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Thursday 31 October 2013

Palestine and Israel: How will there be a Just Peace?


A school curriculum designed for post-primary schools in Ireland and Northern Ireland


A Report and critique by Dr. Denis MacEoin


Former Lecturer in Arabic and Islamic Studies, Newcastle University

 

Please note that the following text has been divided into black and red passages. Black (very roughly) represents summaries of what is in the curriculum (or direct quotations from it). Red denotes my own comments or material I have imported as commentary.

 

Executive Summary

 

· The organization responsible for the curriculum is 100% pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel.

 

·The NGOs recommended and referred to at length are all 100% pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel.

 

·The media (books, films, etc.) recommended as further information are all 100% pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel.

 

· The photographs used as a basis for stories are predominantly pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel. None are pro-Israel.

 

· The text itself is predominantly pro-Palestinian, often anti-Israel, and never pro-Israel.

 

· Individuals referred to and given favourable profiles are 100% pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel.

 

· The historical information in the text is frequently inaccurate and often pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel, mainly be leaving out vital information without which a genuine balance is impossible.

 

· Consistently, this reads like the transcript of a trial in which only one side is allowed to speak or to employ counsel.

 

· There is a routine failure to identify terms, facts or quotations as  controversial. E.g. ‘Occupies, occupation; the separation barrier = a wall’ without any indication of how these are understood by Israel.

 

· At almost every juncture, when facts are given (or statements that purport to be facts) there is no context. Palestinians suffer, but no-one suggest that they have played a huge part in bringing this about.

 

· There are almost no references to Palestinian terrorists, suicide bombers, incitement to anti-Semitism, or refusal to make peace.

 

· There are several important omissions, such as the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Hamas gets only a brief mention in the glossary. There are no Israeli NGOs or other bodies, nor of Israeli voices both public or official. Where, for example, are the voices of Israeli parents whose children have been killed or marred for life by Palestinian terrorists.

 

· There is grave misrepresentation of the refugee situation.

 

· The curriculum includes four maps that are seriously misleading and which come directly from pro-Palestinian sources.

 

· Israelis are shown throughout as abusers of human rights. Nothing positive is said about them. Yet Israel’s record for human rights is by far the most impressive in the Middle East.

 

·Nothing whatsoever is said about anti-Semitism, a centuries-old evil that lies at the root of so much of this conflict

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––


Let me start at the end. The curriculum finishes (p. 78) with a short list of books, reports, media and films.


The books are 7 in number. All titles are by authors notorious in their vehement anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian activism and have been condemned for their signal lack of balance. There are two reports, one by the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the other by Richard Falk, the Special Rapporteur for Palestine. Both are pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel, especially Falk’s work. He has been much criticized (by Canada, the US, the UK and other countries) for his blatant anti-Semitism. He is not balanced or reliable, but a proponent of hate speech.

 

The media and films come from the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey, an openly pro-Palestinian organization, and the Jerusalem Media and Communications Center, which was founded by a group of Palestinian journalists and is also openly pro-Palestinian.

 

I must ask how any pupil, wanting to do further reading, could obtain a fair and non-judgemental picture from these sources, which present only one side of a complex conflict. Of course, these titles are aimed at adults so, on that assumption, one solution is to add  half a dozen pro-Israel titles as a counterbalance. Here are some possibilities. The first, by a famous Irish statesman and writer, is out of date but remains one of the most balanced accounts.

 

1.
Conor Cruise O’Brien, The Siege
2.
Alan Dershowitz, The Case for Israel
3.
Yaacov Lozowick Right to Exist
4.
Denis MacEoin Dear Gary: Why You’re Wrong about Israel
5.
Alan Dershowitz The Case for Peace
6.
Dan Senor, Saul Singer Start-up Nation: The Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle

 

Alternatively, we could scrap all these and find half a dozen books of unimpugnable neutrality. These, however, would be hard to find.

 

May I also suggest the following films and reports, from which a selection can be made?

 

Short films

 

1.
A Black South African, Israel and Apartheid.Kenneth Meshoe, a member of the South African parliament, compares South African apartheid with Israel and concludes it is totally absent from the latter country. (Athttp://www.prageruniversity.com/Political-Science/A-Black-South-African-Israel-and-Apartheid.html#.Um0BdSSH9aH)
2.
Israeli Health Care of Palestinians. A detailed survey of a neglected issue. (Athttp://haifadiarist.blogspot.co.il/2013/09/israeli-health-care-of-palestinians.html)
3.
A History of the Middle East Conflict in 11 Minutes. A cartoon-based presentation that is nevertheless historically accurate. (Athttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZY8m0cm1oY)
4.
The Truth about the Refugees: Israel-Palestinian Conflict Another cartoon-based and spoken presentation by Danny Ayalon, a member of the Knesset, former Deputy Foreign Minister, and ambassador to the United States. (Athttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_3A6_qSBBQ)

 

Reports

 

1.
‘Why is Israel’s Presence in the Territories Still Called “Occupation”? by Avinoam Sharon (Athttp://jcpa.org/text/Occupation-Sharon.pdf)
2.
‘Disputing Occupation: Israel’s Borders and Settlements in International Law’ by Prof. Eugene Kontorovich, Professor of Law at Northwestern University. A very long but crystal clear lecture. (Athttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYZBjoeeehg)
3.
‘The Fogel Family Condolence Guest Book’ (Athttp://fogelfamilyguestbook.blogspot.co.uk/). A commemoration in text and photographs of the appalling massacre of a Jewish family in the town of Itamar in 2011.
4.
‘Hamas Charter 1988’ (Athttp://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/hamas.asp). This is the Yale Law School archived translation of the crippling charter that defines Hamas’s policy regarding Israel.
5.
‘Palestinian Minors Involvement in Terrorism and the Israeli Authorities Legal Framework and Statistics’ (Athttp://docstalk.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/fyi-palestinian-minors-involvement-in.html). From the Israeli Ministry of Justice. A valuable rebuttal of the claims made in the curriculum concerning Israeli treatment of Palestinian children.
6.
Middle-East-Info (At http://www.middle-east-info.org/links/index.htm#mehistoricaldoc). Carries a very large number of links to maps, treaties and documents, as well as a link to Arab and Iranian media and many others to Middle East think tanks.

 

NGOs

1.
NGO Monitor (At http://www.ngo-monitor.org/)
2.
UN Watch

(At http://www.unwatch.org/site/c.bdKKISNqEmG/b.1277549/k.D7FE/UN_Watch__Monitoring_the_UN_Promoting_Human_Rights.htm

3.
Pro-Israel.org (At http://www.pro-israel.org/)
4.
Memri (Middle East Media Research Institute) (Athttp://www.memri.org/)
5.
Honest Reporting (At http://honestreporting.com/)
6.
The Middle East Forum (At http://www.meforum.org/)
7.
The Israel Project (http://www.theisraelproject.org/)

 

 

The bias shown throughout this curriculum should not come as a surprise. To evaluate the curriculum means evaluating those behind it.

 

1.
Marie Crawley (chair) is the former chairperson of the Irish Palestine Solidarity Campaign. The IPSC is the Irish equivalent of the UK Palestine Solidarity Campaign, one of the most outrageous pro-Palestine groups in Europe. Several branches of the UK PSC have been linked to neo-fascist groups. They are considered anti-Semitic and employ strong-arm tactics to force speakers off the stage in universities.
2.
Dr. Elaine Murtagh is a former member of the Executive Committee of the IPSC.
3.
Philip O’Connor is still active in the Trade Union Friends of Palestine. The TUFP is as hardline in its hatred for Israel as the IPSC.
4.
Dr. David Morrison reports for the IPSC. He is also stridently anti-US and UK.
5.
Hilary Minch took part in the Gaza Freedom March and is a former National Committee member of the IPSC. She is also active in the Boycott, Divestments and Sanctions movement, currently the most vicious anti-Israel campaign.
6.
Caitlin Ní Chonaill was very active in building the Palestine Solidarity movement in Ireland and was a member of the IPSC committee, as well as spokesperson and secretary of its Belfast branch.
7.
Stella Carroll has visited the Holy Land with the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine, a church-based organization which remains deeply anti-Israeli.
8.
Finally, Michael Robinson founded the Trade Union Friends of Palestine.

