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Security training the new normal – Thousand Oaks Acorn

Posted By on February 17, 2022

On Jan. 15, a gunman held four people including a rabbi hostage at Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas, because, in his words, Jews control the world.

The crisis ended when the rabbi, following the security training hed received, told his parishioners to run and threw a chair at the gunman.

Courageous action on the part of the rabbi, but one wonders at the necessity for security training.

Rabbi Joshua Stanton wonders as well: I did not become a rabbi to be an expert in security, he said. I became a rabbi to teach, to support, to care. . . . And now . . . there is a great deal of fear.

The need for security training follows a string of attacks against Jewish communities.

One thinks, for example, of the shootings at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh where 11 parishioners died; those at the Chabad of Poway, one dead and three wounded; and those at the Jersey City kosher market, three dead.

Sadly, the disease of antisemitism grows like a cancer in the United States.

According to the American Jewish Committee, one in four American Jews have been the targets of antisemitism in the last 12 months.

The Ventura County Interfaith community deplores both the cowardly attacks on Jewish communities and the antisemitism that undergirds them.

It also applauds the courage of the rabbi of the Colleyville congregation, and it applauds the everyday courage of the rabbis of Ventura County who continue to minister to their congregations in the face of events like Colleyville and the everyday pain of antisemitism.

More than that, though, we commit to a redoubled effort to combat antisemitism by connecting communities of faith of all stripes in Ventura County.

Timothy HeltonCamarilloHelton is a member of the Ventura County Interfaith Association.

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Security training the new normal - Thousand Oaks Acorn

The Idolatry of Permanence – Jewish Journal

Posted By on February 17, 2022

Like physicists in search of a unified field theory, the sages of old sought the Torahs great unifying principlethat which encompasses and undergirds all of Gods teachings to the Jewish people.

Rabbi Akiva proposed: And you shall love your fellow man as yourself. (Leviticus 19:18)

Ben Azzai offered: This is the book of the lineage of Adam. (Genesis 5:1).

For both of these sages, the Torahs unifying principle is love. For Rabbi Akiva, this is expressed explicitly in a divine commandment. For Ben Azzai, it is implied by the fact that we are all one human family, descendents of a shared ancestor, Adam. (Bereishit Rabbah 24:7).

Rabbi Ishmael, however, saw things differently. For him, the great principle of the Torah was the prohibition against idolatry. (Mekhilta de-Rabbi Ishmael 12:6)

There is something undeniably charming about Rabbi Akiva and Ben Azzais answers. That everything boils down to love is a pleasing idea. That said, it is a bit of a stretch. Its not that the Torah is unconcerned with love. It isnt. But it is hugely concerned with other matters as wellmatters which, on the face of things, have no plausible connection to either Rabbi Akiva or Ben Azzais great principles.

And so, Rabbi Ishmaels great principle, despite its lack of pith or pathos, calls out to us for reexamination.

In Hebrew, idolatry is known as avodah zarah which means strange worship. One might also say, estranged worship. As with the charge of estrangement of affection in a divorce proceeding, the implication is that the idolators chief sin is comparable to the infidelity of a lover.

In the words of scholar Moshe Halbertal, however, the Torahs prohibition against idolatry entails not only a ban on the worship of other gods but also a ban on certain ways of representing the right God, i.e. with graven images.

Avodah zarah thus refers to two opposite sins. The first is the sin of taking a finite object and treating it as though it were the Infinite. The second is the sin of taking the Infinite and treating it as though it were finite.

Avodah zarah thus refers to two opposite sins. The first is the sin of taking a finite object and treating it as though it were the Infinite. The second is the sin of taking the Infinite and treating it as though it were finite.

Idolaters of the first variety are those who take the vain achievements of wealth, fame, and beautyand make them into gods.

Idolaters of the second variety take the infiniteGod, religion, Torahand make things. God becomes a star to be wished on or a weapon with which to bash others. Torah becomes a petty rule book. Religion becomes a social club.

