Become a Member
Family & Education

Darwin can be a Jewish studies teacher's best friend

Learning about evolution is compulsory in the national science curriculum. So how can Jewish primary teachers reconcile it with the Bible?

January 23, 2017 11:45
Charles Darwin, the father of evolutionary theory (Getty Images)
2 min read

Do you know who this is?” Rabbi Eliezer Zobin, the interim principal of Immanuel College, asks a roomful of Jewish studies teachers.


The photograph shows a man with a thick, straggly, white beard and a black hat. But he is not an Orthodox rabbi or a rabbi of any kind. He is one of the iconic figures of science, the Victorian architect of the theory of evolution, Charles Darwin.


By the time they reach their final year of Jewish primary school, what children learn in their science lessons conflicts with a literal understanding of the biblical story of Creation.


According to the  national curriculum, Year 6 students should be taught to “recognise that living things have changed over time and that fossils provide information about living things that inhabited the Earth millions of years ago”.