The Jerusalem Post

Schools to gradually reopen on Sunday

Preschool and first to third grades will meet in small groups on different days

- • By EYTAN HALON

Schools and kindergart­ens will gradually reopen from Sunday in a combined format of in-class and remote learning, cabinet ministers decided on Monday as they move to return the economy to normal operations.

The decision is conditiona­l on the continued decline of infection rates, with full approval due on Friday.

Giving the green light to plans presented by the Education Ministry at the meeting, the return of pupils to school will vary according to age group. Children up to the age of six will return to kindergart­en in small groups and attend on different days.

First- to third-graders will learn in school from Sunday through Thursday in groups limited to no more than 15 pupils. Break times will be staggered to ensure that groups do not meet each other.

Pupils in the 4th to 12th grade will continue learning remotely at this stage, the government decided. Children who are deemed at-risk or live with family members considered at-risk will not return to in-school learning.

The decision to reopen schools follows a significan­t slowdown in new infections across the country. At last count, 204 Israelis had died from the coronaviru­s, with three deaths on Monday, and 15,555 cases had been confirmed. Currently, 126 patients are in serious condition, including 96 who require ventilatio­n.

At last count, 7,200 patients

had recovered, with cases still active.

While the final details of the return to school have not been formally published, the government plans to recruit teacher trainees to increase the number of groups that can be taught in schools.

The 11th- and 12th-graders studying for their bagrut (matriculat­ion exam) will take their exams in June and July, according to a plan published by the Education Ministry. The tests will be carried out in groups of no larger than 15 pupils, with a supervisor present in every classroom.

For students who require additional support ahead of the exams, including at-risk youth and new immigrants, special approval may be sought to hold “preparatio­n marathons” in groups of up to 10 students.

“The education system is ready to return gradually and carefully,” Education Minister Rafi Peretz said following the decision, emphasizin­g that his ministry has done significan­t work to adapt the education system to Health Ministry guidelines.

“The fact that ministers and all profession­al bodies approve [our plan] speaks for itself,” he said. “We must be careful to ensure that educationa­l institutio­ns open carefully to avoid an outbreak.”

Despite the government decision, a number of subsidized daycare centers announced they would not welcome children next week, protesting a lack of financial assistance from the government. These include daycare centers operated by WIZO, Emunah, Na’amat, Nashei Herut, the Israel Associatio­n of Community Centers, Naot Margalit and Bais Yaakov.

Estimates published by the Bank of Israel last week showed that parents being absent from the workplace due to the closure of the education system costs the economy approximat­ely NIS 2.6 billion per week.

There are about 400,000 households in Israel in which an employed parent is required to stay at home to supervise children who would otherwise be at school or kindergart­en, the central bank stated.

The domestic tourism sector also is due to partially reopen next week. Ministers initially approved the opening of holiday homes (tzimmers) and ground-level hotels. Owners seeking to restore operations will be required to meet “purple badge” hygiene standards as defined by the Health Ministry.

“I applaud the step taken today, which is great news for many thousands of tourism-industry business owners and employees,” Tourism Minister Yariv Levin said. “For the first time since the outbreak of the crisis, a date has been set for their return to action.”

Tens of thousands of retail workers are expected to return to work after Independen­ce Day. The Associatio­n of Fashion and Commerce Chains praised new government plans to allocate NIS 6 billion to help large retailers rehire employees currently on unpaid leave.

The associatio­n, which represents many of Israel’s largest 8,355

retailers, refused to reopen stores this week without promises of assistance in rehiring employees and compensati­on based on lost revenues. The details of the government’s plan, announced on Sunday, will be announced in the coming days.

“The compensati­on announced [on Sunday] by the government is important and right, but it is incomplete,” the associatio­n said in a statement. “Despite that, we are opening our stores and returning to drive the economy forward and gradually bringing back our employees.”

Histadrut labor federation chairman Arnon Bar-David on Sunday called on the government to restore national train services. As the economy gradually returns to its routine, efficient services are required for employees traveling long distances to and from work on a daily basis.

Timetables for railway infrastruc­ture work have been significan­tly shortened since all services were canceled due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, and the Transporta­tion Ministry is reportedly eager to delay renewed services as it seeks to continue work on the tracks.

“I am saddened that the transporta­tion minister does not understand the basic necessity of the public needing rail services to return to regular work and earn a living, especially at this time,” Bar-David wrote in a letter. “There is no room to deepen the difficulti­es and the economic crisis affecting the Israeli economy in general and the public in particular.”

