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Israel

Ashkenazim-only school 'illegal'

March 18, 2010 15:57
School segregation has been challenged in court several times

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

The Israeli Education Ministry has stepped up its campaign against schools that segregate Ashkenazi and Sephardi pupils.

This week, the ministry ordered the closure of a school that had been set up three months ago to cater for 74 Ashkenazi girls in the strictly Orthodox town of Emanuel in the West Bank.

Their parents had taken them out of the local Beit Yaakov girls' school after the Supreme Court ruled that the separate classes in the school for Ashkenazi and Sephardi girls were illegal.

The issue of segregation in the strictly Orthodox education stream, where many schools operate a quota of Sephardi pupils or keep them in separate classes, has been the subject of a number of Supreme Court petitions, and the current Education Minister, Gidon Sa'ar, has taken it upon himself to enforce the court's rulings.

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