 

 

The two writers who worked on this project were Mary Gannon and Elaine Murtagh. As we have just seen, Ms Murtagh belongs to the board of Sadaka and cannot be regarded as a neutral commentator on any of the subjects dealt with in the curriculum. And I am – perhaps unreasonably – concerned that Mary Gannon also works for the CDU, to whom I have been advised to present this report.

 

There is also a list of five advisors, all female teachers in Catholic schools in Northern Ireland. While they may have been invaluable as experienced teachers accustomed to working with pupils of this age, it is hard to see what if any help they can have given with the content. It is somewhat shocking to note that no-one with professional expertise in this difficult subject area was involved in the writing or editing of the curriculum.

 

It seems that not a single person involved in creating this curriculum was able to provide balance from the Israeli side. This seems incredible to me and makes me think of the curriculum as nothing but pro-Palestinian propaganda. I cannot think of a single situation in which such a high level of bias would be tolerated in materials to be studied by vulnerable schoolchildren. Not a single balancing voice. I find that hard to believe. I would certainly never have given something so out of order to university students, let alone to young children, who are still susceptible to what they are told.

 

The bias continues throughout the curriculum. Let me explain.


Lessons 8-10

These call on students to engage with ‘human rights’ organizations (mostly NGOs), as follows:


‘In lessons 5-6 students looked at the barriers to peace and their relationship to international law and human rights. These next two lessons allow them to examine some relevant areas through the eyes of organisations working to find solutions:


A. The building of peaceful relationships between Israelis and Palestinians (The Parents Circle)


B. Combating the demolition of Palestinian housing in Jerusalem (The Israeli Committee against House Demolitions)


C. The replanting of olive trees destroyed to build the Separation Barrier (The Olive Tree Campaign)


D. Supporting Palestinian prisoners, including children (Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association)

.
Giving a voice to the experiences of Israeli soldiers serving in the occupied Palestinian territories (Breaking The Silence)
.
These NGOs are all presented as neutral bodies working for human rights. In fact,  All of them are notorious for their anti-Israel stance.

 

.
The Parents’ Circle is ostensibly a grouping of some 600 Israeli and Palestinian families who have suffered from terrorism. But it has been criticized as heavily biased and politically committed. To quote: ‘The parents of a fifteen-year-old girl, who was murdered by in an August 9, 2001 Jerusalem terror attack, wrote a blog, dated July 12, 2013, stating that while the Parent’s Circle “claims to speak for five or six hundred bereaved Israeli or Palestinian members,” it “exploit[s] bereavement to raise funds and to promote specific ideological positions.”’ The same source states: ‘They state that PCFF is “narrowly political” and “arouses deep disquiet” within bereaved families, adding that the “flow of substantial foreign grants to this small, unrepresentative group of activists ought to be critically reviewed.”

 

.
The Israel Committee against House Demolitions is a politically motivated organization well known for its anti-Israel stance. Here are some comments by NGO Monitor: Demonization of Israel: ICAHD’s rhetoric includes accusations of “ethnic cleansing,” “genocide,” “collective punishment,” and “apartheid.” ICAHD participated in “Israel Apartheid Week” 2010, and Jeff Halper, the group’s director, spoke in Glasgow about “Israeli Apartheid: the Case for BDS [Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions,” explaining how “Palestinians are ‘warehoused’ in Gaza” (March 17). Halper regularly refers to a so-called Israeli “Matrix of Control….” Halper linked this to “Palestinian Bantustans” that Israel is creating to “make its apartheid plan work.” Halper is also a support committee member of the Russell Tribunal, a mock court with an anti-Israel and anti-West agenda.

 

.
The Olive Tree Campaign This is an American campaign that only partly concerns itself with the controversy over olive trees in Samaria and Judaea or replanting them. Participants also take part in political discussions that have brought them into contact with well-known anti-Israel campaigners like Aziz Duwaik (Speaker of Hamas), George Rishmawi (co-founder of the International Solidarity Movement – ISM – the leading international anti-Israel body), and Mariam Qumsiyeh, a founder of the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

 

.
Addameer (al-Damir). ‘Al-Dameer engages in anti-Israel demonization while referring to terrorists as “martyrs” and speaks of the Palestinian “right to resist”’. Even if its apparent goals, this is not a reliable NGO for present purposes. It should not be forgotten that, in Palestinian society, terrorists, including murderers and mass murderers are treated as heroes if alive, exalted in public, and presented to schoolchildren as role models.

 

.
Breaking the Silence (Shovrim Shtika). Their criticisms are directed one-sidedly at Israel, never at the Palestinians with respect to terrorism or refusal to make peace. In 2009, Amost Harel wrote in Ha’aretz, the leading left-wing Israeli newspaper: ‘Breaking the Silence...has a clear political agenda, and can no longer be classed as a “human rights organization.” Any organization whose website includes the claim by members to expose the “corruption which permeates the military system” is not a neutral observer. The organization has a clear agenda: to expose the consequences of IDF troops serving in the West Bank and Gaza. This seems more of interest to its members than seeking justice for specific injustices.’ Writing in the leading Israeli paper, The Jerusalem Post, in 2012, Gerald Steinberg, a professor of political science at Bar-Ilan University, also writes about Breaking the Silence: ‘BtS’s campaigns to discredit the Israel Defence Force have turned the organization into an invaluable ally of those NGOs behind the “Durban Strategy” – with the explicit goal of “the complete international isolation” of Israel, using repeated accusations of “war crimes,” “genocide” and “apartheid.”

 

BtS’s policy of shedding light on actions by the Israeli military may be commendable up to a point, but in doing so, their lack of actual evidence for their many allegations, which is based on unreliable testimony, their blindness to Palestinian terror as a provocative fact or in the struggle, and their frequent failure to establish chronology make this an unreliable organization to cite in a context where balance is needed.

 

No organizations in the above lists work from the Israeli position, but are just bodies that are openly pro-Palestinian. Thus, there is a serious absence of balance. Palestinian terrorism and Palestinian insistence on a single Palestinian state in which Israel will be obliterated are issues passed over in silence. Several of these ‘human rights’ organizations have been involved in civil disobedience and the boycott of Israel. Addammeer calls for the abolition of the ‘death penalty’. This is deliberately provocative since there is not and never has been a death penalty in Israel. The only person to have been put to death in Israel was Adolf Eichmann, the notorious Nazi and architect of the Holocaust.

 

The reference to the ‘death penalty’ must be removed, unless it is used in a discussion of Gaza (where it is used) or the West Bank (where there is a moratorium, but where someone may legally be put to death simply for selling land to a Jew).



The NGOs mentioned must be balanced by reference to Israeli or pro-Israel NGOs. I suggest any of those listed above. In addition, StandWithUs is an international non-profit organization that chiefly works with young people and students (it runs a campaign called ‘Israeli Soldiers’ Stories’, which serves as a corrective to the negative claims of BtS). The UK-based Christian Friends of Israel, which is self-explanatory. And Israel 21C, which isn’t an NGO but a website with numerous links that explains in some detail the advances made by Israel in science, medicine, IT, and technology. Important for pupils with an interest in such matters.


On page 8, they claim to minimize controversy, but proceed to do the opposite. For example, on page 10, they refer to the ‘occupation of Palestine’. In fact, there is not and never has been a state of Palestine.

 

A historical corrective: Palestine (as ‘Palaestina’) was a term used by the ancient Romans following the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD. In the modern period that region was part of a province of the Ottoman Empire and was divided into different velayets, sanjaks, and the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem. The broad region was called Syria, as it had always been. There was no place called Palestine. After World War I, the British, with the agreement of the League of Nations, set up a Palestine Mandate (like the mandate of Iraq or the French mandates of Syria and, later, Lebanon. This is where the inaccurate references to ‘Palestine’ or a ‘Palestinian state’ originated. Eventually, if the Palestinians ever make peace with Israel, they may establish an independent state of Palestine.

