How Israeli schools help sabotage peace
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By Jonathan Cook
May 16, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- A display of Israeli-style community
policing before an audience of hundreds of
young schoolchildren was captured on video
last week. Were the 10-year-olds offered
road safety tips, advice on what to do if
they got lost or how to report someone
suspicious hanging around the school?
No. In Israel, they do things differently.
The video shows four officers staging a mock
antiterror operation in a park close to Tel
Aviv. The team roar in on motorbikes, firing
their rifles at the "terrorist".
As he lies badly wounded, the officers empty
their magazines into him from close range.
In Israel it is known as "confirming the
kill". Everywhere else it is called an
extrajudicial execution or murder. The
children can be heard clapping.
It was an uncomfortable reminder of a
near-identical execution captured on film
last year. A young army medic, Elor Azaria,
fired a bullet into the head of an
incapacitated Palestinian in Hebron. A
military court sentenced him to 18 months
for manslaughter in February.
There has been little sign of soul-searching
since. Most Israelis, including government
officials, call Azaria a hero. In the recent
religious festival of Purim, dressing up as
Azaria was a favourite among children.
There is plenty of evidence that Israel’s
security services are still regularly
executing real Palestinians. The Israeli
human rights group B’Tselem denounced the
killing last week of a 16-year-old Jerusalem
schoolgirl, Fatima Hjeiji, in a hail of
bullets. She had frozen to the spot after
pulling out a knife some distance from a
police checkpoint. She posed no threat,
concluded B’Tselem, and did not need to be
killed.
The police were unrepentant about their
staged execution, calling it "a positive,
empowering" demonstration for the
youngsters. The event was hardly
exceptional. In communities across Israel
this month, the army celebrated Israel’s
Independence Day by bringing along its usual
"attractions" – tanks, guns and grenades –
for children to play with, while families
watched army dogs sicking yet more
"terrorists".
In a West Bank settlement, meanwhile, the
army painted youngsters’ arms and legs with
shrapnel wounds. Blood-like liquid dripped
convincingly from dummies with amputated
limbs. The army said the event was a
standard one that "many families enjoyed".
The purpose of exposing children at an
impressionable age to so much gore and
killing is not hard to divine. It creates
traumatised children, distrustful and
fearful of anyone outside their tribe. That
way they become more pliant soldiers,
trigger-happy as they rule over Palestinians
in the occupied territories. A few educators
have started to sense they are complicit in
this emotional and mental abuse.
Holocaust
Memorial Day, marked in Israeli schools last
month, largely avoids universal messages,
such as that we must recognise the humanity
of others and stand up for the oppressed.
Instead, pupils as young as three are told
the Holocaust serves as a warning to be
eternally vigilant – that Israel and its
strong army are the only things preventing
another genocide by non-Jews.
Last year Zeev Degani, principal of one
Israel’s most prestigious schools, caused a
furore when he announced his school would no
longer send pupils on annual trips to
Auschwitz. This is a rite of passage for
Israeli pupils. He called the misuse of the
Holocaust "pathological" and intended to
"generate fear and hatred" to inculcate
extreme nationalism.
It is not by accident that these trips –
imparting the message that a strong army is
vital to Israel’s survival – take place just
before teenagers begin a three-year military
draft.Increasingly, they receive no
alternative messages in school. Mr Degani
was among the few principals who had been
inviting Breaking the Silence, a group of
whistle-blowing soldiers, to discuss their
part in committing war crimes. In response,
the education minister, Naftali Bennett,
leader of the settlers’ party, has barred
dissident groups such as Breaking the
Silence. He has also banned books and
theatre trips that might encourage greater
empathy with those outside the tribe.
Polls show this is paying off.
Schoolchildren are even more
ultra-nationalist than their parents. More
than four-fifths think there is no hope of
peace with the Palestinians.
But these cultivated attitudes don’t just
sabotage peacemaking. They also damage any
chance of Israeli Jews living peacefully
with the large minority of Palestinian
citizens in their midst.Half of Jewish
schoolchildren believe these Palestinians,
one in five of the population, should not be
allowed to vote in elections. This month the
defence minister, Avigdor Lieberman, called
the minority’s representatives in parliament
"Nazis" and suggested they should share a
similar fate.
This extreme chauvinism was translated last
week into legislation that defines Israel as
the nation-state of the Jewish people around
the world, not its citizens. The Palestinian
minority are effectively turned into little
more than resident aliens in their own
homeland.Mr Degani and others are losing the
battle to educate for peace and
reconciliation. If a society’s future lies
with its children, the outlook for Israelis
and Palestinians is bleak indeed.
Jonathan Cook is an independent journalist
in Nazareth. -
http://www.jonathan-cook.net/