they give them an indoctrination. When we viewed this [PMW] report in combination with other [PA] media [from other PMW reports] that these children are exposed to, we see a larger picture that is disturbing. It is disturbing on a human level, it is disturbing to me as a mother, it is disturbing to me as a United States Senator, because it basically, profoundly poisons the minds of these children."
 
Tragically, Clinton's words still hold true today. PA schoolbooks, along with PA culture and media, are the recipe for guaranteeing that the conflict, terror and war will continue into the next generation. Only if the international community preconditions its political contacts and support for the PA on the PA's compliance with demands to eliminate its culture of hate and violence will peace become possible.

While the Palestinian Authority is ultimately responsible for the hatred and terror it promotes, its defenders, especially Israelis like Bar-Tal, are ultimately enablers of this hatred. Such misleading reports could ease the international pressure that has been put on the Palestinians to replace their hate education with peace education.

Public rejection of this Bar-Tal-Adwan report by the US is not merely the right thing to do. People's lives are depending on it.

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