 

The term ‘occupation’ used without caveat is extremely misleading. Many authorities in international law have argued that Israel does not occupy ‘Palestinian’ territory at all in any legal sense (as argued here by Avinoam Sharon on behalf of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs: jcpa.org/text/Occupation-Sharon.pdf Sharon is the former Chief Prosecutor for  Samaria and Judea [the West Bank] and Gaza). Among many other legal arguments, Sharon points out that just as the continued presence of American troops in Iraq after the handover of the country to the Iraqi Interim Government did not constitute occupation, so the complete withdrawal of an Israeli presence in Gaza and the partial withdrawal of Israel troops from the West Bank after the Oslo Agreements make talk of an occupation both absurd and legally untenable.

 

If the curriculum is to retain references to the presumed ‘occupation’, this must be done with a proper balance of facts. Whether this can be done for such a young readership is doubtful, but if that cannot be achieved the subject should dropped entirely.

 

It may also be worth commenting that the ‘occupation’ is only there so long as the Palestinians continue the use of terrorism and educate their children to hate Jews. It also depends on recognition that Jews are entitled to live in the West Bank and Gaza in the same way Palestinians are entitled to live in most other countries. Ending the ‘occupation’ depends as much on the Palestinians as on Israel. And that involves adherence to the terms of UN Resolution 242, which the Arabs continue to distort.

 

Part of a future Palestine is Gaza. Israel withdrew from it in 2005 (and has received over 14000 rockets in return). Israel has also withdrawn from the Sinai peninsula and southern Lebanon. It has on several occasions, therefore, exchanged land for peace and received very little peace in return.

 

On the same page there is a reference to ‘Palestinians living in Israel’.

This is misleading. There are many Arab citizens who live in Israel, with exactly the same rights and opportunities as Jewish citizens. In other words, they may be Arabs, but they are also Israelis.Palestinians are those Arabs who choose to live in the territory designated for a future Palestinian state.

 

On page 11, the document says that 21% of the Israeli population are Palestinians. This is, again, misleading, and for the same reason. The correct terms for this 21% are ‘Israeli Arabs’ or ‘Arab Israelis’.


There is, in my opinion, a reason for Sadaka’s blurring this situation. To speak of a ‘Palestine’ when there was no Palestine (and later only a British Mandate territory called Palestine), and to turn Arab Israelis into Palestinians serves an agenda that says Jews came illegally to the land, kicked out most of the ‘Palestinians’, and are opposed to the foundation of a Palestinian state. None of these latter statements is true.


Page 13 shows a series of photo captions. Some of these are perfectly neutral (the Western Wall, for example). Most are severely pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel. I have identified these below.



2. Palestinians demonstrating outside an Israeli jail, demanding the release of all Palestinian prisoners.

 

This implies that all Palestinian prisoners are innocent of any crime. In fact, such prisoners include murderers, terrorists, and the usual range of criminals. They have all been given fair trials, they live in Israeli prisons, which are among the most comfortable and well-managed in the world, they have been provided with legal assistance, and they know that anyone who is proven innocent will be released. Israel has, in fact, released Palestinian prisoners in large numbers in the hope of peace or as an exchange for dead or kidnapped Israelis. Doing so has had no noticeable effect on the Palestinians whatever. Terrorists released from Israeli gaols have repeatedly sworn to return to violence. This image should either be removed or balanced by a relevant Israeli image (the interior of an Israeli prison, for example?).


5. Demos against the security barrier at Bilin.

 

Although this mentions that the demonstrations at Bilin (Bil’in) are weekly, it does not say how violent they can be. A lot of rocks are thrown, and children are involved.

9.
IDF soldiers scuffle with Palestinian and foreign peace activists in a demo at Bilin

 

This is the second photograph showing a demo at Bil’in. It should be removed.


13. The funeral of an Islamic jihad militant, Kamal ad-Dahduh, killed on 25 September 2009. Note the use of ‘militant’. This is something of a weasel word. The vast majority of actions undertaken by Palestinian fighters are attacks (often suicide bombings) directed at Israeli civilians. That is, by definition, terrorism. Dahduh seems to fall into that category, if he is considered a ‘militant’.

 

If this photograph is used and captioned, it should be stated that he was a terrorist. The whole caption may need correction. B’tselem, a leading Israeli anti-Israel NGO has drawn up detailed lists of Palestinian deaths in Gaza that have resulted from Israeli attacks 

(http://www.btselem.org/statistics/fatalities/any/by-date-of-death/gaza/palestinians-killed-during-the-course-of-a-targeted-killing).

Kamal ad-Dahduh does not appear on this list or on any other online resource. No-one seems to have been killed by Israeli fire in September 2009. There are records of the deaths of an A’tah ad-Dahduh (19) and a Muhammad ad-Dahduh (43), but not of the one named in the caption. To correct this will require better information. If it is used, we should demand a photograph of an Israeli soldier’s funeral. This is a two-sided conflict.


17. IDF soldier guards blindfold Palestinian students.

I would require proper details about who the students are, if they are students, at what university, and when. Palestinian universities are well-known hotbeds of terrorist activity and recruitment. A balancing photograph might be one of the young Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who was kidnapped and sequestrated by Hamas for five years, from 2006 to 2011.


19. Nets erected by Palestinians in Hebron (to catch rubbish thrown on their marketplace)

 

It might be wise to balance this image with something related to the 1929 massacre of Jews in Hebron. I have visited Hebron and seen that the small Jewish community there is not well treated by the Muslim majority.


21. Palestinian woman sits by the ruins of her house.

 

There is no context for this image. No doubt the scene is tragic, but Israeli forces do not demolish houses without good reason, and such actions are taken within a broad legal context.


22. IDF soldiers search belongings of Palestinian farmers near Nablus.

 

Again, no context. A balance might be struck with a photograph of IDF soldiers uncovering arms or suicide vests at a checkpoint. Without the context of Palestinian terrorism, imagery often carries false meanings.


25. Palestinians demonstrate against poverty and unemployment.

 

Why not replace this with a photograph of Israelis protesting in 2011 and 2012 on social issues like the cost of living, the cost of housing, increases in poverty etc., similar to demos in European and US cities? This would show that Israel, whatever its successes, has problems too.


26 The separation barrier is described as a ‘Wall’.

 

This is highly misleading: only 2-3% of Israel’s security barrier is a wall and  none of it is ‘illegal’. The barrier has saved thousands of lives. That is more important than legality. The barrier remains essential because attempted or successful terrorist attacks continue: In September 2013 alone, there were 129 attacks in the West Bank and Jerusalem, an increase from 68 in August. There are dozens of similar barriers round the world: should that not be mentioned? A full list of walls and barriers round the world appears a few lines lower.


28. Palestinian girls in a refugee camp.

 

We may conclude that most of the photographs and their captions are neutral, eleven are pro-Palestinian or anti-Israel, none of them are critical of the Palestinians and none are favourable to the Israelis.

 

Here is a list of barriers and walls round the world.

 

US/Mexico Proposed. 3,360km. Several barriers already exist with Mexico (California, Texas, Arizona). This would cover the entire border. Anti-immigration.


 

Belfast, N. Ireland. Built early 1970s. Average 500m. Number around 40. Anti-terror.


 

Padua, Italy 2006. 85m. 3m-high, round mainly African Anelli estate. Internal.


 

Ceuta, Morocco 2001. 8km. €30m. EU-funded. Razor wire. Anti-immigration. Responsible for over 4,000 deaths.

 

Mellila, Morocco 1998. 11km. Anti-immigration.

 

Morocco/Western Sahara 1987. 2,700km. To keep out W. Saharan (Polisario) insurgents

 

Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt 2005. 20km. Anti-terror



 

Botswana/Zimbabwe 2003. 500km. Electrified. Anti-immigration.



 

South Africa/Mozambique 1975. 120km. Anti-immigration. Carries 3,300 volts. Has killed more people than Berlin Wall


 

Israel/West Bank. Under construction. 703km. Anti-terror.

 

Adhamiyya, Iraq 2007. 5km. Anti-terror.