In the Torah, both idolatries are deeply connected to the practice of making imageshardened statues of stone or metal that are worshipped as deities, or else graven images that reduce God to god.

For the Torah, a polemic against statues and graven images is in truth a discourse about perception. To see the world rightly is to see that it is a living being. At every corner, it defies understanding and categorization. It is, in the words of mystic philosopher Martin Buber, an infinitely deep Thou, rather than an it.

The world of idols is a world of illusion. In Hinduism, this concept is known as maya. Maya is the dazzling magic show that conceals the true, deeper nature of the universe.

According to philosopher Alan Watts, the word maya, shares an etymology with the word matter. This is to say that the world of matter, of hardened forms, is in some way what we are talking about when we discuss maya, the world of illusion.

This is not to say, as some religious teachers have it, that the material world is somehow less valuable or real than some imagined spiritual realm. The material world is deeply real. That said, we are deeply confused about its true nature. We like to imagine that the universe is a collection of discrete thingsa space cluttered with junk. We imagine the world as a hardened place, when it is, in truth, ever changingbetter represented by the flickering flame and the melting candle than the golden candelabra.

Maya, then, is the delusion of permanence in a universe of impermanence. It is the delusion of essentialism in a universe of flux. Similarly, idolatry is the sin of taking this vast, shifting, electric, unnamable reality and casting it as a graven image.

In the book of Psalms, it is written of idols that a mouth they have but they do not speak, eyes they have but they do not see. Earsbut they do not hear hands but they dont not feel. The Psalmist warns us, those who make them and all who trust in them will become like them. (115:5-8).

To worship a statue is thus to become a statueto harden and be limited, to be insensate to the world in its fullness. This is the grave danger of the graven image.

To worship a statue is thus to become a statueto harden and be limited, to be insensate to the world in its fullness. This is the grave danger of the graven image.

Mythologist Joseph Campbell famously said that what people are seeking is not the meaning of life but rather an experience of being alive. To the person who has become a statue, it is this experience that is lost.

Trapped by cosmic illusionby maya and matterour senses turn to stone. In this state, what use can Rabbi Akiva and Ben Azzais great principles be to us? What we need is Rabbi Ishmael to drag us from our statues and set fire to our idol trees.

He is here to remind us that the Torah did not descend from heaven in order to inspire us with lovely words but rather to save us from spending our whole lives entranced by stone images as our eyes become dull.

Matthew Schultz is the author of the essay collection What Came Before (2020). He is a rabbinical student at Hebrew College in Newton, Massachusetts.

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The Idolatry of Permanence - Jewish Journal

Traveling exhibit sheds light on the Holocaust during visit to north central Florida – WUFT

Posted By on February 17, 2022

As a young Jewish girl living in Toronto, Jordana Lebowitz decided her purpose in life was to help keep the memory of the Holocaust alive.

Lebowitz, now 26, was just 16 years old when she traveled to Poland and Israel with the March of the Living, an international program that educates people about the history of the Holocaust by taking them to those countries.

Three years later, by then a psychology student at the University of Guelph in Canada, Lebowitz founded ShadowLight, an organization that uses immersive programs to connect people to the Holocaust and aims to ensure that such an event never happens again.

We have to be aware of the issues going on in society, be it hatred, prejudice, genocide, even just little acts of oppression here and there, she said. We have to be able to stop those in their tracks before they become the Holocaust.

Not long into her advocacy efforts, Lebowitz found a replica of a German cattle car, the kind used to transport roughly 100 Jews and others at one time from their homes to the Nazi-run concentration camps. It was literally on the side of the street, in the back lot of Canadian set company MK Picture Car Services, which had created the replica for a movie, she said.

Its now The Cattle Car: Stepping In and Out of Darkness replica exhibit promoting Holocaust education. In 2015, it started with displays of photographs and words on the interior walls. By 2020, it had projectors and speakers to create an immersive experience that allows attendees to feel as if transported in the car just as Holocaust victims were.

