The
Attitude to the Jews, Israel and Peace
in Palestinian, Arab and Iranian School Textbooks
By Dr. Arnon Groiss
March 21, 2006
Presented to the Seminar on "The Role of Textbooks in the
Middle East Conflict" for Members of the European Parliament
in Brussels.
ABSTRACT
Palestinian Textbooks
Compared with other Arab textbooks, the Palestinian texts
have fewer crude and abusive terms in reference to Israel and the Jews.
On the
other hand, they do not differ from the other Arab textbooks in their
general approach, which is based on three main elements:
1. Non-recognition of the adversary's legitimacy.
2. Avoidance of any real acquaintance with the other party, with
a strong tendency towards stereotyping and prejudice.
3. No attempt to reach a real peace based on reconciliation.
Non-recognition of the adversary's legitimacy is expressed in the PA
textbooks in various ways. The Jews are not referred to as having
been legitimate inhabitants of the country in the past (this role
is projected upon the Arabized Canaanites), and are not counted among
its legitimate inhabitants today. Tel Aviv and other modern Jewish
cities do not appear on their maps. There is no acknowledgement of
the country's Jewish holy places, which are represented as Muslim
holy places usurped by the Jews. A Hebrew inscription is erased from
a British Mandatory stamp. The establishment of the State of Israel
in 1948, on the basis of the UN resolution of 1947, is considered
occupation. Israel's territory does not bear the name "Israel" on
maps, and instead the name "Palestine" sometimes appears
there. Palestine sometimes replaces Israel as the sovereign state
in the region, and it – including the territory within the
pre 1967 borders – is depicted as Arab and Muslim, under the
Palestinian flag. Regions, cities and sites within Israel's pre-1967
borders are described as Palestinian. The phrase "Israeli territory" is
never used. It is replaced by circumlocutions: "the Lands of
1948", "the Interior", "the Green Line".
Stereotyping and prejudice are abundant. To begin with, the Palestinian
pupils are given no objective information about the Jewish people
or Israel, and neither Jews nor Israelis are portrayed as individual
human beings. The Jews are presented as enemies of both Jesus Christ
and the Prophet Muhammad throughout history, and are referred to
as today's killers of civilians, slaughterers, human wild beasts.
The Jewish national movement – Zionism – is described
as a colonialist movement connected with Western Imperialism, which
aspired from its very inception to expel and annihilate the Palestinians.
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion are portrayed as the confidential
resolutions of the first Zionist congress in a textbook that is still
available for sale, although a newly published version has omitted
that reference. All evil, including family violence in Palestinian
society is attributed to Israel. No mention is ever made of any possible
Palestinian responsibility for measures that Israel has taken (One
example would be the terrorist attacks that have led to the construction
of the security fence). Furthermore, the textbooks contain passages
that openly demonize Israel.
Although peace is taught in the Palestinian schools as a general ideal,
and the peace process with Israel is presented in a factual language,
nowhere is peace with Israel openly advocated, and the Oslo Accords
are sometimes presented as only a phase in the Palestinians violent
struggle for liberation. That struggle is greatly emphasized and
enhanced with the use of the traditional Islamic concepts of Jihad
and martyrdom. The area to be liberated is never limited to the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip. Rather, there are implications that it extends
to the territory of pre-1967 Israel as well. The books present in
a favorable light the perpetrators of terrorist activity against
Israel as martyrs and prisoners-of-war, thus indicating support.
Syrian, Saudi Arabian and Egyptian Textbooks
None of these books, including those used in Egypt, recognizes Israel
as a legitimate sovereign state, and, accordingly, Israel's name
is not to be found on their maps. In most cases, the name "Palestine" appears
instead, covering the whole territory of Israel, the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip. The Syrian textbooks also deny the existence of a
Jewish nation, although they trace the beginning of the conflict
to the wars between the ancient Israelites and the "Arab" Canaanites.
Only the Egyptian books, acknowledge the existence of Jewish holy
places in the country.
This non-recognition is accompanied by intensive stereotyping and prejudice.
In Syrian textbooks, the Jews are presented as racist, enemies of
the Arabs and of Muslims in general, indeed of the whole human race,
and this evidently serves to justify Anti-Semitism and the Holocaust.
They are portrayed as enemies of God and, thus, as deserving the
punishment of elimination (isti'sal in Arabic). In Saudi textbooks,
the Jews are characterized as deceitful, sly, treacherous, God's
enemies, and "wickedness in its very essence (al-khubth bi'aynihi
in Arabic)", whose perdition is hoped for. They are responsible
for world calamities, such as the French Revolution, the First World
War, the Bolshevik Revolution, prostitution, corruption and cultural
decadence. The Protocols of the Elders of Zion are quoted in this
context. The Egyptian textbooks portray the Jews as enemies of the
Egyptian people, and characterize them as people of treachery, greed,
hypocrisy, racism, disloyalty, etc.
Israel is depicted as an alien entity in the region which usurped the
land of Palestine. The Syrian textbooks describe it as wholly evil
and as cancer endangering the whole of the Arab world. In all textbooks,
Israel is portrayed as an aggressive, oppressive, terrorist state.
Peace with Israel is never mentioned in the Saudi textbooks. Rather,
it is the duty of Arabs and Muslims to liberate the whole of Palestine
by means of Jihad. Peace with Israel is considered high treason in
the Syrian textbooks, which denounce the late Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat on that account. Palestine should be fully liberated
and purified of "Zionist filth", which means the liquidation
of Israel. The liberation struggle should be violent, with a great
deal of emphasis put on the ideals of Jihad and martyrdom. Even in
Egyptian textbooks, which narrate the story of the peace process,
one can find expressions that still advocate war and Jihad against
Israel, though without naming it. Peace in these books is conditional
upon Israel's full compliance with the Arabs' demands, and, since
that has not yet occurred, Israel's sincerity regarding peace is
doubted.
Iranian Textbooks
The Jews are portrayed in a negative light in the Iranian textbooks,
in the context of their alleged conflict with the Prophet Muhammad,
as profit-oriented and arrogant people and as violators of agreements.
On the other hand, they are treated as a nation, with some historic
connection toPalestine, and their holy places in the land are recognized.
However, Zionism is denounced, Israel is not recognized as a legitimate
state, its name on the map is replaced by "occupied Palestine",
it is presented as part of world evil and as an enemy of Iran and the
Islamic Revolution. Hence, the struggle againstIsrael for the liberation
ofPalestine is part of that Revolution, with strong emphasis being
put on the Muslims' duty to liberateJerusalem and Al-Aqsa Mosque.
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