 

Cyprus 1974. 300km. Conflict zone barrier between Turkish and Greek Cyprus.

 

Kuwait/Iraq 1991.* 193km. Built by United Nations.  Conflict zone barrier.


 

Saudi Arabia/Yemen 2004.* 75km. Anti-terror.


 

Saudi Arabia/Iraq. 900 km. Part of much longer security barrier to cover 6,500 kms of border.

 

United Arab Emirates/Oman 2007. 410km. Anti-immigration.


 

Russia/Chechnya. Proposed 2005. 700 km. Anti-terror


 

Russia . Electronic security barrier along old Soviet border.

 

Russia/Norway.

 

Russia/Finland.

 

Russia/China.

 

Russia/Mongolia

 

Kashmir 2004. 550km. Anti-terror (India).


 

Pakistan/Afghanistan Proposed 2005. 2,400km. Anti-terror (Pakistan).


 

Uzbekistan/Kyrgyzstan 1999.* Barbed wire. 870km. Conflict zone.

 

Uzbekistan/Afghanistan. Two fences, one barbed wire, one electrified with land mines. 130-mile border.

 

China/North Korea 2006. 1,416km. Conflict zone.


 

Korea Demilitarized Zone 1953. 248km. Av. 4 km wide. Patrolled by 2 million soldiers. Most heavily guarded border in world. Conflict zone.


 

China/Hong Kong 1999. 32km. Internal barrier.


 

China/Macau 1999. 340km. Internal barrier.


 

Brunei/Limbang 2005. 20km. Anti-immigration.


 

Thailand/Malaysia Proposed. 650km. Anti-immigration.

 

India/Pakistan.* Barbed and concertina wire, giant floodlights. Along 1,800-mile border.

 

India/Bangladesh.* 3,268km. Conflict zone.

 

India/Burma, in construction. To cover 1009-mile border.

 

Iran/Pakistan. 10-foot high wall for 700 km.

 

Greece/Turkey. Wall to be constructed along route of Evros River.



There are, as I have said, no photographs of the bad side of the Palestinians. The terrorism, the hero-worship of ‘martyrs’ who have killed whole families, the propaganda on radio and TV, and in schoolbooks that calls on children to regard murderers as heroes and heroines, that urges children to hate Jews as the ‘sons of apes and pigs’, that claims made to children that all of Israel will cease to exist and be replaced by a Palestinian state. There are photographs by the many thousand to illustrate this. Why did the curriculum designers not think of it? Could it have been their extremist pro-Palestinian bias?



P. 16 The text speaks of ‘Palestine’ in 1917. At that date, the land was still Southern Syria under Ottoman rule. Under 1947, the curriculum is critical of the UN Partition Plan.

 

The UN Partition Plan was put into practice by the UN General Assembly. While the authors of the curriculum may be critical of it, surely it demands too much of young children to grasp something of this order or to appreciate those criticisms when set beside the UN vote. Better to give the facts at this stage.

 

p. 16 ff. Timeline

 

1.
Israel controls all access points to Gaza: this is a clear mistake of fact.
2.
The total misdescription of the 1948 war: describing it as taking place between Israel and the Palestinians. It was, in fact, fought between Israel, Egypt, Transjordan (Jordan), Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq with minor involvement with ‘Palestinian’ Arab troops and Saudi Arabia.
3.
The omission of any explanation for the Six Day War.However, there is an account of Israeli aggression, despite the fact that the war was actually  defensive in nature from the Israeli side, again with several countries planning Israel’s outright destruction.
4.
The total omission of the 1973 Yom Kippur War/invasion of Israel, the planned destruction of Israel, near victory for Egypt and Syria, their support by several dictatorships. We also need to understand Israel’s trials in fighting back, and its eventual victory.
5.
The omission of Hamas from the text. The reference in the glossary to a term not used in the text is in itself indicative of the relevance of this omission. The information in the glossary makes no mention of Hamas's charter and 'military activities’ since 2004 although this includes firing thousands of missiles aimed at Israel's civilian population.
6.
The list of NGOs omits those defending and promoting Israeli human rights e.g. One Family, Israeli trauma centres and others mentioned above.
7.
The omission of an explanation or narrative regarding the forced emigration of Jews from Arab lands(misleadingly described as ‘Asia’ and ‘Africa’ in the diagram relating to population movements). 
8.
The omission of Anti-Semitism prior to the Holocaust,although this is vital information to explain the rise of Zionism
9.
The omission of any reference to Sderot. A resource on peace, human rights and justice cannot omit reference to a town whose civilians have been bombarded by several thousand missiles. 
10.
The omission of the external threats Israel has facedand continues to face, together with omission regarding peace treaties Israel has entered into with Jordan and Egypt.
11.
Omission of an explanation of peace negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians – who made what offers and how were they responded to? This is vital information in the context of young people exploring possible solutions in the future.
12.
The absence of further reading from an Israeli perspective – I have suggested some texts.



P. 18. For 1948, they speak of ‘the outbreak of war between Israelis and Palestinians’.

 

This is not how I, as a historian, would describe this event. Wars do not simply ‘break out’. In most cases, there is an aggressor state (or coalition or empire), and in this case five Arab countries (Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt, Iraq, and Syria – NOT ‘Palestinians’) deployed five armies to invade the fledgling State of Israel on the day after its establishment. The Israelis, small in number and much outnumbered by their enemies, nevertheless succeeded in averting a tragedy and won the war. The ‘Palestinians’ played a very limited part in these events. It ended with Gaza in the hands of the Egyptians and Jerusalem and the West Bank in the hands of the Jordanians. This is historical fact, and any mention of the war must be written to reflect who attacked and who was attacked.



P. 19. ‘Proclamation of the State of Israel. 750,000 Palestinians fled their homes’.

 

This is profoundly disingenuous. It is not said that Israel legally proclaimed a state in accordance with Britain’s and the international community’s aims in creating a mandate and the UN General Assembly resolution in favour of an Israeli state. It does not point out at all that a war started in 1948 and continued until 1949, as described above. Again, if this reference is kept, it must have historical facts rather than deliberate misrepresentation.

 

The flight of Palestinian refugees (whether 750,000 or 600,000) is deeply contentious. Some were undoubtedly expelled by Israeli troops fighting on several fronts at once. Many more were encouraged or forced to flee by the Arab Higher Committee or by officers of the Arab Liberation Army. The Israelis did not set out to put any Arabs to flight, though they did decide to do so in part after the war started. In several places, like Haifa, Jewish leaders pleaded with the Arab inhabitants to remain. Most Arabs fled out of natural fear when fighting approached their towns or villages,  in a war the Arabs started. This balance needs to be clarified.

 

Note that the UN estimate for Arab refugees was 711,000, not 750,000.

 

It needs to be explained that all refugees from this period round the world have been successfully resettled by the main UN refugee agency, UNHCR, but Palestinian refugees, who are dealt with separately and get about three times as much funding as their special agency, UNWRA, for the most part remain in refugees. Unlike all other refugees, Palestinians are allowed to transmit their status to their children and grandchildren for as many generations as they please. Confining them to camps and working exclusively through UNWRA is official policy in Arab countries. It is designed to make the refugees thorns in the flesh of Israel in the hope that they will one day exercise their Right of Return and flood Israel with millions of Palestinians, who will dismantle the Jewish state. No discussion of refugees should avoid this central fact, yet the present curriculum makes absolutely no mention of it.


For 1948-51, ‘700,000 Jews arrived from Europe’.

 

This is unbalanced. The Jews in question were survivors of the Holocaust, and their arrival in Israel was a matter for celebration. Not only that, but Israel had expressly been created to be a safe haven for Jews, so that the arrival of Jews like these in a Jewish state should come as no surprise. There is no reference to the larger number (900,000) of Sephardi Jews who were forced out of Arab lands after 1949. They too were refugees, but unlike Palestinian refugees, were made welcome in their new homes. Again, balance is needed.


p. 16. For 1967: ‘6-Day War – Israel occupies Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Palestinians in those areas living under military rule. Israel began to build settlements in Palestinian areas.

