Unwarranted Controversy: American
Politicians, Israeli Critics, and Palestinian Textbooks
by Reema Hijazi
CNI Intern
12/16/2005
In May 2005, Senator Hillary
Clinton reiterated her denunciation of what she considers incitement and
anti-Semitism in Palestinian textbooks. Speaking as a distinguished
guest at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) Policy
Conference, Senator Clinton condemned “this violence…this dehumanizing
rhetoric” in the Palestinian curriculum. Clinton has preached this
message before—five years ago with author Elie Wiesel, four years ago
with Senator Charles Schumer in a letter to President Bush, and two
years ago in a hearing with Senator Arlen Specter.
While Clinton’s message has always remained consistent, it directly
contradicts academic and institutional research on the actual content of
Palestinian textbooks. Contrary to the findings of American and Israeli
academics, the European Union, and a congressionally commissioned
inquiry carried out by the Israel/Palestine Center for Research and
Information, Senator Clinton continues to issue falsehoods regarding
Palestinian school texts. If Senator Clinton and other US
representatives read the reports written for them, then the debate over
Palestinian textbooks would finally come to a close.
The History
The controversy over Palestinian
textbooks reaches back to 1994. Until that year, the Israeli Civil
Administration managed the education system in the Palestinian
territories. The Civil Administration assigned Jordanian books in the
West Bank, and Egyptian books in Gaza, censoring the material of which
it disapproved. In 1994, the Oslo accords granted Palestinians control
over their own civil affairs, allowing them for the first time to
control education in the West Bank, Gaza, and (to an unacknowledged
extent) East Jerusalem. The newly-created Palestinian Authority (PA)
faced the task of creating an independent Palestinian curriculum.
The PA immediately established the Curriculum Development Center to
design the new curriculum. In the meantime, the PA continued to use the
Jordanian and Egyptian books, but supplemented them with a new series of
books on “National Education” for grades one through six. (Oddly, even
though these books were unobjectionable in content, Israel blocked them
in East Jerusalem. George Washington University Professor Nathan Brown
suggests this is because using Palestinian “National Education” books in
Jerusalem implicitly contested Israeli sovereignty over the city—unlike
the more objectionable Jordanian books that Israel did allow.)
In 1996 the Curriculum Development Center published its 600 page report.
The report directed harsh criticism toward every aspect of the
educational system. It suggested methodology changes—encouraging
critical thinking rather than memorization—and a holistic approach that
integrated subjects into one another while maintaining relevance to the
students’ environment. Significantly, the CDC operated autonomously from
the Palestinian Authority. Its curriculum development team consisted of
Palestinian academics, educational specialists, and teachers—not
government employees. It also interviewed teachers and students
directly, rather than through the Ministry of Education. The hard work
of the CDC resulted in far-reaching criticisms as well as significant
and detailed proposals for improvement—suggestions that have not been
noted by any of the textbooks’ critics.
The CDC report became the basis for the Ministry of Education’s 1997
formal proposal, which was then approved by the Legislative Council.(1)
An entirely new Curriculum Development Center, this one under the
authority of the Ministry of Education, was established to write the new
books. It produced first and sixth grade books in 2000, second and
seventh grade books in 2001, and so on, continuing until the entire
system has been converted to the new curriculum. As suggested in the
report published by the first CDC, these books included the new subject
of civic education, as well as lessons in human rights and democracy,
and role playing games that made the students think while empowering
them to make decisions.
These developments attracted little international attention, with the
exception of some international support from a few European governments
and UNESCO.
