oints of view >> Send letters to: letters@thejewishnews.com Essay Editorial Calculated Incitement lewish Camping Excellent Choice 9y Family Judge Indoctrinating of Palestinian kids still an underplayed core barrier to peace. A ny peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians would be stymied out of the gate by a Palestinian Authority-sanctioned education system that's essentially a lesson plan for hatred and terror — for cultivating a fundamentally poisoned message to sway highly impressionable kids. This revelation isn't new But a new investigation by a respected Israeli research service exposes the scope of the propaganda emanating from Palestinian Authority Robert (PA.) schools and other Contribu official educational outlets. Edito Such brainwashing is one of the gravest impediments to hopes for lasting Israeli-Palestinian peace. The P.A. governs Palestinian-controlled areas of the West Bank via its Fatah politi- cal party. It also would technically preside over the Gaza Strip were Fatah and Hamas, the terrorist organization now ruling that coastal strip, to truly join forces. International debate over the deal struck between world powers and Tehran to limit Iran's nuclear development program, a critical and urgent global concern, has overshadowed the July 21 release of a compelling investigation by Israel-based Palestinian Media Watch (PMW). The probe merits its moment in the public spotlight because no peace pact between Jerusalem and Ramallah stands a chance without quick reversal of the P.A. educa- tional system's approach. Embedded Provocation Over the years, PMW has documented how Palestinian Authority classrooms represent crucibles for repulsing Israel, the Jewish state. Israel has done itself no favors by continuing to be a military occupier of the disputed biblical lands of Judea and Samaria that make up the present-day West Bank. But Israel has found itself in that defensive posture because of Palestinian leaders who have embraced a philosophy of hatred and violence toward Israel and who have rejected its repeated gestures toward resuming meaningful talks. In a summary of its special report "Palestinian Authority Education: A Recipe for Hate and Terror; PMW recounts how the P.A. has named schools after terrorists, how school activities include visits to the homes of these "mar- tyrs for Allah:' how teachers liken terror- ists to role models and imagine a world without Israel, and how a PA.-funded chil- 32 August 6 • 2015 dren's magazine glorifies Adolf Hitler. Particularly troubling is how kids are welcome to recite poems on official P.A. TV shows that describe Jews as "pigs and monkeys", "enemies of Allah" and "most evil of creations" — and describe Israel as "Satan with a tail:' "When a boy told a P.A. TV news reporter that he had learned in schools to 'fight the Jews and kill them: his state- ment was included in the P.A. TV evening news report without comment or correction:' accord- ing to PMW, whose founder and director, Itamar Marcus, is a pas- sionate champion for change in how the P.A. educates its kids. Mandela Influence Last summer, I visited the Robben Island jail cell of longtime political prisoner and anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela, who inspired the peaceful revolution from white-only rule and became South Africa's first black president. He died in 2013. It was intriguing when Marcus invoked in his report of P.A. education a quote from Mandela's 1994 autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom: "No one is born hating Mandela another person because of the color of his skin or his background or his religion. People must learn to hate; and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite" Marcus added, "Tragically, the Palestinian Authority, under the leadership of Mahmoud Abbas, is doing what Mandela warned against: The P.A. is teaching its children to hate. The P.A. and the politically dominant Fatah movement, also headed by Abbas, teach Palestinian children Abbas through their official communication structures that Jews and Israelis possess inherently evil character traits. Fighting them is, therefore, said to be heroic and even Allalis will. Terrorists who have murdered dozens of Israeli civilians are said to be national heroes and Islamic martyrs." That's a chilling picture, to say the least. Remember, Marcus is talking about the EA., Israel's supposed peace partner, not Hamas or its Gaza-based partner in terror, Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Even more disturbing is the P.A. com- mitment to discourage or discredit peace- building contacts between Palestinian and Israeli youth — branding such contacts "a crime against humanity:' according to PMW. The PLO Take On April 30, I joined a discussion in Ramallah, the West Bank seat of govern- ment for the PA., between a Temple Israel of West Bloomfield delegation and Xavier Abu Eid, communica- tions adviser to the PLO Negotiations Support Unit "We refuse to teach to hate Jews:' he told us. The Yasser Arafat- Eid founded Palestine Liberation Organization is the negotiating oversight arm for Fatah and its chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat. The PLO recognized the State of Israel's right to exist in 1988, but will never acknowledge it as a Jewish state in deference to the Israeli Arabs living there, Eid insisted. Eid maintained that "problematic issues" plague Palestinian and Israeli textbooks. He's right: Israel continues to clean up dis- tortions in its teaching materials. But Eid argued that Palestinian teens and preteens who hurl stones at Israeli soldiers do so out of frustration to living "under an occupa- tion:' not because of anything they may have learned via government channels. "Whoever says that either wants to dehu- manize Palestinians or doesn't know what's going on here' said Eid, a smart, crafty guy who articulately makes the Palestinian case when the news media or Western diplo- mats come calling. Eid's well-honed but deceptive narrative reinforces why the P.A. needs to engage in introspection and alter ideology in pursuit of a spur toward creating a peace-promot- ing educational framework, as PMW sug- gests. The dispiriting truth is that a sudden positive shift in P.A. educational direction still would require maybe two generations of painstaking cultural and political reboot- ing to completely overcome the hostility toward Jews and Zionism long infused into Palestinian youth. ❑ n the midst of their Israeli-born par- ents' bitter divorce battle in Oakland County Circuit Court, the three young children of Omer Tsimhoni and Maya Eibschitz-Tsimhoni are in a great place to help find their way – a Jewish sum- mer camp. Along with Jewish schools, Jewish youth groups and Israel experiences, such camps help build Jewish identity and interest in their young charges as well as nurture all-around character. The Tsimhoni children, ages 9, 10 and 14, are caught in the crosshairs of a custody battle before Oakland County Family Court Judge Lisa Gorcyca. So a summer camp opportunity that blends nature's wonder with Jewish values should be a welcome partial antidote to the strain and struggle of their parents' legal maneuvering. On June 24, Gorcyca ordered the kids to Mandy's Place, a dorm-style wing of the Oakland County Children's Village detention center. The ruling: They were in civil contempt of court for refusing to have lunch with or even speak to their father after she had ordered them to have a "healthy relationship" with him. Mandy's Place is a temporary setting for abused or neglected children. On July 10, after her bold order grabbed international headlines, Gorcyca re- directed the kids to the nearby Jewish summer camp. Meanwhile, the judge is wading through the legal briar patch surround- ing the divorce proceedings in hopes of coaxing the parents toward a satisfac- tory resolution that yields productive, not alienating, joint legal custody. In an unrelated research study of the long-term impact of Jewish overnight camp, the New York-based Foundation for Jewish Camp concluded: "The bonding experience of camp not only builds a long-lasting taste and yearn- ing for community, it also create habits of Jewish practice. It makes Judaism part and parcel of life's most joyous moments. Moreover, those moments are experienced as integral parts of life in a beloved community." Summer camp ends in mid-August so campers and their families can prepare for the new school year. Chances are their month-long stay at a Jewish sum- mer camp will have helped the Tsimhoni kids rediscover better times in a Jewish context – a takeaway that should give the family a leg-up in pursuing the "healthy relationship" Judge Gorcyca is angling so emphatically for. ❑