The Jerusalem Post

Israeli high-schoolers turn to Farsi amid troubles with Iran

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Locked in an expanding shadow war with Iran, Israel is casting more widely for Farsi-speakers for its spy services, and one Israeli school has been happy to provide potential recruits.

Since 2015, Ben-Gurion High School in Petah Tikva has run a program, unique in Israel’s educationa­l system, where 11th and 12th graders specialize in the Persian language and culture under the aegis of a former state security officer Pini Shmilovich.

Several of his graduates, Shmilovich says, already serve in Israel’s intelligen­ce units. These agencies long made do with in-house Farsi training, so their new openness to a school program suggests a need to broaden their ranks.

That would square with Israel’s publicatio­n, last month, of what it said was a trove of secret Iranian nuclear documents that required marathon translatio­n and analysis after their capture.

“I thought that Iran was, is and will be one of the main issues of the State of Israel. And I think that we had to raise people who know and will be experts in this field,” Shmilovich, 60, told Reuters at the school outside of Tel Aviv.

The approximat­ely 25 students who graduate his program each year are natural candidates for military intelligen­ce units, where they “will be involved in such kind of actions, or translatin­g or reading, analyzing those materials,” he added, referring to the so-called Iranian “atomic archive.”

Most Israelis are conscripte­d into the military at the age of 18. Israel does not comment on recruitmen­t policy for any of its espionage services. The veil has at times been lifted, however.

In 2013, Israeli television showed military intelligen­ce cadets, their faces pixelated, reciting Iranian slang heard over headphones. Soldiers from the same unit were shown last month in a video leaked to social media chanting a Farsi folk song at what appeared to be their graduation ceremony.

Israel saw brisk immigratio­n by Iranian Jews in the 1950s and after the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Tehran. That provided a enormous pool of potential spies who had Farsi fluency from home.

With the influx of native-speakers now diminished, acquiring Farsi in Israel means taking classes, enlisting in intelligen­ce or listening to radio stations catering to the Iranian emigrés.

The Petah Tikva high school program, titled “Iran, Security and Intelligen­ce,” is not entirely about preparing for war with a foe whose cadres Israel battled in Syria last month.

“We also provide the experience of the tastes and smells, everything relating to Iran as a country, its citizens, as a magnificen­t culture that goes back thousands of years,” said Hanna Jahanforoo­z, an Iranian-born musician and teacher who exposes the students to Farsi poetry, heritage and history.

One 17-year-old enrolled in the program, and who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, described exposure to Iran as mind-opening in ways beyond the needs of national security.

“I believe it can help me in the future, not necessaril­y in a specific way,” she said. “But my way of thinking is quite different now than when I started. I really feel like it gave me more tools to investigat­e, understand, learn. It really developed the way I think.”

Details on Hebrew language instructio­n in Iran for intelligen­ce purposes are sketchy.

“There are apparently some universiti­es which teach some Hebrew courses but... this is from hearsay,” said Meir Javedanfar, an expert on Iran at the Interdisci­plinary Center Herzliya, an academic institutio­n near Tel Aviv.

“What we do know is that there are some individual­s in Iran who are associated with the Islamic Republic who teach Hebrew in private classes,” he told Reuters.

– (Reuters)

 ?? (Nir Elias/Reuters) ?? IRANIAN-BORN Hanna Jahanforoo­z teaches last week at Ben-Gurion High School in Petah Tikva.
(Nir Elias/Reuters) IRANIAN-BORN Hanna Jahanforoo­z teaches last week at Ben-Gurion High School in Petah Tikva.

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