Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
An education in inequality
An education in inequality
Apr 26, 2025 8:13 PM

  Expressing his support for the controversial loyalty oath bill - legislation that will require non-Jews to pledge allegiance to Israel "as a Jewish and democratic state" - Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, remarked: "Zionism established an exemplary national state, a state that balances between the national needs of our people and the individual rights of every citizen in the country."

  But a look at the Israeli education system offers a very different picture.

  Rawia Aburabia, an attorney with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), says that schools attended by Palestinian citizens of Israel are missing "9,000 classes, 300 [officials who enforce school attendance], 200 psychologists, and 250 educational consultants".

  As a result, the dropout rate for Palestinian citizens of Israel is almost double that of their Jewish counterparts. Classes in the Arab school system are also larger than those attended by Jews - and this means reduced instruction time per student, increased disciplinary problems and lower achievement rates.

  "In the Negev, the situation is catastrophic," Aburabia says. "There are 37 unrecognized [Bedouin] villages with no high schools and they barely have elementary schools. Eighty thousand people live [in these villages]."

  There the dropout rate is over 40 per cent, in part, Aburabia explains, "because they have to travel to get to high school, walking many kilometers by foot to the highway".

  Faced with tremendous obstacles to learning, only two per cent of the Bedouin go on to university. According to a report released by Sikkuy, a Jewish-Arab NGO that advocates for equality, Israel's Arab population as a whole does not fare much better - just over three per cent enter academia, compared with nine per cent of Jews.

  If Israel were indeed a state where all citizens are treated equally, Aburabia says, "I don't think I'd have to go to the High Court of Justice so that the ministry of education will close the gap of 9,000 classes".

  'Frustration and despair'

  The Israeli government is well aware of the tremendous disparities between the two school systems, says Yousef Jabareen, the director of the Arab Center for Law and Policy, Dirasat.

  "Much of the statistics are from the government itself," Jabareen says.

  And over a decade ago, Zvi Zameret authored a government report detailing the many gaps between Arab and Jewish schools. "[T]he average quality of teaching in the Israeli Arab sector is lower than in most Jewish schools," he wrote.

  Zameret continued: "[T]he resources allocated to Arab education are not keeping up with the growth in population. Arab schools - more than any other educational sector - suffer from a shortage of classrooms and substandard classrooms."

  In the report, Zameret admitted that there "exists a disparity between the Arab and Jewish educational systems".

  But more than a decade later those same gaps remain. And Zamaret, now chairman of the pedagogical secretariat, is forging ahead with a plan to edit civic textbooks, deleting sentences like: "Since its establishment, the state of Israel has engaged in a policy of discrimination against its Arab citizens."

  That the state both admits to problems plaguing the Arab educational system and ignores them creates "a sense of frustration and despair," Jabareen says.

  Another point of contention is the National Priority Areas [NPA], of which Jabareen remarks: "If this is not clear ethnic-based discrimination, then I don't know what discrimination is."

  Known as the national priority map, and drawn in 1998, it marks 533 towns and villages for economic and educational incentives. Despite the fact that Palestinian citizens of Israel make up 20 per cent of the population - and are disproportionately represented in the lowest socioeconomic rungs - only four Arab villages are NPAs.

  Deeply concerned about the NPA's impact on educational funding, Adalah - a human rights organization and legal centre that advocates for Palestinians who live within the Green Line as well as those who live in the Occupied Territories - took the state of Israel to court. In 2006, a panel of seven high court justices ruled that the NPAs constituted illegal discrimination and ordered the state to amend them.

  But not only did the state circumvent the high court's ruling, it expanded the national priority map to include six illegal West Bank settlements. Jewish settlers number half that of Palestinian citizens of Israel. And, generally, they are more affluent.

  Israel's 'fifth column'

  Regarding the gaps between Israel's Jewish and Arab educational systems, Gabi Salomon, a professor of education at the University of Haifa and a co-director of Sikkuy, remarks: "I don't think there is any sinister intention behind it."

  The neglect, Salomon explains, comes from considering Palestinian citizens of Israel "as a potential fifth column not to be trusted too much or counted too much".

  As such, many Jewish Israelis think that there "isn't an absolute necessity to share taxes with them," Salomon says. "The feeling is that 'why do they need everything that the Jews need?'"

  This sentiment is apparent both in the lopsided allocation of resources and students' attitudes.

  A recent poll conducted by Tel Aviv University professor Camil Fuchs found that 50 per cent of Jewish teenagers do not want Arabs in their classes. And while nearly two-thirds of those surveyed acknowledge that Palestinian citizens of Israel do not have equal rights, 59 per cent are fine with that.