 

As for 1948, no explanation is given about how the war started (the Arabs planned another invasion and massed troops on Israel’s borders). We are just told that ‘Israel occupies’ and Palestinians now live under military rule. Israel begins settlements. No explanation is given about how UN Resolution 242 was drafted to allow ongoing Israeli settlement (within reasonable limits) of Gaza and the West Bank. No link is drawn between Israeli military rule and the use of terror by the PLO and other organizations.


No reference is made to the 1973 war, which started with another Arab invasion of Israel.


For 2010, ‘Palestinians now only have access to less than one-third of the West Bank.’

 

This is misleading. Palestinians have reasonably free access across 39% of the West Bank. Area A is entirely controlled by the Palestinian Authority, and it is a criminal offence for Israelis to enter it. And the one-third access statement needs to be balanced by the fact that built-up settlements constitute a mere 1.7% of West Bank land. The question of access has to be set alongside the long years of Palestinian terrorism. This curriculum has been written as though this extremely dangerous form of terrorism never existed.

 

p. 17 Four maps

 

These and similar maps have been widely distributed internationally and have always been used in the context of pro-Palestinian anti-Arab propaganda. They are seriously misleading In 2011 the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation/Radio Canada concluded that the maps are ‘erroneous, confused and incomplete’. It is hard to see why such maps, this described by a neutral body, should be used in a school curriculum.

 

Map 1.

This is often substituted by the same map with large numbers of Jewish settlements, kibbutzim and moshavim in the north. If I may cite the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs:

There was no independent country called “Palestine” in 1946. The area was under the League of Nations British Mandate following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in WWI, which had controlled “Palestine” for 400 years. Labeling the territory “Palestine” incorrectly implies that a state by that name existed before Israel and was subsequently destroyed by Israel.

‘This map misleadingly depicts Jewish-owned land eating away at the rest of the territory, drawing a false distinction between Jewish-owned land and the rest of the territory under the British Mandate – a single political entity. Even so, this map still omits the Jewish-majority population of Jerusalem.

‘This map also misleadingly portrays the rest of the territory as belonging to the Palestinian Arabs (who were later dispossessed of it and became refugees). An accurate depiction would not show a simple division between white and green, but a rainbow of colours depicting land owned by Jews, Palestinian Arabs, Arab absentee landlords from other countries and European churches. Most of the land was owned by Arab absentee landlords in Beirut, Cairo, Damascus and Baghdad. In fact, the largest area would have been unregistered public lands belonging to the British mandatory government. This wilful misrepresentation is designed to promote the false message that Israel exists on land stolen from its rightful owners – the Palestinian Arabs.

 

Map 2.

This map omits the designation of Jerusalem and Bethlehem as a UN administered corpus separatum, over which neither the Jewish nor the Arab state would have sovereignty for ten years pending a referendum of its residents on whether this arrangement should continue. It also avoids stating that, although the area proposed for the Jewish state is slightly larger, 60% of it was desert. Take away that 60% and the map would show a very different picture.

 

Map 3.

Between 1949 and 1967, the yellow areas were not ‘Palestine’. They had either been annexed to Jordan (West Bank, 1950-1967) or were under Egyptian military rule. This was a very different situation to what is portrayed in these maps.

 

Here is a simple map of Israel. The lower portion marked Negev Desert represents well over half of the country (which ends just north of the Sea of Galilee). This changes our perspective about how land was distributed between Arabs and Jews.

 

 

 

 

Map 4.

This map for 2012 implies that Israel has annexed areas of the West Bank. In fact, Israel exercises authority in these areas under the auspices of the Oslo Accords (1993) signed by both Israeli and Palestinian leaders.

‘This agreement divided the West Bank and Gaza into three areas: A, B and C. The Palestinians are responsible for both civil and security administration in Area A and exercise civil authority in Area B. Israel is responsible for security administration in Area B and both civil and security administration in Area C.

‘It is important to note that this was proposed as and continues to be a temporary situation. Israel has not permanently annexed Area C. The precise parameters of how much of Area C will remain under Israeli administration in a final-status agreement is subject to negotiations with the Palestinians and will almost certainly involve concomitant land-swaps so that the total area comprising a future Palestinian state will remain more or less unchanged from the territory depicted in Map 3.’

 

 

p. 18. For 2005: ‘2005: Withdrawal of Israeli settlers from Gaza strip. Israel still controlling all access to area.’

 

This ignores several things. No mention is made of the fact that the withdrawal from Gaza was reciprocated by some 14,000 rockets fired by Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other groups, targeted on Israeli civilians in Sderot and elsewhere, and an absolute refusal to make peace (the Hamas covenant says ‘Initiatives, and so-called peaceful solutions and international conferences, are in contradiction to the principles of the Islamic Resistance Movement’ and ‘There is no solution for the Palestinian question except through Jihad. Initiatives, proposals and international conferences are all a waste of time and vain endeavors.’) Nothing is said about the thousands of tons of food and other materials that Israel sends into Gaza on a daily basis. Nor is it mentioned that Israel is not the only country to impose a (partial) blockade on Gaza: t

a blockade has been put in place by the Egyptian government, which has destroyed over 1000 tunnels operated by Hamas to smuggle in goods and weapons. Then naval blockade is entirely legal and, from the point of view of Israel’s security, absolutely essential. Actual control of the Gaza Strip is in the hands of Hamas. The rest involves security measures for Israel and Egypt. If Hamas were to stop illegal and aggressive actions, security could be lifted and the Gazans would be free to be as free as any other Arab country. But the responsibility for that is theirs, not Israel’s. As we all know, if the Gardaí place pressure on drug smugglers and sellers, the remedy does not lie with the Gardaí but with the criminals, who are at liberty to stop their activities.

 

Here again, pupils will go away with a distorted view of the conflict.

 

p. 18 For 1947. ‘UN partition plan, granting 56% of the area to a Jewish state, though they only comprised 1/3 of the population and owned less than 6% of the land. Outbreak of war  between Israelis and Palestinians.’

 

No details at all of the numerous international conferences, agreements, League of Nations deliberations, UN deliberations, British negotiations, the total failure of the Ottoman state, the nature of all post-war agreements after World War I. If that is too complex for this age group, then it would better be explained more simply. But if this is directed at teachers, it is guaranteed to mislead. This statement refers to Jews having less than 6% of the land at this stage (7% would be more accurate), but fails to state  that the Jews had the worst land in the country but worked on it to create a thriving agricultural basis for a future state. This also fails to state that the territory given to the Jews had to be enough for large numbers of future Jewish refugees and as provision for future generations. The area in question had been calculated by several countries and the UN. Also, there is afailure to show that this was a period of a major Civil War between Jewish inhabitants and mandatory Arabs, aided by other Arabs. It omits the fact that the Arabs started hostilities in defiance of repeated Israeli calls for peace.

 

• p. 18: 1948:  ‘Proclamation of the State of Israel. 750,000 Palestinian refugees fled homes. West Bank & East Jerusalem came under Jordanian control. Gaza Strip came under Egyptian control.’

 

This is profoundly disingenuous. It is not said that Israel proclaimed a state in accordance with Britain’s aims in creating a mandate and the UN General Assembly resolution in favour of an Israeli state. It may be taken to mean that the Israelis made a unilateral declaration of independence. It did not. It does not point out at all that a war started in 1948 and continued until 1949 – the starting point for most of the conflict that has followed. The war was started by five Arab countries (Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Iraq) with the express aim of destroying the new Jewish state and returning the whole country to Arab rule. Not to mention any of this undermines any claim to historical balance. Israeli statistics for the number of Arab refugees are somewhere between 550,000 and 600,000, and this should have been included in the text.

 

• p. 19: ‘In 1948 all restrictions on Jewish immigration to Palestine were lifted. Between 1948 -1951, 700,000 Jews arrived from Europe, including two thirds of the Jews displaced after World War 2.’

