JULIE WIENER Staff Writer S eizing When The Syllabus Is Hatred on the Littleton, Colo.- spawned concerns about youth vio- lence, a small local organi- zation is launching a stu- .`*.:A ■ ‘':W.:,'NO:\k,..‘,i&X,KM.,\WM:*::;.,RM14,:2k0&.:,. .44, :';'. , :. ‘ AW dent campaign protesting `*s .4*,, ,,KSW'' 4`$,,',A'',.,* 0.`,X0 40,*04*42:1***•',%.,, W, what it describes as the 0$it .5 - : , K, 4.**44, 0% <*kierM44 ibiitkM04**, *X*,\U' :;'..iet, ?. : 1 ,.**;2•:,,,.... ,kkk4,* 03X,..*. , + $'40,04*. teaching of hatred in .4**10&24W4 N:W.,. I.k.:\k&tkOkOk,k,tkV.*:?'6'07:4*W:. .. . ..,: Palestinian schools. \,...k,.§.". -,..: 3w;,::::-.. .:.: s,s,,,,,,, ,:::,,,,,,,...,,,,,, .....:,,,,,,,,,..,,,,,.:.,,,,,,,,,,, skyWiss,1 But spokespersons for peace advocacy organiza- tions and local Arab organi- zations wonder if the pro- ject will accomplish any- thing of substance. Some say the effort is merely a veiled attempt to undermine the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians. The 1-year-old Mothers Against Teaching Children to Kill and Hate (MATCKH) is visiting local Jewish schools, talking about anti-Jewish and anti- Israeli statements in Palestinian textbooks and urging students to write 0 0 0 their counterparts in the Palestinian Authority, requesting a more peace-ori- ented curriculum. The way MATKCH's impassioned president, Molly Resnick, sees it, if American Jews are fearful that violent Trilateral Anti-Incitement Committee at the center, which is registered as a movies and video games can influence established following November's Wye non-profit organization in the United teens like Eric Harris and Dylan Accords between Israel and the States and funded by two philan- Klebold to kill, they should be doubly Palestinians. The center's Marcus is an thropists from Israel and Monaco, fearful about how violent messages in Israeli representative on the committee. read 140 textbooks used in Palestinian state-sanctioned textbooks can influ- Resnick envisions her student off- schools, noting references to Israel, ence Palestinian children to commit shoot, called Kids for Peace, blossom- Jews, peace, jihad and violence. acts of terrorism in Israel or elsewhere. ing into a national effort, although so "Our objective in publicizing the And for Resnick, until the issue is far it is just getting started locally. The schoolbooks is to create awareness of addressed, all peace efforts between group is not making any efforts to the problem, which will eventually lead Israelis and Palestinians are simply engage Arab Americans. to new books that not only eliminate "building on a rotten foundation." "Our job is first to the vicious hate against "The Arabs have to prove that they wake up our people to the Jews and Israel but will Molly Resnic k talks to mean it when they say they want issue and stop Americans include references to Jews Akiva stuclen is about peace," she said. "If you called me from sending money until and Israel as legitimate Palestinian textbooks. names, but then said to others that it's resolved," said Resnick. neighbors," wrote Itamar you wanted to be my friend, I would Spokespersons for Marcus, the center's say you must be joking." national peace-related and local Arab research director, in an e-mail interview. The objectionable statements in the organizations said they had not heard The books are based on old Palestinian textbooks — which of Kids for Peace, but they expressed Jordanian ones; when Israel controlled include descriptions of Jews as "cun- skepticism about the project's efficacy. the Palestinian schools, the offensive ning" and "treacherous," calls for a "I don't know how effective it is to material was expunged from the holy war against Israel and references have a Jewish group telling Arabs their books, but the Palestinian Authority to the State of Israel as "Palestine" — books are wrong, or vice versa, without reintroduced the material in new were found in a recent study conduct- a dialogue on both sides," said Meredith printings, said Marcus. ed by the Jerusalem-based Center for Katz. She is associate executive director Both Palestinian and Israeli text- Monitoring the Impact of Peace. Aides of Seeds of Peace, a summer camp in books are under discussion in the N,-, 0,80 6s,, , Maine that brings Jewish and Arab teens together to discuss the Middle East conflict. "I don't think last- ing change ever occurs when some- thing is imposed on people," Katz added. Thomas Smerling is the Washington, D.C.-based director of the Israel Policy Forum, an "indepen- dent Jewish leader- ship organization that supports the peace process as vital to Israeli security and American interests." He said that while the "many instances of hatred" found in Arab media and text- books are reprehensi- ble, he questioned the rationale of the "cottage industry?' of Jewish organizations dedicated to exposing these instances. "Is it a construc- tive effort to get the Palestinians to make the necessary changes or is it sim- ply a game of `gotcha' to show how terrible they are and, therefore, pull the plug on the Oslo accords?" Terry Ahwal, a Palestinian American who is the former director of the local Arab American Anti- Discrimination Committee and a board member of the local Seeds of Peace chapter, said she opposed teach- ing hatred. But, "It's very naive to send letters to schools without exam- ining the issue as a whole and what the books in Israel teach." Ahwal, who grew up in the West Bank city of Ramallah, said Palestinian children aren't learning hatred from what is taught in school, but from interactions with Israeli soldiers, the difficult living conditions under Israeli occupation and the frustrations caused by ongoing border closings and Israeli restrictions on Palestinian travel. "Hatred came in because of the action of the occupier, not because of what someone is teaching in school," she said. "When your teacher is taken away in front of you and shackled, or when a child sees his father taken (-/ A campaign against messages in Palestinian textbooks draws some questions of its own. c=( 5/14 1999 6 Detroit Jewish News