The Jerusalem Post

Curriculum to include Jews from Islamic countries

- • By LIDAR GRAVÉ-LAZI

Middle- and high-school history curriculum­s will be required to include the study of Jews in Islamic countries beginning in the upcoming school year, the Education Ministry announced on Monday.

The decision aims to implement one of the recommenda­tions of the Biton Committee, released in July, which was tasked with enhancing Eastern Jewish cultural studies within the general education curriculum.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett launched the committee some five months ago and appointed as its head Erez Biton, the first poet of Mizrahi descent to win the Israel Prize in Literature in 2015.

Biton was tasked with empowering the identity of the Mizrahi Jewish community – including immigrants from Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Tunisia and Libya – within the education system.

“History is repeating itself, in every sense of the word,” Bennett said on Monday. “In history class we not only learn about the past but also how to shape the future. Sixty-eight years ago we were telling half the story. Sixty-eight years ago that half of the nation was missing from the pages of history.”

“The revision of the history curriculum is great news to the people of Israel as a whole,” he said. “The Jews of Spain and the East have a magnificen­t history and form a significan­t part in the Zionist enterprise.”

The subjects to be covered in the revised curriculum include the scattering of Jews throughout the Diaspora after the expulsion from Spain in 1492, the activities of Alliance Israelite Universell­e in aiding Jews from Islamic countries in education, pogroms against the Jewish community in North Africa and Asia, the establishm­ent of the Bukharan Quarter in Jerusalem and the Black Panthers.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? EREZ BITON
(Wikimedia Commons) EREZ BITON

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