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Do our children know enough about Israel?

An American study questioned the substance of Israel education in Jewish day schools

June 5, 2020 08:46
Alex Pomson, of Rosov Consulting, who led a session on Israel education at the London School of Jewish Studies online conference for secondary school teachers

BySimon Rocker, simon rocker

3 min read

When Bradley was 17, he was interviewed as part of a research project on Israel education in Jewish day schools in the USA. As a teenager, he was a passionate supporter of the Jewish state and felt a responsibility to defend it, believing Israel was something to “cherish a lot”.

But seven years later, he had become more left-wing politically and his opinion of Israel changed. The ethical and political foundations on which he had been taught at school to “advocate for Israel” now felt detached from his general worldview and he felt resentful at his school. “How dare they have led me astray as a young kid,” he now said.

His experience was cited at one of the sessions at a recent conference for Jewish secondary school teachers organised by the London Jewish School of Studies. Despite having to move online, it attracted nearly 130 participants from the UK and abroad.

“It is really challenging task to engage in a form of Israel education that is authentic, honest and developmentally appropriate to a degree that young people won’t look back on it as being paediatric,” said the presenter of the LSJS session, Alex Pomson of Rosov Consulting, which conduced the research .