Palestinian Education - Raising The Next Generation To Hate
By Abigail R. Esman/Algemeiner.com November 23, 2017In response, the school, whose logo depicts a map eliminating Israel, wrote on its Facebook page: "The name of Dalal is engraved in our hearts and will remain engraved in our minds."
Belgium planned to fund ten more schools in the coming three years, The Algemeiner reported. Those projects would have come in addition to the 20 schools that the country has already helped build in the Palestinian territories, through a €71.6 million, four-year support package set up in 2011.
Belgium is not alone: in 2017, the UK pledged £25 million to cover the salaries of PA employees in the West Bank. And, according to a Mail on Sunday report, several schools funded by the UK are also named for terrorists.
Other European contributions have come from France (€8 million in 2016), and Germany (a whopping €160 million annually), among others. Almost all of these payments are funneled through PEGASE, though Germany insists that none of its funds are used for pensions, salaries or ongoing payments that the PA makes to Palestinian terrorists jailed in Israel and their families. These payments reportedly total an estimated $140 million per year.
Yet some analysts and monitors dispute those claims.
"Following repeated queries by an opposition lawmaker, the Foreign Ministry in Berlin last month also acknowledged that funds for so-called 'martyrs' and Palestinian prisoners sitting in Israeli jails for security-related offenses come not only from the Palestine Liberation Organization but partially from the PA's own budget," a 2016 Times of Israel report said. This would mean that German funds may have helped pay for them.
EU funds, in other words, are not just helping to celebrate terrorists, but to support and train them in schools named after "heroes" like Mughrabi.
America stands apart from these European funders, but it is not entirely innocent. The US sent more than $700 million to the Palestinians in 2016. Still, America's contributions to the Palestinians have decreased in recent years, and are subject to extensive vetting, according to a Congressional Research Service (CRS) report.
Moreover, whereas EU payments are distributed through PEGASE, the US works through USAID, which -- since 2014 -- has primarily used the funds to pay off Palestinian Authority creditors, rather than send it directly into PA accounts.
Even stricter restrictions on US aid may be put into place in the coming year.
The Taylor Force Act, which the Senate Foreign Relations Committee passed in August, will "make future US assistance that directly benefits the PA contingent on it ending its current policies concerning payments to convicted terrorists and families of terrorists," according to Haaretz.
The act requires that the secretary of state regularly enforce PA compliance by certifying it has "terminated payments for acts of terrorism against American and Israeli citizens after being fairly tried and who have been imprisoned for such acts of terrorism, including the family members of the convicted individuals." In addition, "The PA will also have to take 'credible steps' against incitement to violence against Israelis and Americans," The Jerusalem Post reported. The Taylor Force Act, Haaretz predicted, could go into effect as early as 2018.
Even with the Taylor Force Act, however, the US is expected to continue much of its financial assistance to the PA, including several million dollars dedicated to humanitarian relief, infrastructure and the development of private sector initiatives. And as with Belgium and the UK, America continues to finance education efforts and the building of schools.
But this, too, may be about to change. Until recently, the curriculum in these schools was largely regulated by the Palestinian Authority, in keeping with UNRWA standards of teaching "the curriculum of the host country." Included in that curriculum: lessons demonizing Jews, encouraging "martyrdom" through terrorism and celebrating terrorists like Dalal Mughrabi.
But revisions to the UNRWA programs introduced in April now require that schools eliminate those incitements to violence, and include recognition of Israel. The US Congress has reportedly threatened to suspend school funding if these changes, which affect the education of more than 300,000 Palestinian children, are not implemented.
Now, with Belgium's retreat from educational support of Palestinian schools that honor terrorists, other countries are likely to re-examine their funding of Palestinian schools. The UK, for example, halted $30 million in aid last month.
At first glance, this seems appropriate. But it also opens up new dilemmas and questions about the future prospects for Middle East peace. Educating Palestinian youth is increasingly important in the Internet age -- and in the ongoing battle for hearts and minds. Abandoning education initiatives risks allowing Fatah, Hamas and other terrorist or Islamist groups to oversee the schooling of these children -- leaving them vulnerable to the constant propaganda machines of other terror groups.
The West's best hope, then, would seem to be continuing to provide our own alternatives, with a curriculum of our own making. The question is how to best proceed -- and how effective we ultimately can be.