 

This is inaccurate and omissive. The figure should be 600,000. The Jews who were ‘displaced’ were not simply displaced persons, but Holocaust survivors. The British kept them in interment camps in Cyprus after World War II. The entry makes no mention of the 900,000 displaced Jews expelled from Arab states, of whom 580,000 moved to Israel. In both cases, Israel acted as a haven for Jews fleeing from tyranny and bigotry. By leaving this unsaid, schoolchildren may see the Jews as people intent on taking other people’s property.

 

 

• p. 19 For 1967: ‘Six-Day’ War – ‘Israel occupies Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Palestinians in those areas living under military rule. Israel begin to build settlements in Palestinian areas.’

 

As for 1948, no explanation is given about how the war started or how the Arab states involved were on the brink of yet another invasion of Israel. We are told that ‘Israel occupies’ and Palestinians now live under military rule, without any reference to the legality of occupation following a defensive war and the fact that Israel did not annex these territories and has offered to return them once the Palestinians give up hostilities. ‘Israel begins settlements’. No explanation about how UN Resolution 242 was drafted to allow ongoing Israeli settlement (within reasonable limits) of Gaza and the West Bank (Judea and Samaria). No link between Israeli military rule and the use of terror by the PLO and other Islamist organizations.

 

• p. 19.

The timeline comes to an end in 1967. There is no mention of several important matters: the 1973 Yom Kippur war, when Arab armies attempted for the third time to invade and destroy Israel, and Israel fought back and snatched victory out of the jaws of a near-defeat. The security barrier is not mentioned. The Oslo Accords and the creation of the Palestine Authority are not mentioned. The 2005 Israeli withdrawal from Gaza is not mentioned. The two engagements  between Israel and Gaza are not mentioned. The rocket attacks from Gaza are not referred to. The war with Hizbullah is not mentioned. The 2008 peace talks and their failure are not mentioned. The 2008 peace talks with Syria are not mentioned. The 2007 and 2009 talks with the Palestinians are not mentioned. The 2010 direct talks are not mentioned. The Camp David fiasco is not mentioned. The two intifadas are ignored. There is no mention of the current peace talks or of the Fogel murders in 2011. Such major omissions must be put into the text.

 

Furthermore, not a single positive word is said about Israel anywhere in the timeline or elsewhere. Israel’s record in women’s rights, gay rights, the rights of religious minorities like the Baha’is (whose world centre in Haifa stands in contrast to the persecutions in Iran and elsewhere), international aid, multiculturalism, bilingualism, education, international agricultural development (especially in Africa), medicine, technology, computing, education, the arts, free speech, an open press, democracy, and much more is passed over in total silence despite the fact that Israel is a world leader in so many fields. Israelis are only portrayed as aggressive abusers of human rights, something I would argue they are not. Similarly, the Palestinian record as the world’s leader in terrorism is conveniently forgotten. How can a curriculum with such omissions bring pupils to an understanding of the truth between both sides? We need to add some lines or a section to acknowledge the staggering contribution of Israel in so many fields. And it will be morally positive for children to learn that Jews have created so much out of the ashes of six million dead.

 

 

• The Glossary on p. 77 has a short entry for Hamas.

 

While slanted, the entry does give some idea of Hamas’s aggression, but says nothing of the range. However, although Hamas is an important feature in any discussion of the contemporary situation, it is not mentioned once in the text – a remarkable omission. We need a reference or two to their 1988 Charter, which rejects peace out of hand, and some mention of their attachment to jihad-based terrorism, as well as their treatment of other Palestinians.

 

• The map showing Jewish and Arab movement is misleading.

 

The captions for Jewish movement into Israel are labelled ‘Europe’, ‘Africa’, ‘Asia’ and ‘Unknown Origin’. Europe is clear. But ‘Africa’ can only mean North Africa and, to a small extent, South Africa (but this gives no idea of the timescale for Morocco, for example; or the fact that South African Jews made up less than 2000 emigrants up to 1960). The departures from Ethiopia come much later. ‘Asia’ is just as vague. It does not refer to the Far East or even India, but to the Middle East and the flight of Jews from neighbouring countries. This needs to be specified, as do the numbers.

 

• Another striking omission is the absence of any reference to European anti-Semitism in the lead up to the Holocaust, or to Islamic anti-Semitism as an ongoing factor in perpetuating the conflict.

 

We need to add references to both of these and to the growing rate of anti-Semitic sentiment and actions in most European countries. This is important because it reflects the original animosity towards Jews that impelled Zionists to seek the creation of Israel as a secure haven.

 

• Yet another omission relates to conditions in Gaza.

 

While that is a legitimate subject, it is entirely wrong for a resource on peace, human rights and justice to omit all reference to the southern Israeli city of Sderot, which has been subjected to thousands of bombardments by illegal rockets originating in Gaza. And while conditions in Gaza are not ideal, that is mainly because money has been poured into Hamas’s weaponry and into a range of luxury apartment buildings, hotels, and clubs or the purchase of luxury cars by the elite.

 

• We have to ask why there is no mention of the many external threats Israel has to face, many of which it continues to confront, of the peace treaties Israel has signed with Egypt and Jordan, or of the miniscule size of Israel when compared to the size of the Arab and Muslim worlds. In other words, we ask why there is so little perspective.

 

• There is no mention of the many peace negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians. If young people are expected to explore possible future solutions, they need to start with the content of previous offers and the (usually negative) responses to them. I have compiled a short list here in a footnote.


Pp. 21-27 Lesson Four. This lesson focuses on reasons why some Jews and Arabs left their homes in the 1940s.

Although this lesson seems balanced, it has some flaws. The story cards on pages 26 to 27 purport to give the stories of nine individuals, four Jews and five Arabs. Some of the content is surprising (e.g. Zionists threatening to explode a one-ton car bomb in the street), and I think we are owed some sort of sourcing to show whether these stories are fact-based or fiction. The numbers suggest some form of parity, but in fact they do not. All the Palestinian narratives show Arabs being forced out of their homes by Jews and often remaining in refugee camps. But three of the four Jewish stories, while giving other reasons for their own displacement speak of Jewish fighting to get land, taking Palestinian property, or resenting the offer of someone else’s home. Only one story shows Jews being expelled by Arab states. Nor is there anything about Arab responsibility for the Palestinian refugees and the policy of making them permanent.

 

The reference to the car bomb comes in Nina’s story:when war broke out between the Jews and the Palestinians, we had to flee from our home because Zionists threatened to detonate a 1 ton car bomb in our street.’ I find this worrying. The only incident I can find for 1947-48 is the explosion of a car bomb by the Irgun at the Damascus Gate, which killed 20 people. Irgun were very much at loggerheads with the majority of Zionists and were later disbanded. Many Jews were killed by bombs placed by Palestinians during this period, but this is not mentioned. But this account places all the blame for explosions on the Zionists (who remain, effectively, any passing Jew).

 

There are several citations from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. But no effort is made to link these to issues around ‘moving’. In the wrong hands, these could be used to show a poor human rights record for Israel when, in fact, it has the best human rights policies, legislation and practice in the Middle East. Overall, this section seems tendentious, but it could easily be improved. There should be less emphasis on what the wicked Jews did and some explanation of how that happened and the responsibility of Arab states for the exiling of both Palestinians and Jews. A very short box could be added on the significance of exile in Islamic religious and political thinking, based on the monumentally important hijra of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina. This could show that exile is not always a negative concept for Muslims.


‘Attacked by Jewish settlers’

 

Very few have ever moved for this reason, though the creation of some settlements has resulted in the eviction of Palestinian families.


‘Evicted from our home by Jewish forces’

 

There is no indication of what period this refers to, the reasons for the eviction, or whether the ‘Jewish forces’ were regular troops or independent militants like the Irgun. If it applies to the modern period, it is partly true but requires greater detail. If it refers to 1948-49, I recommend Benny Morris, 1948 as a source for evictions by Israelis in that period.



‘Home destroyed in war’

 

There is no reference to which war this was, to who started it, or to why it was destroyed.


There are two references to the Nazis and a concentration camp. Commendable as these are, they are not directly relevant to the Israeli experience after, say, 1948. The reference to Jewish settlers is, of course, contemporary.


