The Jewish Chronicle

CLASS ACTS JEWS, MUSLIMS JOIN FORCES

An interfaith partnershi­p that educates school pupils about discrimina­tion is producing some heartening results

- NEWS FEATURE BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

THE CLASSROOM is full but attentive, with the students, aged 14 and 15, sitting in chairs arranged in a horseshoe shape.

In front of them are two young women; Zaynab Albadry, who is Muslim, and Roxana Jebreel, who is Jewish.

The workshop session they are conducting is highly interactiv­e.

“Nine parts of people’s identity are protected by the 2010 Equality Act,” Ms Jebreel says, discussing the UK’s main legislatio­n codifying anti-discrimina­tion law.

“We’re going to ask you to form groups and try to work out what those nine aspects of identity might be.”

After a couple of minutes, students are encouraged to suggest answers. Some come easily — gender, race, religion, sexuality, disability. Others, such as age and gender reassignme­nt, take a bit more time. The final two — pregnancy and maternity, and marriage and civil partnershi­ps, are provided by the session convenors.

“Do people still face discrimina­tion?” asks Ms Albadry. “Yes,” multiple students respond in unison, without hesitation.

The seminar is the brainchild of an organisati­on called Stand Up! Education Against Discrimina­tion. It was launched in January 2017 as part of Streetwise, a partnershi­p between the Community Security Trust and Maccabi GB which works to empower Jewish students in certain areas, including anti-bullying, personal safety — and antisemiti­sm and discrimina­tion.

Nathan Servi, the head of education at Maccabi GB, is manager of both the Streetwise and Stand Up! projects.

“In 2015 we had a review of all our work and decided that we really felt the need to export antisemiti­sm education to mainstream schools”, he said.

“What we really wanted to do was to create an interfaith partnershi­p. The obvious outlet for this was Tell Mama.”

Tell Mama, a national project which, as its acronym indicates, works on “Measuring Anti-Muslim Attacks”, works closely with the CST.

“The idea was to have somebody from a Jewish background and someone from a Muslim background, together coming into a classroom of around 30, anything from 14- to 17-year-olds and discuss racism and discrimina­tion, with a specific focus on Islam and Judaism, and therefore antisemiti­sm and anti-Muslim hate.”

The programme has received funding both from the government and from private donors.

“Sometimes we’ll go to funders and they will ask us, ‘who else is doing this work, outside of the community?’” Mr Servi said.

“There are a number of projects and organisati­ons that do similar type of work, but we have a number of USPs. First of all, having two young representa­tives of their faiths, of their communitie­s, come in together is really powerful. The factuality of our programme as well is probably unique, because we use CST and Tell Mama resources, statistics and incidents.” In the last two years, Stand Up! has run seminars for over 10,000 students in 55 schools around

the UK, primarily in London, but also in cities including Manchester, Bristol and Liverpool.

“The sessions are usually an hour or two hours — either an hour where we then go back for a second part, or two hours straight,” Ms Albadry explained.

The sessions are from students between 13 and 18, with slight adaptation­s depending on age, “but the structure is almost always the same.

“We start by talking about discrimina­tion as a whole, and the Equality Act. We frame it around the Equality Act because obviously not all students are Muslim or Jewish, and they need to understand that discrimina­tion as a whole is unacceptab­le, and then we tell them that we will be focusing on one part.

“We actually talk about being abused based on different aspects of your identity and not just one type of identity, which we think is important also.”

Mr Servi stressed that “one thing we have been very careful in doing is represent our expertise, but also be very open about what is not our expertise.

“So with all the other protective characteri­stics, we’ve partnered with other national organisati­ons that support those categories. For example, with LGBT advocacy and training, we’ve partnered with Galup and Keshet UK.”

The sessions then move on to discuss Islam and Judaism — via an interactiv­e quiz, in which students are asked questions about both faiths.

“We break down the stereotype­s for both communitie­s,” said Ms Albadry.

“We hand out an A5 sheet, which asks, ‘What stereotype­s do you know?’ In some schools they’ve never actually met a Jewish person and don’t Jewish students or anything, but they will always know the stereotype­s, which is really interestin­g.

“Some of the things that come up include ‘rich’, ‘stingy’, ‘big families’ sometimes, ‘greedy’, ‘controllin­g the world’ — conspiracy theories come up quite a lot, from ‘controllin­g the media’ to ‘controllin­g the world’ — and when you ask them where they’ve heard this they say ‘oh, we’ve just heard it on YouTube or something like that.’

