Education minister unconcerned with pluralism, wants to curb religious
influence in secular schools
Hily Tropper
It appears that in the developing struggle involving Education Minister
Yuli Tamir and national service organizations, particularly the centers
for deepening Jewish identity, no holds are barred.
Under a veneer of seemingly professional and educational arguments hide
serious ideological disputes, in particular a reality and facts that
some seek to ignore. In all matters related to facts on the ground,
Minister Tamir stands out as someone who insists on not letting the
facts confuse her.
I will first note that in my view, the education minister's desire to
set priorities is legitimate and appropriate. The minister is
authorized, and indeed obligated, to set priorities and decide, for
example, that the number of teaching jobs aimed at assisting mentally
disabled children should be boosted at the expense of Jewish studies
teaching positions.
Yet even legitimate decisions must be explained, and particularly in
line with the truth and with reality. It appears that Tamir's latest
decision to stop religious girls on national service teaching Judaism
in schools is neither in line with the truth nor with reality.
The education minister does not want religious girls going into secular
schools. This is the story, the whole story, and no mountains of nice
words about pluralism and openness will cover this simple truth. By the
way, we have already had such education minister, Shulamit Aloni, who
fought the exact same war and demanded that schools refrain from
inviting religious national service girls. However, Aloni failed on
this front.
The current minister, who in this matter at least wishes to continue on
the path outlined by Aloni, apparently chose a slightly more
sophisticated approach. She does not turn to school principals directly
because she realizes they think otherwise. She simply aims to close the
centers for deepening Jewish identity, so that even schools that wish
to invite the girls would find it impossible to do so. According to
Tamir's plan, there simply won't be such girls.
What we have here is a stubborn and clear attempt to dictate a reality.
The fact is, and let there be no mistake about it, that there has been
a consistent and significant increase in the scope of activity
undertaken by the centers for deepening Jewish identity.
That is, more and more secular schools are turning to more and more
such centers and seeking (while paying for this) more and more national
service girls. The minister's policy completely contradicts what is
happening on the ground. The principals understand that all the claims
that we're talking about private branches making their way into their
schools are false, and that they choose to order a paid service because
they perceive it as beneficial and proper.
A principal in the Beit She'an Valley, for example, has the free choice
of selecting either the Holiday Archive at Beit Hashita or the center
for deepening Jewish identity in Beit She'an. Nobody is forcing him to
do anything.
Those who speak highly about the importance of pluralism are supposed
to be the ones who should disapprove attempts to shut down diverse
educational options and give principals, who are secular education
officials, less credit in making their choice without the education
minister or anyone on her behalf attempting to force anything on them.
Threatening right-wing octopus?
Yuli Tamir's decision also implies a lack of faith in principals. The
principals choose to show their faith in the activity of national
service girls, yet Minister Tamir does not believe in them and their
judgment. For pluralistic reasons, of course.
Yet the most serious implication of the minister's decision is yet
another particularly difficult blow to Jewish identity studies at
Israeli schools. The drastic cutbacks in Jewish classes led by national
service girls would not be replaced by anything.
Thinking that schools themselves would be the ones to teach Jewish
studies is no more than an illusion. There is good reason why time and
again we see that the conclusions of the committee that ruled that
Jewish studies teachers must be trained to work at secular schools are
no more than pretty words that are disconnected from reality.
The teachers did not join such classes, and the schools do not have
enough hours to dedicate to this issue. We can assume that had this
been possible, schools would have done it a long time ago. Again,
nobody is forcing anyone to use the services of national service girls.
According to data collected by the centers for deepening Jewish
identity, the implication of the planned cutbacks in the coming year is
that 64,000 children in Israel would lose one hour of Jewish studies a
week.
The easiest thing is to classify all religious girls as the long arms
of a threatening right-wing octopus and cry out that we're talking
about an effort to turn secular kids religious under a sophisticated
veneer. (By the way, the first ones to kick out a girl who involves
political activity in her work are the centers' directors themselves.)
It is much harder to check whether these charges have a hold in
reality, and it is particularly difficult to address the question of
whom or what would be filling the vacuum created by the education
minister's decision.
The writer is among the leaders of the Bema'aglei Tzedek non-profit
organization and the director general of the Aharai movement
Original
Source
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Religious girls out
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