P. 28. A map of population movements.

 

The map was designed by The Palestine Acedemic (sic) Society for the Study of International Affairs and is available from their website. PASSIA has published large numbers of well-produced maps that present demography and other matters from a Palestinian point of view.  None of the material in this curriculum comes from Israeli sources.

 

P. 33. 1948.

 

The text moves from the establishment of Israel directly to the 1949 ceasefire, with no explanation of the war, how it began, the combatants, the Arab rejection of any compromise (which laid the basis for future hostilities), the declarations of jihad, the relative sizes of forces and armaments.


‘Gaza blockade’

 

There are no references to the violent Hamas takeover, the destruction of Israeli equipment left to secure the Palestinian future, rocket fire, the two engagements, the legality of the blockade in terms of maritime law, or anything else of relevance.


P. 35. Cites UN Resolution 242.

 

This is misleading. It ignores the important fact that Israel accepted the resolution, whereas the PLO rejected it out of hand. The curriculum text reads: ‘Israel should withdraw from the West Bank (including East Jerusalem), because these occupations are illegal under international law,’ implying that this is the wording of the resolution. But it is not. Lord Caradon, the chief negotiator, and other international authorities deliberately omitted the words ‘all the territories’, meaning that Israel did not have to withdraw and that final borders must depend on the outcome of future negotiations between the warring parties. Israel has only been asked to withdraw from ‘territories’, without the definite article. There is no illegality about the occupation nor any about Israeli settlements within a limited area of Judea and Samaria.


P. 38. Reads: ‘Settlements are built on land confiscated from the Palestinian population.’ ‘Settlements are Israeli colonies built on Palestinian land which has been annexed or occupied by Israelis’.

 

This isn’t true, at least not in this simplistic sense. Israel has not annexed the West Bank and has no plans to do so. ‘Occupied’ is open to strong challenge from many international jurists such as Prof. Eugene Kontorovich. The majority of settlements are built on state-owned or ‘public’ land, with a smaller number bought by Jewish settlers from Arab owners. ‘Confiscated’ is entirely untrue. Settlements are by no means ‘colonies’, especially because there is no imperial system in force. These points should be made openly, perhaps with some finer detail. As it stands, the statement is a distortion of a complex reality.


P. 39. Refers to the Fourth Geneva Convention thus: ‘The Fourth Geneva convention prohibits occupying powers from transferring its citizens to the occupied territory
(Article 49).’

 

It should have been added that this involves a misreading of the Convention, in that many experts in international law, like Professor Gerald Steinberg, hold a very different interpretation with regard to the Israeli settlements. The International Red Cross confirmed many years ago that Article 49 of the Convention applied to the sort of deportation and transfer that the Nazis and others used during and after World War II. This doers not refer to the voluntary transfers of Israeli Jews. Furthermore, not all international jurists would describe Israel’s presence in Judea and Samaria as ‘occupation’, and this interpretation deserves at least a mention. Use of the Geneva Convention’s Article 49 in this context simply perpetuates one of many myths about Israel that are still in use.

 

 

 

 

p. 41.Key Facts for Refugees

 

Most of this page shows facts that favour a pro-Palestinian position. There is no mention of UNWRA, the agency responsible for the Palestinians alone. There is no attempt to explain why the Palestinians are the only refugees still in existence following World War II (all others were resettled years ago) and the only refugees now in their third or fourth generation. It says nothing about the intricate and sometimes violent relations between Palestinian refugees and the governments of the countries they live in. A former UNRWA official, Sir Alexander Galloway, said in April 1952: ‘The Arab States do not want to solve the refugee problem. They want to keep it as an open sore, as an affront to the United Nations and as a weapon against Israel. Arab leaders don’t give a damn whether the refugees live or die.’ This switches the balance greatly.

 

Part of the text reads: ‘UN General Assembly Resolution 194 states that: Refugees wishing to return to their homes should be permitted to do so Compensation should be paid to those choosing not to return Compensation should be paid to refugees for loss of or damage to property’.

 

This is a reasonable summary, but it omits any reference to the fact that it was opposed by Israel and was rejected out of hand by the Arabs. Nor is it fully clear that the resolution was written in the middle of a war in which the Arabs planned to exterminate the Jewish population and the Jews were fighting for their lives. In that respect, interpretation and application of the resolution was never going to be simple.


P. 42. This has a statement that ‘Israel should recognise its role in the creation and perpetuation of the Palestinian refugee upheaval.’

 

Israel has never failed to admit that it played a part in this (see, for example, the eminent Israeli historian Benny Morris, in his book 1948). But two vital points are overlooked. The first is that the Arabs (5 countries) began the war that led to the refugee problem. The second is that many, perhaps the majority of flights were made on orders from Arab forces. Their role is much greater than Israel’s. The third is that the Arab states (e.g. Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Kuwait and some others) have seldom admitted their sometimes cruel treatment (expulsion, murder) of their Palestinian brethren. As before, this should be a two-way discussion.


P. 43 The only two photographs are of Palestinian refugee camps.

 

Why not show Israeli camps where Syrian refugees are being houses, fed and treated?

 

p. 44 is on the Status of Jerusalem.

 

This includes a statement that when Palestinians build houses without permits, the Israelis demolish them. This seems simplistic. All citizens in the developed world (e.g. Ireland) require a permit to build a house, and if one is built without it, the state will demolish it. ‘If Palestinians would submit request for building permits, there could be thousands more approvals,’ said Capt Zidki Maman of the West Bank civil administration.



P. 44. Here, we are told that E. Jerusalem was part of ‘Palestine’.

 

It was, of course, part of Jordan when Israel took it. To repeat: there has never been a state called ‘Palestine’.


P. 47. This deals with the separation barrier. To illustrate it, we are linked to a video by well-known anti-Israel activist Roger Waters.

 

The video is not without merits, but it is thoroughly one-sided. At one point Waters narrates that the Wall will be over 700 kms long. He is wrong. The entire barrier is 700 km long. 90% is a fence. 10% or less is a wall. Nowhere is it explained why the wall and the checkpoints inside it are necessary, or how often would-be terrorists are picked up on an almost daily basis. There are dozens of terror attacks every month.

 

pp. 49-51. A long list of international bodies

 

Useful though this may be to adults, it seems irrelevant to children of this age. It seems to have been put here to prepare the way for the entry on the controversial Richard Falk – see below.


P. 51 is headed by a photograph of Richard Falk, the current UN Special Rapporteur for Palestine.

 

Falk is a bigot on many fronts. Following remarks he made after the Boston Marathon bombings, the Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird said ‘Once again, United Nations official Richard Falk has spewed more mean-spirited, anti-Semitic rhetoric, this time blaming the attacks in Boston on President Obama and the State of Israel. The United Nations should be ashamed to even be associated with such an individual.’ He has openly defended Ayatollah Khomeini and Mu’ammar Ghadhafi, and has been widely condemned as an anti-Semite. The US representative to the Human Rights Council, Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe, has called for Falk’s resignation: ‘His views and behavior, both official and unofficial, are offensive and provocative and do nothing to advance peace in the Middle East or to further the protection and promotion of human rights. We again call for his resignation.’

 

Surely not someone to cite favourably on a children’s curriculum.  

 

The rest of the discussion focuses on ‘the abuse of Palestinian children by the Israeli Authorities’. This is followed by a summary of a report on the abuse of Palestinian children by none other than Richard Falk. There is nothing from the Israeli authorities or social services on what is called here ‘child abuse’, and nothing on the many Israeli children who have been murdered or badly injured over the years. Nor is anything said about joint Israeli-Palestinian initiatives for children, encouraging participation in sports, music, or dialogue, nor about the extensive treatment of Palestinian children in Israeli hospitals or through heart transplant provision with organizations like ‘Save a Child’s Heart’. No doubt there are problems, but much that is said about Israel is myth or exaggeration.


p. 52 A summary of Falk’s report on Palestinian children

 

Whether or not we should take this at face value, it should not be the first and last word on this subject. If it remains, we need some form of official Israeli response to these accusations.