This changed in 1998, when an Israeli organization, the Center for
Monitoring the Impact of Peace, published a report condemning
Palestinian textbooks for what it claimed were inciteful and
anti-Semitic passages. The Center was founded by Itamar Marcus, a
resident of the Israeli settlement Efrat in the West Bank. Before
founding the group, Marcus lobbied to keep West Bank water sources under
Israeli control.(2) Over the past few years, the Center has alleged that
“There is a systematic effort in the textbooks to demonize Israel and
the Israelis.” It claims that “The Palestinian textbooks use terminology
that is associated with war and violence,” and “Jihad continues to be
glorified and martyrdom is praised.”(3) Because of the Center’s
aggressive and effective advertising campaigns, Palestinian textbooks
have been a politically attractive target ever since. Sen. Hillary
Clinton, Sen. Charles Schumer, Rep. Steve Israel, the Israeli
government, and pro-Israel groups have criticized Palestinian texts with
information from Marcus’ Center.
However, investigations led by institutional, academic, and independent
researchers have yielded a consensus in direct contrast to the Center’s
findings. This consensus holds that the Palestinian curriculum is not
anti-Semitic and is not inciteful to violence.
A Researched Consensus
The Coalition for the Advancement of
Jewish Education published an article concluding that the Palestinians
have produced “a highly nationalistic curriculum that criticizes
Israel’s policies, but not its existence…To be sure, the Palestinian
curriculum is not a peace curriculum. But neither is it a war curriculum
or one based on anti-Semitism.”(4)
The 2003 and 2004, the United States Congress mandated an independent
research group, the Israel/Palestine Center for Research and
Information, to review Palestinian textbooks and present Congress with a
conclusive report. Its 2003 report states, “The overall orientation of
the curriculum is peaceful despite the harsh and violent realities on
the ground. It does not openly incite against Israel and the Jews. It
does not openly incite hatred and violence. Religious and political
tolerance is emphasized in a good number of textbooks and in multiple
contexts.”(5) The 2004 report continues the consensus view, stating “the
textbooks promote an environment of open-mindedness, rational thinking,
modernization, critical reflection and dialogue.” Furthermore, “All
references that could be perceived as negative (e.g., ‘Zionist
ambitions,’ ‘Israeli occupation,’ ‘Zionist settlements,’ and the like)
are all made either within their historical contexts or reflect
historically accurate and factual information from the point of view of
the Palestinian collective narrative.”(6)
Professor Nathan Brown of George Washington University has extensively
researched the new Palestinian curriculum. In his paper, Democracy,
History, and the Contest Over the Palestinian Curriculum, Brown writes,
“the Palestinian curriculum is not a war curriculum; while highly
nationalistic, it does not incite hatred, violence, and anti-Semitism.
It cannot be described as a ‘peace curriculum’ either, but the charges
against it are often wildly exaggerated or inaccurate.” Professor Brown
goes on to denounce vitriolic condemnations coming from the Center for
Monitoring the Impact of Peace because they dismiss a more useful,
accurate critique.(7)
In Ha’aretz, one of Israel’s leading daily papers, Akiva Eldar wrote,
“The Palestinians are being rebuked where they should in fact be
praised.” Eldar goes on to quote Dr. Ruth Firer, the head of a research
team at the Harry S. Truman Institute for the Advancement of Peace at
the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Firer studied Palestinian textbooks
for five years, and told Ha’aretz, “We were surprised to find how
moderate the anger directed toward Israelis in the Palestinian textbooks
is, compared to the Palestinian predicament and suffering. This surprise
is doubled when you compare the Palestinian books to Israeli ones from
the 1950s and 1960s, which mentioned gentiles [only] in the context of
pogroms and the Holocaust.” Firer also noted that the new texts are
freer of negative stereotypes of Jews and Israelis than the older
Jordanian and Egyptian books.(8)
Matti Steinberg, while serving as the head of Israel’s Shin Bet security
services on Palestinian affairs, thoroughly studied the new PA
textbooks. In October 2002 he published his study, A Different View of
Palestinian Textbooks, mainly in response to maligning reports by
Israel’s office of the government coordinator. As reported in Ha’aretz,
Steinberg claimed that the latter report’s authors were “amiss not only
with regard to the facts, but also entertain exaggerated expectations.”
Steinberg stated, “relative improvements were noted in the Palestinian
textbooks. True, they do not contain a distinctive message of total
peace and conciliation, but neither do they send a message of abysmal
hatred and militancy, but restraint, which should be seen as necessary
preparatory stage ahead of peace.”(9)
On the level of official political opinion, the European Union conducted
its own review of Palestinian textbooks in 2001.The report states that
“New textbooks, though not perfect, are free of inciteful content and
improve the previous textbooks, constituting a valuable contribution to
the education of young Palestinians. Palestinian Authority Ministry of
Education has accepted the need for ongoing review, revision and
improvement. Therefore, all allegations against the new textbooks funded
by EU members have proven unfounded.”(10)
In short, the researched consensus directly contradicts the charge of
incitement made so frequently by Senator Clinton and other US
politicians.
Misinformation and Misled Policy
These same investigations have found
serious fault with the Center for Monitoring the Impact of Peace.(11)
The Coalition for the Advancement of Jewish Education wrote, “the CMIP
reports read as if they were written by a ruthless prosecuting attorney
anxious for conviction at any cost.” Also, the Center’s “strongest
charges are simply unsupported by a fair reading of the books.”
Indeed, the academic who has most extensively covered the international
controversy surrounding Palestinian textbooks strongly criticizes the
Center’s method. Brown writes, “The sensationalist charges against the
Palestinian curriculum are based more on hostility than analysis.”(12)
As a result, according to Brown, group’s reports are “often misleading
and always unreliable.”(13)
Brown enumerates three central problems with the Center’s reports.
First, the Center “generally ignores any historical context in a way
that renders some of its claims sharply misleading.” In listing
offensive passages from textbooks, the Center report failed to mention
that the passages quoted were from Jordanian and Egyptian textbooks—not
the Palestinian books under review. Second, Brown finds that the Center
approaches its reviews with a “prosecutorial style. …Any evidence that
contradicts the Center’s harsh message is ignored, obscured, or
dismissed. …Other evidence is interpreted inaccurately.” One report
points to a map of Palestine that does not show Israel’s boundaries as
evidence for the denial of Israel’s existence. However, the map is
topographical, showing only geographic realities and no political
boundaries whatever. The Center criticizes a unit on tolerance because
it omits Jews, but a reading of the unit in its entirety clearly shows
that its topic is tolerance within Palestinian society. Finally, Brown
observes that the largest problem lies in how the reports are read, with
which he faults the Center itself. The group uses “qualifications and
elliptical wording” to mislead readers, but also to avoid stating
outright lies. When politicians read the reports the Center sends them,
they remember what they have been misled to believe, but do not grasp
any actual evidence, because it has been hidden from them. This creates
situations in which politicians state outright falsehoods based on
blurry Center writings. In June 2001 Senator Clinton and Senator Schumer
sent a letter to President Bush stating the false charge (based on a
Center report), “A book that is required reading for Palestinian six
graders actually starts off stating, ‘There is no alternative to
destroying Israel.’”(14) A general browbeating of Palestinian books then
ensued in the United States Congress and media, based on an untrue
statement.
Once inaccurate charges began circulating because of reports from the
Center, hostile allegations were made against the European Union for
funding the supposedly offensive textbooks. The EU in fact provided no
funding for the books. Some EU member states contributed independent
funding, but the European Union was forced to answer false charges.
Under such pressure, the EU conducted its own review of the books,
concluding, “Quotations attributed by earlier CMIP reports to the
Palestinian textbooks are not found in the new Palestinian Authority
schoolbooks funding by some EU Member States; some were traced to the
old Egyptian and Jordanian text books that they are replacing, some to
other books outside the school curriculum, and some not traced at all.
While many of the quotations attributed to the new textbooks by the most
recent CMIP report of November 2001 could be confirmed, these have been
found to be often badly translated or quoted out of context, thus
suggesting an anti-Jewish incitement that the books do not contain.”
In her new book, Inheriting the Holy Land: An American’s Search for Hope
in the Middle East, Jennifer Miller interviews personalities and
officials involved in the textbook controversy. She visits the Center
for Monitoring the Impact of Peace in Jerusalem, and what she writes is
worth quoting at length: “my main criticism of CMIP: Its reports do not
always clarify whether the quotations they cite come from the new
Palestinian Authority textbooks or from the Egyptian and Jordanian books
used prior to 2000. In fact, the material that Israel and the US
Congress call so blatantly offensive—that the Palestinians books equate
Zionism with Nazism—appears in an eleventh-grade Jordanian text.
…Similarly, nowhere in the new Palestine Authority books do any words
call for Israel’s destruction. This kind of incitement simply does not
exist. While there are illustrations of bulldozers demolishing houses
and armed soldiers, it’s the real-life versions of these pictures that
truly influence students.”(15)
Miller even found that those working at the Center did not believe their
own reports. She writes: “I asked Yohanan Manor, CMIP co-director,
point-blank if he thought these images or anything else in the
Palestinian books incited students to violence. He said no. Both he and
Groiss [author of CMIP textbook reports] admitted that the new PA books
are a huge improvement over those in other Arab countries.”
In the end it is clear that the Center writes dubious reports that
mislead its readers into believing falsehoods. These falsehoods cause
international controversy, and in turn, spur politicians into defaming
the Palestinian educational system undeservingly. Because American
politicians have relied on CMIP reports for their information on
Palestinian textbooks, they have leveled inaccurate, and oftentimes
false allegations against Palestinian educators and officials. They have
put American international influence behind these allegations, and hence
put Palestinians through a damaging, unnecessary, and unfair trial.
Had these representatives and their staffs varied their sources for
information—as any researcher should do—they could have avoided this
unwarranted controversy altogether.
Power and Double Standards
The debate over textbooks is really one
of power, and in the end, self-determination. Palestinians do not, and
cannot censor, or even critique Israeli textbooks, and the world does
not ask for a Palestinian opinion. Israeli criticisms, on the other
hand, play a large role in the international debate concerning
Palestinian texts; because of Israel's special relationship with the
United States, American politicians allow, and oftentimes actively
enable Israeli concerns to influence Palestinian curriculum. Unlike any
other nation, Palestine must undergo tight scrutiny when espousing ideas
of nationalism and patriotism—in textbooks and elsewhere.
As a case in point, the nationalism found in Palestinian textbooks has
been interpreted as hostility toward Israel, and even the denial of its
existence. Critics have attacked the textbooks for ubiquitous use of
Palestinian flags and other symbols. Indeed, Brown, Firer, and other
researchers have also noted the pronounced prominence of nationalist
symbols in the books. However, the consensus among non-CMIP researchers
holds that this nationalism does not represent threats to Israel, nor
does it take an aggressive tone. In fact, the researchers point out that
nationalist symbolism is common in any series of public textbooks.
Israeli Professor Eli Podeh, author of The Arab-Israeli Conflict in
Israeli History Textbooks, 1948-2000, writes that Israeli textbooks
and curricula up until the mid 1990s were “approached entirely within
the context of the Zionist struggle against the Arabs.”(16) Discussing
Palestinian texts, he has said, “The Palestinians suffer from the same
problems we did. If the role of their books is to inculcate national
identity and attachment to the land, then their books must be very
nationalistic. It happens during the first stages of building a state.
Perhaps the current Palestinian books should be compared to the first
generation books in Israel and not the third.”(17)
That is exactly what Ruth Firer did when conducting her research on the
Palestinian books, as discussed above. She was surprised at the
moderation she found in Palestinian books, and astounded when she
compared them to Israeli books. “Israeli books, especially those
published from the 1980s on, include almost no derogative stereotypes of
Arabs and Palestinians, but the basic narrative is still the same, at
least until the mid 1990s. The change in the Zionist narrative, which
portrayed Israelis as heroic, pioneering people, was prompted by the
publications of the New Historians. Wherever this does occur, it is
usually on a very small scale, and sometimes as an afterthought to the
traditional narrative.”(18)
Israeli textbooks did not and do not receive the same international
attention that Palestinian books receive. Palestinian textbooks do
deserve criticism, but the exaggerated claims currently leveled against
them constitute a double standard rather than researched analysis.
