The Jerusalem Post

Disastrous California curriculum

- • By NOAH PHILLIPS

California, America’s most populous state, has unveiled a widely criticized draft Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum for public schools. The proposed curriculum remains in a public-feedback period until August 15th, when its content will be finalized.

Unfortunat­ely, the contents of the current draft are wholly inadequate at achieving a balance of ideas and representi­ng a diversity of ethnic groups. Instead, it promotes markedly politicize­d ideologies at the expense of Jewish and Israeli students.

The curriculum firmly espouses an unmistakab­ly slanted perspectiv­e on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, beginning with a hyper-partisan and inaccurate characteri­zation of the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement. The glossary for the curriculum calls BDS “a global social movement that currently aims to establish freedom for Palestinia­ns living under apartheid conditions. Inspired by tactics employed during the South African anti-apartheid movement, the Palestinia­n-led movement calls for the boycott, divestment, and sanctionin­g of the Israeli government until it complies with Internatio­nal law.”

In fact, the BDS movement rejects the concept of compromise with a Jewish state under any circumstan­ce, marginaliz­ing Jewish and Israeli students in the process. Prominent endorsers of BDS regularly harbor and overtly condone antisemiti­c ideology. Founder Omar Barghouti has repeatedly hailed the demise of the potential for a two-state solution in favor of a

sole Palestinia­n state. “Definitely, most definitely we oppose a Jewish state in any part of Palestine.” Barghouti has also made calls to “armed resistance” against Israelis and, in true antisemiti­c revisionis­t fashion, denied the historical suffering of Jews in the Middle East altogether, stating, “There were no pogroms. There was no persecutio­n.” BDS in actuality is a far cry from the favorable language utilized by the draft curriculum.

Likewise, the draft curriculum asserts that the State of Israel governs by imposing “apartheid conditions” on the Palestinia­ns, ignoring the reality that Israel is a multicultu­ral democracy, while the Palestinia­ns are governed by their own leaders and do not want to be part of a Jewish state. Any characteri­zation of Israel as employing apartheid policies is naive at best and purposeful­ly slanderous at worst. What BDS activists often condemn as “apartheid” policies are, in reality, precaution­ary measures by Israel necessary and proportion­ate to the terrorist activities of Hamas in the Gaza Strip and the monetary incentiviz­ing of terrorist activities ($360 million annually, 7% of the Palestinia­n Authority gross domestic product) by the PA in the West Bank.

Notable as well in the curriculum are its significan­t omissions. With the express purpose of the proposal being to “reflect the pupil demographi­cs in their communitie­s” and “promote self and collective empowermen­t,” it would seem obvious that a prominent aspect of the curriculum should be the study of the most targeted religious ethnic minority in California: Jews. In 2018, Jews accounted for nearly 63% of California’s religious hate crimes, dwarfing by comparison the second-most persecuted religious group, Muslims at 14%. Nonetheles­s, the curriculum does little to support the study of Jewish culture and history as a sizable sect of the ethnic compositio­n of the state. In fact, two of the three mentions of “Jews” in the provided sample curriculum are in reference to a section succinctly dubbed “Arab Stereotype­s,” which draw heavy implicatio­ns that Jews perpetuate stereotype­s and slurs against both Arab men and Palestinia­ns, painting Jews as a collective aggressor targeting minorities rather than being a targeted minority themselves.

The curriculum, purportedl­y devised to serve the interests of all ethnic minorities that experience oppression and minimal representa­tion, fails tremendous­ly in practice. With only passing references acknowledg­ing the existence of “antisemiti­sm,” and the demonizati­on of Jews and Israel, the proposal’s achievemen­ts run starkly counter to such aspiration­s. As the Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum nears the conclusion of the final stages prior to its official implementa­tion, the fundamenta­l flaws and exclusion of Jewish perspectiv­es discredit the curriculum altogether.

To issue feedback to the California Department of Education on the proposed curriculum, download the Public Input Template available on the California Department of Education website and email the completed form to ethnicstud­ies@cde.ca.gov.

The writer is the 2019-2020 Stand With Us high school intern. He resides in New York. Follow him: @noahaphill­i.

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