P. 53. ‘Key Questions’.

 

Almost every single question holds Israel to blame. From an educational point of view, please note that most of the questions are leading questions. Here they are:

 

1. What is the Human Rights issue that you want to inform us about?


2. Can you give us an overview of how rights are being denied  to children?


3. Which Human Rights conventions are involved?


4. Can you describe how children are arrested?


5. Were the children and their families informed of the chargesagainst them?


6. How was the interrogation of the children carried out?


7. How many children were in prison when you finished your report?


8. How young were they?


9. Were they held in special children’s facilities or with adults?


10. How many Palestinian children are prosecuted in the courts each year?


11. What kind of court are they tried in?


12. Can you describe how they are treated in court?


13. What recommendations are you making in relation to this issue?

 

These questions are too advanced for the age group they are aimed at. None of the children will have had any experience in such matters. Therefore, they will have to depend on secondary information, and the only information to which they will have been exposed are references in a pro-Palestinian curriculum and a report written by a notorious anti-Semite. This will not advance sensible dialogue or understanding.


P. 54. This presents a fairly accurate sketch of the UN Human Rights Council.

 

What it does not do for the present context is to expose the long history of the council’s extreme bias against Israel. Since its inception in 2006, the Council has criticized Israel at every session, and has seldom if ever criticized other countries. All its condemnations of Israel have been sponsored by a combination of Arab and Islamic countries. Although Israel has the best record in the Middle East in respect of democracy, women’s rights, gay rights, the rights of religious minorities, and acting against racism, it has not once been praised for these things by the Council, whereas countries like Sudan or Iran, with an appalling human rights record have been. It is not right to ask young children to master the intricacies of such political matters.

 

This recent news item explains the nature of the bias and the condemnation of it from within the UN itself:

 

‘GENEVA, Oct. 27 - Israel decided today that it will return to the UN Human Rights Council, two days before it is scheduled to undergo a quadrennial review of its human rights record on Tuesday.

 

‘Now is the time for the Council to show good faith on its part by heeding the calls of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, and his predecessor Kofi Annan, to both remove the selective agenda item on Israel -- the only provision of its kind focusing on a specific country – and to end the exclusion of Israel from any of the Council's five regional groups.

 

‘The Israel-only agenda was criticized by Mr. Ban after its adoption in June 2007 at the initiative of the Arab states. Mr. Ban “voiced disappointment at the Council decision to single out Israel as the only specific regional item on its agenda, given the range and scope of allegations of human rights violations throughout the world.” Nevertheless, it still remains in place.

 

‘The council’s permanent investigator on Israeli violations is mandated by the council to examine only Israel and not Hamas, Fatah, Islamic Jihad, or any other Arab state or group.

 

‘It is the only country mandate that examines the actions of only one side and that in advance presumes them to be violations.

 

‘The one who holds the post, Richard Falk, has endorsed Hamas, praised 9/11 conspiracy theorists, and was condemned this year by UN chief Ban Ki-moon, the U.S., the UK, and Canada, for implying that the Boston Marathon terrorist attacks were the fault of the U.S. and Israel. Falk will present a report to the UNGA on Tuesday calling for a boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) campaign to pressure Israel.

 

‘Leading Figures Oppose UNHRC’s Anti-Israel Bias

 

Regional Group Exclusion

 

• ‘“Israel [is] the only Member State that is not a member of one of the regional groups...This anomaly should be corrected. We must uphold the principle of equality among all United Nations Member States.” —Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan25 March 1998.

 

• ‘“The exclusion of Israel from the system of regional groupings [and] the intense focus given to some of Israel’s actions, while other situations sometimes fail to elicit the similar outrage […] have given a regrettable impression of bias and one-sidedness.” — Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, 12 December 1999

 

• ‘“We must uphold the principle of equality among Member States. I shall keep encouraging all concerned to find a solution.” — Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in regard to Israel’s exclusion from a regional group.

 

• ‘Late UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Sergio de Mello advocated the inclusion of Israel in the Western group and lobbied ambassadors in Geneva.

 

• ‘“[We] need to correct a long-standing anomaly that kept Israel from participating fully and equally in the work of the Organization” by including Israel as member of the Western European and Others Group in Geneva. — Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, 15 March 2005.

 

• ‘“Israel’s exclusion from the regional group system places the UN in breach of its fundamental obligations regarding sovereign equality and is thus illegal… The need now to redress it is urgent.” —Sir Robert Jennings, QC, former President of the International Court of Justice.

 

Biased Agenda Item and Resolutions

 

• ‘“[I am disappointed by] the Council decision to single out Israel as the only specific regional item on its agenda, given the range and scope of allegations of human rights violations throughout the world." —UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, 20 June 2007.

 

• ‘“I know that Israelis see hypocrisy and double standards in the intense scrutiny given to some of its actions, while other situations fail to elicit the world’s outrage and condemnations.” —Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, 25 March 1998.

 

• ‘Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in his message to the Human Rights Council on 29 November 2006, expressed the hope that the Council would deal with the Middle East issue “in an impartial way” and “not allow it to monopolize attention at the expense of others where there are equally grave or even graver violations.”

 

• ‘“I believe the actions of some UN bodies may themselves be counterproductive. The Human Rights Council, for example, has already held three special sessions focused on the Arab-Israeli conflict. I hope the Council will take care to handle the issue in an impartial way, and not allow it to monopolize attention at the expense of other situations where there are no less grave violations, or even worse.” —Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, addressing the Security Council, 12 December 2006.

 

The focus of the Sadaka Curriculum on the UN, the UN Human Rights Committee, and its Special Rapporteur Richard Falk is completely undermined by the total absence of impartiality when dealing with Israel. These elements require major correction, giving priority to UN leaders like Ban Ki Moon and Kofi Annan and not the opinions of a conspiracy theorist and anti-Semite like Richard Falk.


P. 55 The NGOs listed here are all, as we have seen before, decidedly anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian.


P. 59 says Jerusalem was ‘governed’ by Jordan, which sounds benign. It was, in fact, conquered by Jordan in the 1948 war.

 

It would make sense to add that, under Jordanian rule, conditions were bad for the non-Muslim population. No fewer than 58 yeshivas and synagogues were destroyed, and both Jews and Christians were placed under difficult restrictions. The reconquest of Jerusalem in 1967 was a massive relief to the population, and similar restrictions were not placed on Muslims.

 

A section on East Jerusalem follows, all of which is critical of Israel. References to house demolitions as before.


P. 64. Photo of Jeff Harper of the Israeli Committee against House Demolitions. He is quoted on how we should ‘Reframe the conflict’.

 

There is no alternative Jewish or Israeli view. He is not a friend of Israel. Again, balance has been thrown out the window.


P. 66. We are shown a list of peace talks between Israel and the Arabs/Palestinians.

 

Although reasonable, this is not as complete as the list I have supplied in footnote 1. There is no mention of the fact that the Palestinians walked away from these. The Egyptians have made peace with Israel. The Jordanians have made peace with Israel. But the Palestinians have not. And the text here should have cited the famous and influential clause from the 1967 Khartoum Declaration by the Arab League: ‘no peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel, no negotiations with it....’


P. 70 to Proposals. This gives the refugees four choices, one of which is for refugees to go to Israel.

 

The text does not say so, but the first 3 options depend on the agreement of the relevant state. Option Four is the dominant theme of Palestinian propaganda, which is a call for the ‘return’ of all Palestinians to Israel, in order to create a Palestinian state ‘from the river to the sea’, something taught in all Palestinian schools and summer camps. It also ignores the reality: if all Palestinians moved to Israel, there would be no more Israeli state. The new Palestine would inevitably join the chaos of the Arab Spring.


P.77. Glossary: ‘The Palestine Liberation Organisation was founded in 1964 with the intent to establish an independent Palestinian state on the territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. Since 1988, its goal has been redefined to establishing a state only in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.’

 

This is disingenuous. Schoolbooks, maps, TV quizzes all contain references to ‘from the river to the sea’. The glossary entry makes the PLO seem quite moderate, whereas it continues to advance a policy of a total takeover.’

 

 

Dr. Denis MacEoin

 

Former Lecturer in Arabic and Islamic Studies, Newcastle University

Middle East Forum Fellow


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