The freight cars U.S. leg of the North American tour began in December and made its way Monday and Tuesday to the outside of Jewish organization University of Florida Hillels building across University Avenue near Ben Hill Griffin Stadium.

According to UF spokeswoman Hessy Fernandez, the originally requested location, which would have been on UF property, had already been reserved by the time the Jewish Student Union made its request late last week. But, according to UF Hillel executive director Rabbi Jonah Zinn, the final location worked out for the best.

I had someone who drove by the other day and said, I came by, I saw this and I pulled my car over because I had to stop, Zinn said.

Videos of people acting as Jewish men, women and children of the time period are projected on every inside wall of the cattle car.

During the free, 21-minute experience, attendees heard from Holocaust survivors Hedy Bohm and Nate Leipciger, whose interviews are also projected on the walls. Videos and photos of concentration camps and their starved prisoners both dead and alive accompany images of Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler and German war propaganda.

Jared Marino, 23, oversees the technical aspects of the program. A film graduate from Sheridan College in Ontario, he makes sure the generators have gas, the computers are properly working and the internet is stable. Marino is also in charge of keeping it all operable when the hardware overheats, a problem the team doesnt encounter in the Canadian weather.

It makes me so happy to be a part of something that is changing some peoples lives, he said. It certainly changed mine.

The Cattle Car tours high schools and universities, but students arent the only ones to take advantage of the experience. UF Hillel associate director Stefani Rozen said she spoke to visitors Monday from an interfaith womens group in Ocala.

Other attendees live right down the road. Ashley and Ethan Fieldman, both UF graduates came from just a few blocks north of campus Monday while their children were at school.

Ethan Fieldman, who has visited the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, as well as the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland, said the freight car replica is as good as it gets without having to travel overseas to learn about Holocaust history. Ashley Fieldman said, Its a lot more powerful than reading a book or even just hearing about it.

Cleo Gilmore, 21, of Jacksonville, is a UF junior studying psychology. Adopted into a Jewish family as a baby, she said much of what she saw and heard in the exhibit Tuesday wasnt new. However, that didnt change the way being in the freight car made her feel. She said it helped her see that people just like her were packed into the real thing during the Holocaust.

Gilmore said while the reminder of Jews difficult history was saddening, she also felt feelings of frustration over the idea that antisemitism hasnt completely gone away. She urged her Jewish friends to each bring someone with them to the exhibit who wasnt Jewish.

Its a reminder that it didnt begin or end with the Holocaust, Gilmore said. The Holocaust was just one instance out of many of antisemitism.

Barrett Uhler, 33, of Fort Washington, Maryland, is a graduate student of critical museum studies at UF. When her classmate told her Tuesday about the exhibit, Uhler knew she had to go. The car only had a few other people in it when she stepped inside, but she said it still felt disconcerting when a volunteer closed the door to the outside.

To Uhler, learning the stories of the Holocaust from the people who experienced it even if virtually made the program both emotional and realistic.

The personalization of the stories and the environment really work together very well, she said.

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Traveling exhibit sheds light on the Holocaust during visit to north central Florida - WUFT

Holocaust victims opera stored for years in trunk gets premiere at last – The Guardian

Posted By on February 17, 2022

An opera score retrieved from a San Francisco basement has had its world premiere in a German theatre, exuberantly brought to life by more than 150 musicians and performers nearly 80 years after its composer was murdered by the Nazis.

Grete Minde, a late-romantic opera of 1920s jazz-inspired melodies and large orchestral sounds, was the work of Eugen Engel, a Berlin-based Jewish textile tradesman in his day job, who gave his handwritten sheet music to his daughter for safekeeping when she escaped to the United States in 1941.

He waited in vain for permission to follow her but was killed in Sobibor extermination camp on 26 March 1943, at the age of 67, after his arrest in Amsterdam.

