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A binational society: The Jewish-Arab cleavage and tolerance education in the State of Israel
In: Israel affairs, Band 9, Heft 1-2: The Israeli Palestinians: an Arab minority in the Jewish state, S. 97-119
ISSN: 1353-7121
Ausgangspunkt des Beitrags ist die Feststellung, dass Israel eine binationale Gesellschaft mit einer tiefen Kluft zwischen der jüdischen Mehrheit und der arabischen Minderheit ist. Vor dem Hintergrund der sozio-politischen und ethischen Implikationen dieser Spaltung analysiert der Autor die im jüdischen Sektor vorherrschenden negativen Stereotype und Vorurteile gegenüber der arabischen Bevölkerungsgruppe und untersucht dann, inwieweit das Schulsystem dem gesellschaftlichen Auftrag gerecht wird, Vorurteile abzubauen und zu Toleranz zu erziehen. In seiner Evaluierung bezieht sich Soen auf eine Inhaltsanalyse von Lesebüchern und Readern, die 1994 in israelischen Grundschulen verwendet wurden. Er kommt zu dem Schluss, dass das Erziehungsministerium, das für die Auswahl der Unterrichtsmaterialien verantwortlich ist, "failed in its mission to try and foster at least a common civic identity uniting Jews and Arabs living in Israel under an acceptable common denominator". (DÜI-Hns)
World Affairs Online
A Binational Society: The Jewish-Arab Cleavage and Tolerance Education in the State of Israel
In: Israel affairs, Band 9, Heft 1-2, S. 97-119
ISSN: 1353-7121
A Binational Society: The Jewish-Arab Cleavage and Tolerance Education in the State of Israel
In: Israel affairs, Band 9, Heft 1-2, S. 97-120
ISSN: 1743-9086
Human and social factors in Israel's arid zone
In: Habitat international: a journal for the study of human settlements, Band 6, Heft 1-2, S. 31-38
Citizen and Community Participation in Urban Renewal and Rehabilitation—Comments on Theory and Practice
In: Community development journal, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 105-118
ISSN: 1468-2656
Purposes and achievements of Israeli agricultural research
In: Science and public policy: journal of the Science Policy Foundation, Band 5, Heft 6, S. 460-469
ISSN: 1471-5430
Les groupes ethniques orientaux en Israël: Leur place dans la stratification sociale
In: Revue française de sociologie, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 218
Shoa and experience: a journey in time
In: The Holocaust
In: history and literature, ethics and philosophy
Machine generated contents note: The Trip Experience: Poland and the Polish People as Perceived by Israeli Youth in Light of Their Trips to the Death Camps / Dan Soen -- A Test of Leadership: IDF Delegations to Poland -- A Tool for Promoting Command-Oriented Leadership? / Dan Soen -- The Pedagogy of Commonness: An Alternative Theory in Teaching about the Holocaust / Marek Kazmierczak -- Myth and Reality: On "Future Generations" of the Holocaust / Zvi Zemishlany -- A13808 / Ruth Dorot -- The Unterlimpurg Synagogue: Issues Involved in Restoring a Demolished Synagogue / Zvi Orgad -- The Abuse of Holocaust Memory in 2011 -- 2012 / Manfred Gerstenfeld -- Studying Judaism, Jewish History, and the Jews: The Experience of Jewish Studies at Academic Campuses in Poland Today / Edyta Gawron -- Remnants of the Holocaust: A Process of Consciousness Far from Conclusion / Zvi Gil
Costruire la società: Israele tra passato e futuro
In: Saggi e studi. Didattica e ricerca
Leisure in the twenty-first century: the case of Israel
In: Israel affairs, Band 22, Heft 2, S. 492-511
ISSN: 1743-9086
Israeli Youth Pilgrimages to Poland. Rationale and Polemics
The article, which was written based on material collected as part of a project evaluating the pilgrimage trips to Poland by Israeli adolescents as part of the Holocaust curriculum, attempted to provide the reader with the background for these trips. In this context, the authors discussed the evolving national agenda in Israel, and the transition from experiencing independence to experiencing the Holocaust. It was explained that this process began with the Eichmann trial in 1961, but became far more intense after the political upheaval in 1977, when the Labor Party, which had been in power since the 1920s, lost the election. The authors of the article stressed that in the wake of the profound social changes that took place in Israeli society, the memory of the Holocaust gained new significance among the country's national priorities. While a policy known as "the great silence" regarding the Holocaust prevailed among the first generation after statehood, the Holocaust has now become a factor that shaped the national ethos. In 1979, for the first time, the Ministry of Education commissioned two curricula dealing exclusively with the Holocaust. It was this new attitude to the sources of Israeli identity that led to the commencement of trips to Poland by adolescents in the 1980s. Since the trips began, in 1988, over 300,000 adolescents have traveled to Poland. These journeys have become a sort of rite de passage for the relevant age group (high school juniors and seniors). They can be compared to backpacking by young adults who travel abroad to "clear their heads" after completing their army service, on trips lasting anywhere from a few months to two years. The authors noted that nevertheless, only 25-30% of Israeli adolescents actually take part in these journeys. Inter alia, the article reviewed the evolving goals of the trips defined by the MOE, in