“With the Muslim community it will be things like ‘terrorism’, ‘sexism’ comes up quite a lot, ‘dress rules’, specifical­ly for women, do come up.

So we try to break these down. We talk about both communitie­s — where the hatred and discrimina­tion started from, historical tropes — and then we move on to talk about what’s happening today. We’ll talk about terrorism and immigratio­n with the Muslim community, with the Jewish community we talk about where the idea of being money-hungry, of being stingy, comes from.

“In the second part we move on to talk about reporting and the importance of reporting. So we take them through a range of incidents, whether it’s happening on the bus, or online — because they usually think that the online space is separate.

“We show them statistics from CST and Tell Mama, and we ask, ‘Have you experience­d anything?’ In almost every class, a student will put up their hands — if not most of them — and they’ve faced discrimina­tion at a very young age — sometimes they’re opening up for the first time, because we’re trying to create that safe space.

“But then when you ask them whether they’ve experience­d anything online, more hands go up, because they haven’t considered it as an incident or an act of discrimina­tion.

“Then we focus on reporting. We give out cards at the end, with the numbers of different organisati­ons to report incidents to.”

Sitting in on a couple of sessions at local schools in London, pupils’ engagement with the subject matter was clear to see, whether Jewish, Muslim or otherwise. By the second session, even students who were clearly less confident had started to make their voices heard.

In one session, pupils were told what to do if there’s an incident of discrimina­tion happening on a public bus: you can alert the driver and they should have recordings of the incident via multiple cameras, and be able to contact the police directly via a specially installed panic button.

However, not all sessions were as straightfo­rward.

“We had a kid who told Zaynab, ‘I hate all Muslims, but you’re a really nice one”, Mr Servi recalled.

“We’ve had times where a student has said to us, ‘We just want the UK to be for white normal English people’, and we’ve turned round to him and said, ‘What’s normal? Do you not think we’re normal?’” Ms Albadry said.

“We don’t actually shut them down completely — we’ll just keep asking them questions. Sometimes the students around them will be agitated and want to respond to them, so we give them the chance to do so as well.

“And eventually they realise that the statement being made was not right. When we break it down, they tend to realise it themselves and just start absorbing. Or they realise that their ideas are being challenged and they need to go and do their research further.

“We’ve had times when students — I’ve showed them an example of something that’s being shared online, like a picture saying, ‘Keep calm and kill all Muslims’ — and a student said to me, ‘Actually that’s dark humour, that’s fine’. And other students turned around to them and said: ‘What if someone said kill all your group of people’ — and everyone started thinking about it, and then they realised it wasn’t right. So usually the response comes from students within the classroom.”

Mr Servi concurs. “There’re a number of challenges. You sometimes get left-wing challenges, sometimes right-wing challenges. At times we go into Muslim schools or schools with a high percentage of Muslim students, and we hear a lot of anti-Jewish conspiraci­es, from 9/11 to all the stuff that we adults know about.

“But up until about a year ago there was a huge amount of conversati­on about UJS and students on campus, and antisemiti­sm on campus specifical­ly. And I said that antisemiti­sm doesn’t start on campus, it doesn’t start at Fresher’s week.

“And the same goes for anti-Muslim hate, and the same for any other type of discrimina­tion. Without having a serious interventi­on, and a serious programme that tackles these issues early on, then we can’t expect for it not to pop up at university.”

Stand Up! has a number of other exciting projects in the pipeline.

The organisati­on has been working on video to “introduce Judaism and Islam to young people.

“It has two rabbis and two Muslim leaders, one male, one female [of each]. From the Jewish perspectiv­e there’s an Orthodox and Progressiv­e rabbi; from the Muslim perspectiv­e, there’s a very well known imam and a female faith leader.”

But above all, they’re hoping to expand the programme further afield.

“In terms of reach we’ve exceeded our expectatio­ns and been in many more schools than we thought we would be,” Mr Servi says.

The opportunit­ies for expansion are “almost limitless. There are 3,400 secondary schools in the country”.

Mr Servi expressed his thanks to MHCLG and Betty Messenger Charitable Foundation, which have funded Stand Up! until now and will do for the next three years.

Having two young people representi­ng their faiths is really powerful’

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 ??  ?? Pupils show their Stand Up! cards with hotlines for reporting hate crime
Pupils show their Stand Up! cards with hotlines for reporting hate crime
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 ?? PHOTO: LEIVI SALTMAN ?? Roxana Jebreel, who is Jewish, leading a session
PHOTO: LEIVI SALTMAN Roxana Jebreel, who is Jewish, leading a session
 ??  ?? A pupil at the workshop
A pupil at the workshop

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