  Gaps are also perpetuated by the fact that Palestinian citizens of Israel are not represented in the ministry of education. Even the head of Arabic and Islamic education is Jewish.

  "Adequate representation is very important to protect the interests of the minority," says Sawsan Zaher, an attorney with Adalah. "And there are almost zero Arab professionals in the decision-making process."

  Zaher adds that those who do aspire to move through the ranks of the ministry of education must hold a certain ideology. For example, Adalah recently learned that "positive values towards the Jewish state" is one of the listed requirements for a high-status position.

  Zaher compares such criteria to the existence of some kind of "thought police".

  In the past the ministry of education also conducted security checks on Arabs who applied to work as school principals.

  After Adalah contested this, the high court struck the policy down. "But I am aware that, unofficially, they're still doing the checks," Zaher says, adding: "You can only be a principal if you comply with the mentality and the politics of the state."

  "Eventually everything is related to the [the concept of Israel as a] Jewish state," Zaher reflects. "You don't learn about the nakba because it's a Jewish state. You don't get funded because you're not Jewish. You get appointed only if you are loyal to the state."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Palestinian children cover their faces after Israeli police fired tear gas at stone-throwing youths in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Ras al-Amud September 24, 2010.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Bedouins fear Israeli resettlement plans
  At a steep rocky hillside by the road that winds down to the Dead Sea, children of this Palestinian Bedouin community run up and down the rugged slopes, as goats graze on thorny weeds and sheep bleat nearby.   The encampment falls on a bare ridge between Jerusalem and Jericho, almost...
Israel detains 100 Palestinian Palestinians in E. Jerusalem
  Israeli police have detained more than 100 Palestinians in East Jerusalem since July for allegedly "throwing stones" at trains.   In a Tuesday statement, police said that more than 100 Palestinians had been arrested since July – when a Palestinian teenager was murdered by suspected Jewish settlers – for pelting passing...
Central Gaza homes turn into refuge for the displaced
  The clock above Gaza Strip resident Ahlam Abed chimed 6:00am and in that hour there was strong knocking on the door of her house. The knocking was one of fear.   Behind the door there was a Palestinian family that sought safety from Israel's ceaseless rocket and bomb attacks on the...
7 Palestinians killed, 350 detained in October: NGO
  Seven Palestinians were killed and 350 others, including three journalists and an ex-female prisoner, detained by Israel during October, a Palestinian NGO said Saturday.   Ahrar Center for Prisoners and Human Rights Studies said the seven dead victims included four teenagers less than 15 years of age.   The center added in...
Egypt's prisons still rife with torture
  Amr was arrested in March while having a cup of tea with two friends at a coffee shop in downtown Cairo.   Four months later, the 17-year-old remains in jail, accused of involvement with Ansar Bait al-Maqdis, an armed group in the Sinai that has claimed responsibility for a number of...
Palestinian hunger strike passes 40-day mark
  Just outside the Tbeish family home, people began to gather at sunset. Some carried flags, but most held posters of the town's native son, Ayman. A child carried a placard depicting a young man in chains; "Ayman is dying" read another sign, held by an elderly man.   In what has...
Amnesty slams US over Afghan civilian deaths
  On September 16, 2012, at three in the morning, Mohammad Zahir Shah, received a phone call.   There were air strikes in the mountains near his home in Lagham province.   For the next two hours, Shah and fellow villagers waited for the shelling to come to an end. Then they set...
Where is accountability for Gaza's children?
  Before Israel's invasion of Gaza last July, Farah Baker was an ordinary Palestinian teenager growing up in the besieged strip of land by the Mediterranean Sea. But a compelling Twitter feed catapulted her to international fame.   "I'm the modern Anne Frank Gaza-Palestine, 16 years old," is the description of Baker's...
Iraqi Shia militias accused of murder spree
  Shia militias have abducted and murdered scores of Sunni civilians in Iraq in crimes committed in retribution against the actions of ISIL, according to a new report by Amnesty International.   The London-based rights group on Tuesday published what it said was evidence that Shia militias abducted civilians in Baghdad, Samarra...
Amnesty: Dozens of Sunni detainees killed by Iraq government
  Evidence is emerging of reprisal killings of 50 Sunni detainees in the custody of Iraqi forces as retaliation for predominantly Sunni militant group, ISIS's take over of parts of Iraq in the last three weeks, say Amnesty International.   Survivors and relatives of the victims said that the detainees were extra...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved