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Far-right coalition in Israel sparks furor over education and values

A far-right government led by Benjamin Netanyahu has yet to take office, but already a public revolt is brewing in Israel. It’s not against the coalition’s looming plans to seize more West Bank land or undermine the independence of the judiciary. Rather, it’s over the handover to religious extremists of key facets of Israel’s education system.

The focal point of the defiance is Avi Maoz, whose extreme religious-nationalist party ran on a campaign of “traditional” family values and anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and who was given control over all external curricula allowed in state-run secular schools. Additional responsibilities include a new amorphous “Jewish identity authority.”

Why We Wrote This

Even before Israel’s new, hard-right coalition has taken office, the naming of a religious anti-LGBTQ extremist to a new education post is roiling the public over fundamental questions of Israeli identity and Jewish values.

Vows of defiance have extended well beyond the liberal and secular sectors of society. Yet some educators are skeptical of Mr. Maoz’s ability to institute wholesale changes.

Nir, a parent and high school teacher, says Mr. Maoz and other religious coalition members are “missionaries who view secular society as an ‘empty vessel’ and Israeli secular identity as flimsy and weak.”

“But how exactly will a minister or clerk in Jerusalem dictate to us what to teach or what topics are brought up in a classroom by the students themselves? At the end of the day, it comes down to one teacher standing in front of a class.”

A new, far-right government led by Benjamin Netanyahu has yet to officially take office, but already a public revolt is brewing.

It’s not against the coalition’s looming plans to seize more West Bank land or to undermine the independence of Israel’s judiciary, but rather the handover to religious extremists of key facets of the country’s education system.

Indeed, among the numerous flash-points this new government – expected to be sworn in next week – may exacerbate are fundamental questions surrounding Jewish values and civic identity in Israel, which was founded both as a liberal democracy and as a homeland for Jews.

Why We Wrote This

Even before Israel’s new, hard-right coalition has taken office, the naming of a religious anti-LGBTQ extremist to a new education post is roiling the public over fundamental questions of Israeli identity and Jewish values.

Alluding to this month’s Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, termed the Festival of Lights, Israel’s largest parent association wrote as a protest rallying cry in early December: “We’ve come to expel darkness.”

In quick succession, hundreds of schools and dozens of municipalities across Israel signed on to the petition by the parent association rejecting any radical changes to the education curricula. Demonstrations were called, and in a move never before seen in Israeli politics, still-serving centrist Prime Minister Yair Lapid joined in protests against the government that is set to replace him.

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