I PURELY COMMENTARY I Learning Versus Rock Hurling PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor Emeritus A ccusatory means have con- tributed to the prejudicing of Israel's status in human rights and commitments to educational freedoms. Constantly spreading reports about the closing of Arab schools in Israel's administered areas and claims of mistreatment of teachers and professors in Arab schools of higher learning keep adding to the multiplying hatreds. Many circulated charges which have received media notoriety are reduced in a factual statement in Near East Report. While this is a Jewish medium and is the organ of AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Com- mittee), the facts made known must be accepted with great seriousness. The following is a detailed accumulation of the status of the Arab school systems under Israel's administration defined by AIPAC under the headline "Schools As Battlegrounds": Despite its decision last week to begin the phased reopening of West Bank schools and universities, Israel remains under fire on the issue. But the rationale for the shutdown, the PLO's longtime campaign to for- ment violence in the schools, has received little attention from the media. Despite the intifada, nursery schools, kindergartens and most West Bank vocational schools have remained open because none of these have been used to instigate violence. Gaza schools have also stayed open, because militant Islamic fun- damentalists there use mosques, not schools, to incite their followers. "When this situation [as in Gaza) exists in Judea and Samaria, the schools there will be re-opened?' Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin declared last month. Israel has repeatedly offered to reopen any school whose principal will guarantee that it will be used to educate children rather than encourage rioting, an Israeli Embassy spokesman said. But educators wouldn't come forward for fear of being labeled "collaborators" — a vir- tual death warrant — by the PLO and its allies. Israel has also met with similar dead-ends in its efforts to negotiate the terms of school reopenings with West Bank village leaders. Educational opportunities have been greatly enhanced since Israel began administer- ing the territories in 1967. The number of elementary and secondary schools has increas- ed more than 50 percent, from 997 in 1967 to 1,560 in 1988. Women have been major beneficiaries of the boom. In 1970, less than one-fourth of women over age 15 had made it through eighth grade. By 1986, more than half had done so. The percentage of women who hadn't gone to school at all was slashed by more than half, drop- ping from 65.3 to 32.3 percent during the same period. Before 1967, there was not a single university in the West Bank; to- day there are six. Since the intifada began in December 1987, the PLO used the schools to turn children in- to cannon fodder. Prominent Palestinian journalist Daoud Kuttab gave a glowing account of this process: "In school, demonstrations and stone- throwing are part of a tradi- tion?' Children, he says, par- ticipate in such events by "play- ing hookey en masse" and "throwing stones at passing Israeli vehicles:' "To hit an Israeli car," Kuttab writes, "is to become a hero:' He adds that "schools are the natural place for a demonstration to begin because of the large number of children gathered in one place." (Journal of Palestine Studies, Spring 1988). According to Kuttab, children ages 7 to 10 are often "seen rolling tires to the middle of the road, pouring gasoline on them, and setting them afire." The advantage of using children that young, he says, is that "since these children are under the legal age, their capture does not lead to a prison term. Eleven to 14-year-olds usually put "large stones in the road to slow down or stop traffic" and attack Continued on Page 45 A Millenium Of East European Jewry R eplete with every conceivable function in peoplehood, indel- ible religious functions, political action, activism in the battle against anti-Jewish bias, combine into a unified identity that makes the East European Jewish record a history all its own. Out of it grew immensities personality-wise. Biographies by the scores are thereby appended to the ex- periences recorded. Inner struggles are as frequent as the battles against bigotry. Literary qualities, folklore and the emergence of great movements are functions in the assembled story. In the excellently researched an- thological compilation, The Golden Tradition — Jewish Life and Thought in Eastern Europe (Jason Aronson Publisher), Lucy S. Davidowicz shares the imperishable records about 60 of the most important and influential Jewish personalities whose records of political and literary activities magnify the THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS (US PS 275-520) is published every Friday with additional supplements the fourth week of March, the fourth week of August and the second week of November at 20300 Civic Center Drive, Southfield, Michigan. Second class postage paid at Southfield, Michigan and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send changes to: DETROIT JEWISH NEWS, 20300 Civic Center Drive, Suite 240, Southfield, Michigan 48076 $26 per year $33 per year out of state 60' single copy Vol. XCV No. 26 2 August 25, 1989 FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1989 Jewish roles of more than a century in these assembled literary gems. The mere mention of the biographies and quotations by Davidowicz will at once arouse fascina- tion and a temptation to share the con- tents, especially among the knowledge- able who are aware of the history of the recorded era. There are the earliest of the Chassidic rebbes like Menahem Mendel of Kotzk and famous labor leaders like Leon Trotsky. The Labor Zionist Yehuda Leib Gordon is alongside Peretz Smolenskin, the noted author of the Haskalah. Rabbi Israel Salanter, who tried to conciliate the rabbiniate with modernity, has a role in the texts that include the great historian Shimon Dubnow. Mendele Moher Seforim, is here among the creators of Yiddish literature, along with Reuben Brainin who was eminent in American Jewish literature and in Zionist leadership. Marc Chagall, Nahum Sokolow, Ahad HaAm, Chaim Nahman Bialik, Chaim Weizmann, Shlomo Zalman Shnair, Zalman Shazar, Vladimir Jabotinsky, Chaim Zhutlovsky, Shmarya Levin are among the very famous in the admired list. The very referral to the names of the many decades of dominant Jewish thinking arouses a desire to trace the movements with which they are align- ed. Every personality also represented an ideology. They were in the battle of contrasting ideas. Chassidism and Haskalah, Zionism and Bundism, socialism and the assimilatory aspects in life — these arise again as subjects for Jewish studies thanks to the research and chronology provided by Davidowicz. With the difficulty to utilize much of the treasured herein in an all-too- brief review it is urgent to indicate the effectiveness of a scholarly introduction. Davidowicz offers a historic analysis of the numerous controversies, the con- tributions toward them by the heads of the movements involved, the disputes that marked the differing ideas and the aspirations of the functioning movements. 'Before Haskalah and Chassidism, rabbinic Judaism had been more worldly, more tolerant and more responsive to social changes. After the Haskalah, rabbinic Judaism became conservative, inflexible and repressive; Chassidism, too, followed suit. There are many items to contend with in this volume. There is the folklore, the music of the masses evidenced by Davidowicz. There are the linguistics emphasized in the Zhutlov- sky recollections which judge Yiddish as a saving grace for Jewish survival. It is in the religious disputes that there are numerous attitudes of im- pressive importance. The Davidowicz in- troductory essay gives an excellent ac- count of Chassidism, the Haskalah movement, and rabbinical Judaism. There is an evaluation of the divisiveness among the religious. Davidowicz has an important ex- planatory note on the subject: "Before Haskalah and Chassidism, rabbinic Judaism had been more world- ly, more tolerant and more responsive to social changes. After the Haskalah, rabbinic Judaism became conservative, inflexible and repressive; Chassidism, too, followed suit." For an understanding of the refer- red to developments, it is necessary to read and compare the declarations in the quoted texts in The Golden Tradition. While it is impossible to go into more extensive detail, the variety of biographies and texts of the per- sonalities in this volume need em- phasis. Therefore it may not be too sur- prising that the one now mentioned is Leon Trotsky. It is because the Com- munist leader who refused to be judged as a Jew and insisted that he was "a social democrat only" now is brought to light again by his grandson who has become an extremely religious Jew. The international section of the London Economist recently published this item: Not much went right in the life of Lev Davidovich Bronstein. Things are going wrong still. Like most Jews born in the late 1880s in the "Pale of Settle- ment," the small part of imperial Russia where Jews were allow- ed to live, Trotsky had to choose Continued on Page 45