We kept his papers in a trunk for years but it was too painful for my mother to take them out, so we never really engaged with them, though I always knew there was an opera score there, said Jan Agee, Engels granddaughter.

She didnt realise their significance until after her mother Evas death in 2006, when she was contacted by the Jewish Museum Berlin looking for documents for its archives.

Agee travelled with her brother and daughter from California to eastern Germany and the Theater Magdeburg for the first live performance of Grete Minde, a rousing spectacle that veers between comedy and tragedy and has left critics full of praise.

It has everything you may wish from an opera, involving the entire ensemble, a heart-stopping storyline touching on the dream of a better, fairer life versus the dogma and bigotry of bourgeois society, accompanied with gorgeous sounds and catchy rhythms, wrote Die Zeits music critic Hannah Schmidt.

Talking backstage after the performance, which received standing ovations, Megan Agee, Engels great-granddaughter said: It is quite overwhelming to have these written words and notes which have been dormant for so long brought to life. Its like Eugen Engel planted a seed back then but until it was performed we did not know exactly what that was. We are amazed and grateful for the abundance of what has emerged.

Her uncle Claude Lowen, Engels 84-year-old grandson, said: These musicians today are giving voice to my grandfather as well as to all the many other musicians who were murdered, many cut off before they were able to show their full potential.

The opera has further performances in Magdeburg in February and March and the family said they were hopeful it would be performed elsewhere around the world, with several concert venues having already reached out to the German theatre.

Jan Agee, 74, said her mother never got over the feeling she had left her father behind. She said: She had an upright piano waiting for him for when he would finally arrive in the United States. But he never did, and it was her greatest wish to have his music performed. My biggest regret is that she is no longer here to experience this.

Anna Skryleva, a Russian conductor who became the general music director of Theater Magdeburg in 2019, first became interested in Engel at a performance of some of his works at the unveiling of a brass plaque engraved with brief details about his life and death. The stolperstein, or stumbling stone, is set in the pavement of Charlottenstrasse 74, his Berlin address, which was destroyed in a bombing raid.

She took a copy of the piano arrangement of the opera home and played it. I was immediately captured, she said. It is replete with interesting harmonious expressions and stylistic phrases. I was struck by its touches of Wagner, Strauss and Korngold, by the confidence of a layperson to write such an ambitious work.

The musicians a large ensemble including an organ, two harps, strings and brass, a female choir and solo singers were enthusiastic supporters of the project, Skryleva said. We are all at great pains to do Engel justice, seeing him as representative of the many composers we never got to know.

Little is known of Engels life or how he taught himself to compose. His wider body of work includes chamber music, lieder and quartets. Working on the opera was a sideline as he earned money as a buyer of fabric for womens coats on behalf of a large Berlin department store.

He was friends with leading musicians in Berlin including the composer Engelbert Humperdinck and the conductors Bruno Walter and Leo Blech, as recorded in extensive letters between them found in the trunk. Engel would trawl music shops with his daughter and regularly took scores with him to study line by line during opera concerts.

The dozens of letters on thin paper that he sent to his daughter after she went to the USremain among the familys most precious possessions.

He typed them; then, when he was forbidden from buying typewriter ribbon, he continued them by hand, Agee said. In the last one, via the Red Cross, dated 20 March 1943, he wrote: My dear children, I am healthy and well and think of you often.

Skryleva and Ulrike Schrder, Theater Magdeburgs chief dramatic adviser, oversaw the painstaking transcription by external experts of more than 40 individual voice and instrument parts, making use of the shutdown during the pandemic to do so. The entire production cost more than 110,000 to stage.

We believe he spent almost 20 years composing the opera, working on it in his spare time, said Schrder, who has attempted to piece together as much of Engels life as possible. The libretto was written in 1914 and this might have been the starting point.

By the time hed finished the opera in 1933, the Nazis were in power, but he kept trying to get it on stage even as his life was in danger. Even if he hadnt been Jewish it would have been hard for him to get it on the stage as a non-professional, but the rise of Hitler made it absolutely impossible, Schrder said.