Self-Determination
Policy makers believe they are arguing
over the content of Palestinian books, but do not make themselves aware
of that content. The books teach the Palestinian narrative, which has
become condemned because of misinformation. As such, the controversy
over Palestinian textbooks has become a debate over whether the
Palestinian narrative can be taught in Palestinian books.
As Nathan Brown writes, “in a sense, the content of the books does not
matter; the controversy is driven far more by the broader conflict than
by specific issues with the books themselves…as long as the textbooks do
not repudiate the Palestinian point of view, they will always remain
suspect in some eyes.”(19)
The scrutiny of Palestinian teachers and academics should be sufficient
to deem the books acceptable, and the books certainly have received much
constructive criticism from within Palestinian society. However, the
international power system demands non-Palestinian analysis. This
third-party analysis has been completed, with an overarching consensus
coalescing among many independent researchers, but the politicians who
have demanded such research do not respond to it.
Such negligent scrutiny is insulting to Palestinians, who for the first
time are able to teach their youth themselves. After decades of Israeli
dominance, and still under Israeli occupation, they are faced with
illegitimate hurtles instead of legitimate criticism.
In the end, it seems that the textbooks’ most virulent critics expect
Palestinians to write a text that embraces their oppressors. Though a
peace-loving curriculum is absolutely an ideal for which to strive,
books that can be described as “neither peace, nor war” books are a
promising reality, as the conflict still looms. As Professor Sami Adnan
of Bethlehem Univeristy, who co-researched textbooks with Firer, has
said, “How can a Palestinian write in a textbook that Israelis or Jews
should be loved, while what he is experiencing is death, land
expropriation, demolition of homes and daily degradation? Give us a
chance to teach loving. [That will happen] when they stop seeing
Israelis as soldiers or bulldozer operators. Let us breathe. Give us a
chance to love you.”(20)
Conclusion: Power in Scholarship
Palestinian textbooks merit criticism,
but not the type of criticism currently leveled at them. As American,
Israeli, and Palestinian researchers have demonstrated, the common
allegations against the books do not withstand basic scrutiny.
Furthermore, other countries do not have to defend their schoolbooks to
the rest of the world. Palestinians, on the other hand, have their texts
scrutinized by the United Nations, the European Union, the United
States, and Israel. Palestinians must also contend with a massive power
imbalance: while Palestinian books are held to certain standards by
Israeli and American reviewers, Palestinian reviews of Israeli texts are
unheard of, and in any case, never requested by the international arena.
Yet even with the unwarranted international pressure, Palestinian
textbooks have lived up to standards of education and decency as
articulated by the European Union, the Israel/Palestine Center for
Research and Information, prominent American academics, as well as
Israeli textbook specialists.
Politicians have allowed themselves to be misinformed. If Senator
Clinton and other US representatives read the reports written for them,
rather than relying on only one dubious source, then the debate over
Palestinian textbooks would transform into a consensus. We could then
turn our attention from Palestinian textbooks to the dilapidated
condition of Palestinian schools, or the serious lack of educational
resources for Palestinian children.
By speaking knowledgably about the topics on which they take action,
American politicians could effect positive change in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, where misinformation is in abundance.
Thorough research and attention to scholarship is key. By overlooking
these basic steps in the case of Palestinian textbooks, American
politicians have only added fuel to an illusionary fire. If we make a
point of knowing the content of the books in question, and of
questioning educators rather than prosecuting them based on dubious
information, we can build up the Palestinian educational system, rather
than work to undermine it.
NOTES
(1) Both Professor Nathan Brown (Democracy, History, and the Contest
Over the Palestinian Curriculum) and Jennifer Miller (Inheriting the
Holy Land) detail the contentions of the CDC report, as well as its
effects on the writing of the new Palestinian books—the report’s
criticisms were so far-reaching that they appeared too progressive to
the Ministry of Education. As such, the report had influence on the
development of the curriculum that was eventually approved, but less
influence than the report’s authors had hoped. However, The teachers and
academics who proposed the changes continue to push for their
fulfillment.
(2) See Brown, Democracy, p 3, and Akiva
Eldar, “What did you study in school today, Palestinian Child?”
Ha’aretz, Jan 2, 2001.
(3) Arnon Groiss, Jews, Israel and Peace
in Palestinian School Textbooks, the Center for Monitoring the Impact of
Peace, November 2001 and May 2003.
(4) This summary originally appeared in
“Teaching about Terrorism, published by the Coalition for the
Advancement of Jewish Education. It can be found online at http://www.geocities.com/nathanbrown1/CAJE.htm
(5) The Israel/Palestine Center for
Research and Information, Report I: Reviewing Palestinian Textbooks
and Tolerance Education Program, submitted to the Public Affairs
Office US Consulate General, Jerusalem, March 2003, p 5.
(6) The Israel/Palestine Center for
Research and Information, Report II: Reviewing Palestinian Textbooks
and Tolerance Education Program Grades 4 & 9, submitted to the
Public Affairs Office US Consulate General, Jerusalem, June 2004, p 7,
5.
(7) Brown, Democracy, History, and the
Contest Over the Palestinian Curriculum 2001, p 1, 8.
(8) Akiva Eldar, “What did you study in
school today, Palestinian Child?” Ha’aretz, Jan 2, 2001.
(9) Akiva Eldar, “Reading, Writing—and
Propaganda,” Ha’aretz, Oct 9, 2004.
(10) Found online at http://europa.eu.int/comm/external_relations/mepp/faq/heads_%20mission_schoolbooks.pdf
(11) All Center for Monitoring the Impact
of Peace reports can be found at www.edume.org. A point by point
comparison of the Center’s claims and the actual texts is beyond the
scope of this paper. For such a comparison see Fouad Moughrabi, “The
Politics of Palestinian Textbooks,” The Journal of Palestine
Studies, v. 31, n1, Autumn 2001.
(12) Brown, Democracy, p 9.
(13) For correspondences between Nathan
Brown and the Center for Monitoring the Impact of Peace, see http://www.geocities.com/nathanbrown1/Response_CMIP.html.
This includes detailed quotations and
analysis of the textbooks on behalf of both authors.
(14) Brown, Democracy; for Brown’s
analysis of the Center for Monitoring the Impact of Peace, see 3-6.
Discussion concerning Senator Clinton’s letter begins on 7. Professor
Brown goes to great lengths explaining the original contention made by
CMIP about the phrase allegedly found in a school text, and the
extensive research done by himself and two other scholars, all of whom
searched for the book and specific edition that was supposed to contain
the phrase. According to this in-depth search, no edition of the book
includes such a phrase. See also, Fouad Moughrabi, “The Politics of
Palestinian Textbooks,” The Journal of Palestine Studies, v. 31,
n1, Autumn 2001.
(15) Jennifer Miller, Inheriting the
Holy Land: An American’s Search for Hope in the Middle East,
Ballantine Books, 2005, p 57.
(16) Eli Podeh, The Arab-Israeli
Conflict in Israeli History Textbooks, 1948-2000, New York: Bergin
and Garvey, 2002, p 32.
(17) Miller, Inheriting the Holy Land,
p 65.
(18) Eldar, “What did you study in school
today, Palestinian Child?” New Historians are the Israeli historians who
literally rewrote Israeli history in the 1980s after the opening of the
Israeli archives. See books by Benny Morris, Avi Shlaim, and Ilan Pappe.
(19) Nathan Brown, "The International
Controversy Regarding Palestinian Textbooks," delivered to the
Georg-Eckert Institute for International Textbook Research, Dec 2002.
(20) Eldar, “What did you study in school
today, Palestinian Child?”
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