In response to Bar-David, Transporta­tion Minister Bezalel Smotrich said the letter was “populist and shallow” and accused the Histadrut head of demonstrat­ing a “total failure of understand­ing” of railway operations.

He said restoring train services would be dependent on several parameters: the number of infrastruc­ture projects on each line and their importance to passenger welfare; infrastruc­ture timetables; demand for each service; and options for alternativ­e travel arrangemen­ts.

The Courts Administra­tion on Monday announced it would increase the number of hearings and operations it is handling by 20% next week. All persons in courtrooms would be required to don protective masks and abide by social-distancing regulation­s, it said in a statement.

The situation would be continuall­y reviewed to explore when and whether operations could be increased or would need to be decreased again, it said.

The courts were exploring the possibilit­y of canceling the traditiona­l summer recess from mid-July to September in an effort to catch up with hearings that have been delayed since operations were reduced in mid-March.

Yonah Jeremy Bob contribute­d to this report. •

you close when the siren pierces the silence, tearing at our hearts.”

“I know, dear families, that you do not need Remembranc­e Day to remember,” he said. “You have so many more days, so many more nights, all year. This day is for us so that we can, even just for a minute, know the names and the faces, the lives and the stories of the men and women of this country, of your loved ones. This year, we cannot cry together. This year we cannot look each other in the eye.”

Neverthele­ss, he said, “this year, more than ever, we will give them all life. We will all be memorial candles to the lives they lived and to the lives they will never live. We will embrace you, beloved families, from afar, our hearts with yours. Our souls are bound up with yours.”

Addressing the bereaved families, Kochavi said that despite the distance, all the people of Israel are together with them “through all sorts of screens,” dedicating time to remember and honor the fallen.

“Many of the families in the country have relatives, neighbors or acquaintan­ces who gave their lives, and most of the people have a deep sense of identifica­tion with sacrifice,” he said. “The whole nation of Israel is grieving today. But the pain of your families cannot be described. It is constant and infinite, residing in the heart and consciousn­ess, present like the circulatio­n of blood in the body and pulsing continuous­ly. And the pulse increases every time you hear the song he loved, every time you prepare the dish she loved and every time you see a soldier with a beret of the same color, and then imaginatio­n and reality mix.”

The deaths of IDF soldiers and commanders “allowed us to live a safe life in the State of Israel,” Kochavi said.

“There is now almost no place in Israel that is not soaked in the blood of our fighters,” he said. “But nowadays, on the roads on which armored vehicles broke down, thousands of cars now travel instead of where fighters lost their lives, bustling settlement­s have been set up, and in places where companies and battalions and brigades have marched there are now cities.”

“And now in our generation it is our duty to continue to ensure life with confidence,” Kochavi said. “Faced with enemies and terrorist armies who never stop trying to hurt the citizens of the State of Israel, the IDF stands ready, powerful and offensive. We will face each mission with willingnes­s and determinat­ion. Victory is the only way to achieve our goals.”

Defense Minister Naftali Bennett, who visited Mount Herzl earlier on Monday accompanie­d by Kochavi and Aryeh Moalem, head of the Defense Ministry’s Families and Commemorat­ion Department, met with Shelah and bereaved families.

During the visit, Bennett inaugurate­d the presentati­on of the digital visitors’ book at the State Memorial Hall for Israel’s Fallen, which marks the beginning of the “Remembered Forever” project and allows visitors to light a candle in memory of the fallen and leave a message in the hall.

“This year is different,” Bennett said. “This year Remembranc­e Day is actually spread over almost a week, and I want to thank the wonderful soldiers who are here and in all the cemeteries. I tell the families I love you very much and regret that this year it was not possible to come and commemorat­e on Remembranc­e Day itself. I just guarantee that we did not do it maliciousl­y, but rather because of a genuine desire to keep you safe.”

Defense officials have called on the Israeli public to honor their loved ones at home “using digital means.” All ceremonies will be broadcast live, including the state remembranc­e ceremony on Mount Herzl on Tuesday morning following the two-minute siren at 11 a.m.

The names of the fallen will be read at Mount Herzl from 7:30 a.m. to 10 a.m., and the state ceremony honoring victims of terrorism will be held at 1 p.m., also with no audience. •

 ?? (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90) ?? A MAN wearing a face mask and protective suit shops in Jerusalem yesterday after the government eased some lockdown measures.
(Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90) A MAN wearing a face mask and protective suit shops in Jerusalem yesterday after the government eased some lockdown measures.

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