The Palestinian education and propaganda are more dangerous to Israel than Palestinian weapons. Ariel Sharon, November 18, 2004
Acknowledging
that without a population educated to accept peace, no other
negotiations or concessions were meaningful, the U.S. President set
forth, "A Performance-Based Roadmap to a Permanent Two-State Solution to
the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict." (April 30, 2003) Before discussions
on the status of land, borders, Jerusalem, or "settlements," the
Road Map
called for Palestinian leadership to issue an "unequivocal statement
reiterating Israel's right to exist in peace and security and calling
for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire to end armed activity and
all acts of violence against Israelis anywhere. All official Palestinian
institutions end incitement against Israel."
In a few
weeks, it will be five years since the Palestinian Authority was to
prepare its citizens for a two-state solution and end incitement in its
educational system. Yet from pre-school through highschool, Palestinian
children are indoctrinated to deny Israel's legitimacy, demonize
Israelis and Jews, and glorify violent struggle as a religious goal. The
Palestinian government-produced textbooks and government-controlled
media work in tandem to assure that Palestinian children will be no more
disposed to living peacefully with Israel tomorrow than their parents
are today.
It's never too early to begin the hate education. Preschool television programming could be called Terrorism for Tots. Last
year American viewers had a glimpse of the weekly program starring an
outrageous Palestinian version of Mickey Mouse, Farfar, who in a
Mickey-like voice told children to pray until there is "world leadership
under Islamic leadership" and in the meantime to oppose the "oppressive
invading Zionist occupation."
Farfur taught the children not
only the glory of violence but the mindset of victim hood and blame. In
one episode (May 11, 2007) Farfur cheated on an exam and his excuse was,
"Because the Jews destroyed my home and I left my books and notes under
the rubble." In case the point was too subtle, Farfur advised other
children, "I'm calling on all children to read more and more to prepare
for exams because the Jews don't want us to learn."
The program,
which broadcast over most of the Arab world, was withdrawn recently
after some international uproar. Of course, in the final episode Farfur
was beaten to death in front of his impressionable young fans by an
Israeli official. Farfur may be dead, but his legacy continues in other
characters such as Assoud, the terrorist version of Bugs Bunny. Diane
Sawyer showed one clip of Assoud saying, "I will finish off the Jews and
eat them." (ABC Feb. 14, 2008)
With the emotional
foundation of fear and hate established by the time children are five,
these youngsters are ready to begin school and obtain "facts' to support
their prejudices. On the way to school, children learn who the heroes
are. In most of the world, streets, public buildings and schools are
named after presidents, great musicians, scientists, and others who are
to serve as role model for children. Palestinian towns such as Yaabid)
named their most important street and schools after former Iraqi
dictator Saddam Hussein.[Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, January 4, 2007] One of the
numerous examples of schools named after terrorists is the Dalal
Mughrabi School, which honors Dalal Mughrabi, who killed American
photographer Gail Rubin and 36 Israelis. [Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, December 14, 2004] Before the children open a book, they already know who is to be emulated.
Then
the serious indoctrination begins in the textbooks. When the
Palestinian Authority assumed control of education in 1994, it reverted
to pre-1967 textbooks, which were little more than manuals for terror.
With an infusion of international funds, the PA began a new curriculum
process issuing books for two grades each year. Books for grades 1-10
were published under Yassir Arafat's rule. Texts for grades 11 and 12
were prepared by the more "moderate" leadership of Mahmoud Abbas. The
Center for Monitoring Peace and Cultural Tolerance in School Education
http://www.edume.org/ conducted an analysis of Palestinian textbooks published before and during Abbas' presidency.
It comes as no surprise that in books produced under
Arafat, Israel is not present in maps of the modern Middle East or
that Jewish claims to a biblical connection are denied. In place of
Israel, maps, both modern and ancient, show a sovereign state of
Palestine( Reading and Texts, Grade 9, Part 2 (2004), pp. 34-35)Children
in the 2nd grade learn that "Palestine" covers the whole
territory of pre-1967 Israel. (Islamic Education, Grade 2, Part 1
(2001), p. 98) The Jewish presence is also eliminated from the past. Despite
the fact that Islam did not start until thousands of years after the
biblical account of Abraham, the Cave of the Patriarchs is called the
Mosque of Abraham (National Education, Grade 7 (2001), p. 55)
and Rachel's Tomb is referred to as "Mosque of Bilal bin Rabbah."