accordance with the worldview of the minister in office, and noted that, in accordance with the spirit of the times, there were sometimes differences in the main nuances along the particularism-universality axis. The article further stated that apart from the terms in office of ministers Rubinstein and Aloni, the assimilation of the humanistic, moral, universal and anti-totalitarian lessons of the Holocaust during the trips was minor. The article includes a fairly extensive discussion of the dispute on this issue in Israeli discourse. The article noted that the Holocaust and its lessons can be examined from three different perspectives: The first perspective focuses on presenting the universal significance of the Holocaust and perceiving it as parallel to other cases of genocide (such as the murder of the Armenians by the Turks, the genocide in Rwanda and so on). The second perspective focuses on presenting the national significance of the Holocaust as a unique and unparalleled case of the Jewish People. The perception held by this approach is actually "the whole world is against us." The third perspective is a synthesis of these two approaches. In this article, the authors noted that the longstanding debate in Israeli society over the various methods for instilling the Holocaust and the journeys to Poland by adolescents expresses these three perspectives. The speakers and writers interviewed in the field research each represent one of these perspectives. The article contains many direct quotations from authors, teachers, academics and others, which support the points made by the authors. ; Israeli Youth Pilgrimages to Poland: Rationale and Polemics The article, which was written based on material collected as part of a project evaluating the pilgrimage trips to Poland by Israeli adolescents as part of the Holocaust curriculum, attempted to provide the reader with the background for these trips. In this context, the authors discussed the evolving national agenda in Israel, and the transition from experiencing independence to experiencing the Holocaust. It was explained that this process began with the Eichmann trial in 1961, but became far more intense after the political upheaval in 1977, when the Labor Party, which had been in power since the 1920s, lost the election. The authors of the article stressed that in the wake of the profound social changes that took place in Israeli society, the memory of the Holocaust gained new significance among the country's national priorities. While a policy known as "the great silence" regarding the Holocaust prevailed among the first generation after statehood, the Holocaust has now become a factor that shaped the national ethos. In 1979, for the first time, the Ministry of Education commissioned two curricula dealing exclusively with the Holocaust. It was this new attitude to the sources of Israeli identity that led to the commencement of trips to Poland by adolescents in the 1980s. Since the trips began, in 1988, over 300,000 adolescents have traveled to Poland. These journeys have become a sort of rite de passage for the relevant age group (high school juniors and seniors). They can be compared to backpacking by young adults who travel abroad to "clear their heads" after completing their army service, on trips lasting anywhere from a few months to two years. The authors noted that nevertheless, only 25-30% of Israeli adolescents actually take part in these journeys. Inter alia, the article reviewed the evolving goals of the trips defined by the MOE, in accordance with the worldview of the minister in office, and noted that, in accordance with the spirit of the times, there were sometimes differences in the main nuances along the particularism-universality axis. The article further stated that apart from the terms in office of ministers Rubinstein and Aloni, the assimilation of the humanistic, moral, universal and anti-totalitarian lessons of the Holocaust during the trips was minor. The article includes a fairly extensive discussion of the dispute on this issue in Israeli discourse. The article noted that the Holocaust and its lessons can be examined from three different perspectives: The first perspective focuses on presenting the universal significance of the Holocaust and perceiving it as parallel to other cases of genocide (such as the murder of the Armenians by the Turks, the genocide in Rwanda and so on). The second perspective focuses on presenting the national significance of the Holocaust as a unique and unparalleled case of the Jewish People. The perception held by this approach is actually "the whole world is against us." The third perspective is a synthesis of these two approaches. In this article, the authors noted that the longstanding debate in Israeli society over the various methods for instilling the Holocaust and the journeys to Poland by adolescents expresses these three perspectives. The speakers and writers interviewed in the field research each represent one of these perspectives. The article contains many direct quotations from authors, teachers, academics and others, which support the points made by the authors.
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A college as la lever for graduates settling in the region: a case study of the College of Judea and Samaria
In: Israel affairs, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 66-80
ISSN: 1353-7121
World Affairs Online