National Education, Grade 7 (2001) p. 54
Jews,
whose legitimacy in Israel has been denied in the texts are further
demonized as killers with genocidal intentions. Literary selections such
as the following fill the texts at all levels. Your enemies killed
your children, split open your women's bellies, held your revered
elderly men by the beard, and led them to the death pits. (National
Education, Grade 7 (2001), p. 20) Following the storyline of
Farfur, Palestinians and Arabs are the victims and bear no
responsibility for the 1948 Nakba (catastrophe) even though it was five
Arab nations that attacked Israel. (Islamic Education, Grade 9, Part 1 (2003), p. 62) The
textbooks present violence and martyrdom as the desired response to the
"injustices" imposed by Israel. Twelve-year-olds learn that "The
martyr's rank is above all ranks." (Our Beautiful Language, Grade 7, Part 1 (2001), p. 97) and as early as first grade, children recite:
I shall live as a Fida'i and continue as a Fida'i
And shall die as a Fida'i until it [i.e., the land] returns ...
(National Education, Grade 1, Part 2 (2000), pp. 57-58)
Hopes that a change in leadership would produce a change in education were dashed in the most recent
analysis
of forty-two books which were issued for grades 11 and 12. After a
slight change in tone in the grade 11 texts (Jews are mentioned in a few
biblical accounts and one map includes Tel Aviv and other modern Jewish
cities with a font so small that it requires a magnifying glass), the
new grade 12 texts resume the vitriol against Israel.
Israelis
are disparaged as "Zionist gangs," "colonial imperialists," and
"racists." Palestinian youth are exhorted to fight Israel, not only for
political gains but for religious Jihad. The battle for Israel is called
"Ribat for Allah," (the place to fight Islam's enemies) and "Ribat for
Palestine" is the ultimate of religious goals. With an increased
religious aspect of the struggle, martyrs are violent liberation are
praised. In Arabic language classes, students read:
O my homeland, I would not cry in this wedding party
For our Arabness refuses that we cry over the martyrs p. 13
I swear by Al-Aqsa Mosque and those plains
I shall not return the sword to its sheath and shall not lay down arms. p. 85 Arabic Language-Linguistic Sciences, Grade 12 (2006)
School
outings and after school programs solidify the indoctrination to hate.
This month Palestinian children were treated to an exhibition of Israel
burning children in a crematorium. (
Palestinian Media Watch, March 20, 2008) The theme of Israel
prepetrating a Holocaust is a consistent with what they learn in school and on television.
"They
[Israel] are the ones who did the Holocaust ... They opened the ovens
for us to bake human beings... and when one oven stopped burning they
lit a hundred more ovens." [PA TV March 25, 2004]
Almost more disturbing than what is being taught in an educational system that undermines any efforts for peace is who
is paying for a large part of it: the U.S.A. Congress has issued
repeated concerns that U.S. funds not be used to teach war (S.Hrg.
108-290, Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States
Senate,October 30, 2003, Palestinian Education-Teaching Peace or War?),
and a priority for some Members of Congress is that U.S. aid to the
Palestinians, totaling $1.4 billion since 1993, does not support an
inciting, anti-Israeli curriculum. (CRS Report RS21594, United States Aid to the Palestinians, by Clyde Mark; and CRS Report RL32260)
On
March 6, 2008 the House Appropriations State-Foreign Operations
Subcommittee hearing challenged Deputy Secretary of State John D.
Negroponte's request for additional funding for the Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas' government and placed a hold on $150 million in
economic support for the Palestinians. Members of the committee were
"skeptical about the political will of a Palestinian leadership that all
too often lapses into inflammatory rhetoric that belies their stated
commitment to peace." (Rep. Nita Lowey, chair of the House
Appropriations Committee's Subcommittee on State and Foreign Operations,
in a March 12 letter to the State Department)
After a phone
call with Abbas, the State Department issued assurances and Condoleeza
Rice said she was, "confident that President Abbas is someone who is
committed to the negotiated solution of this issue." On March 12, a day
before Rice's scheduled appearance before the appropriations
subcommittee, $100 million of the aid was released.
At
this moment, in classrooms in Gaza and the West Bank, in schools under
Hamas control or "moderate" Fatah control, children are being poisoned
with hate and distrust and readied to be warriors for the "final and
inevitable result ...the victory of the Muslims over the Jews." [Our Arabic Language for Fifth Grade
p. 67] With humanitarian intentions and a blind eye to what is actually
written in the textbooks and shown in the media, the U.S. funds hate
education.
The U.S. provides funding to Palestinian
education without any of the oversight it demands of American schools. I
have been an educator for 31 years and know the stringent standards for
accreditation and funding of schools in all fifty states. Perhaps a
team of educators could set minimum requirements of pedagogy as well as a
low level of tolerance for incitement towards violence, and only after
the standards are met would funds commence. The money would follow
performance, not promise.
As it stands now Americans need
to learn what Ariel Sharon understood: the most lethal weapon of mass
destruction is an education which implants the seeds of war in the next
generation and guarantees a tragic future for all.
Source: http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/04/palestinian_hateeducation_cont.html