Engel was one of about 13 siblings, most of whom are thought to have been murdered by the Nazi regime. But Schrder said she would be cautious about reading too much into Engels choice of source material Grete Minde, by the writer Theodor Fontane, which is based on the true 16th-century story of a young woman who is deprived of her rightful inheritance by officials in her home town and takes her revenge by setting fire to it and burning to death herself and her child.

Nevertheless, she said, a modern audience watching as the town goes up in flames would not be able to avoid drawing parallels between the fate of Grete Minde, who is treated as an outsider, and the decimation of the Jews.

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Holocaust victims opera stored for years in trunk gets premiere at last - The Guardian

We cheapen the grief of the Holocaust by conjuring Nazi tyranny it must stop | Opinion – NorthJersey.com

Posted By on February 17, 2022

Lisa Swain| Special to the USA TODAY Network

Whoopi Goldberg suspended from 'The View' over Holocaust comments

Whoopi Goldberg led off Tuesday's episode of "The View" with an apology but was suspended for 2 weeks for her Holocaust comments.

Entertain This!, USA TODAY

In the wake of Holocaust Remembrance Day, I have found myself reflecting on what it truly means to honor the over 17 million people, including 6 million Jews, who were murdered by the Nazi regime. Six million Jews were not killed overnight; the genocide began with dehumanizing cartoons and hateful language, with derogatory name-calling and slurs. Seemingly small acts of harassment and intimidation against Jewish business owners or worshippers in synagogues started early in the Nazi regime and grew with hateful and ill-informed language used by charismatic party leaders to incite harm.

It is alarming that we have begun to see a rise in these anti-Semitic language and acts around the world and here in New Jersey. An anti-vaccine propagandist recently compared daily life during a pandemic, wearing masks and getting vaccinated for the public good, to the experience of Anne Frank, who famously wrote about her time living in a concealed room for two years and later died in a concentration camp at age 16.

A talk show host recently claimed that the Holocaust had nothing to do with race, despite the Nazis' baseless views of Jewish people as an inferior race. Republican colleagues of mine in New Jersey even attended a rally where State House public health protocols were compared to policies from Nazi Germany. Comparing the policies of our public health officials who want to save lives in a pandemic to the policies enacted by Adolf Hitler trivializes the imprisonment and murder of these 17 million people.

Casually comparing wearing a mask or getting vaccinated during the pandemic to the Nazi regimes treatment of Jews is offensive. What started as commonplace anti-Semitism in the 1930s led to Jews being tortured and killed for their faith. Others were killed because of their association with Jews, their sexual orientation, religious beliefs, or their ethnic origins. The Nazis tortured many of these people, experimented on their bodies, took their children away and sent them to concentration camps where they were killed in gas chambers.

There is no comparison.

Misguided celebrities and public officials have a large audience, their voices carry weight.

But so does mine.

As one of only a handful of Jewish elected leaders in New Jersey, I have and will always choose to use my platform to shine a light on injustice and stand up against hatred. The horrors of the Holocaust and, furthermore, the casual anti-Semitism that escalated to such atrocities against humankind must never be repeated and it is our responsibility to assure it doesnt.

Assemblywoman Lisa Swain represents the 38th Legislative District in parts of Bergen and Passaic Counties.

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We cheapen the grief of the Holocaust by conjuring Nazi tyranny it must stop | Opinion - NorthJersey.com

Israeli-Palestinian Conflict | Global Conflict Tracker

Posted By on February 17, 2022

Recent Developments

In October 2020, an Israeli courtruledthat several Palestinian families living in Sheikh Jarraha neighborhood in East Jerusalemwere to be evicted by May 2021 with their landhanded overto Jewish families. In February 2021, several Palestinian families from Sheikh Jarrah filed an appeal to the court ruling andpromptedprotestsaround the appeal hearings, theongoinglegal battle around property ownership, anddemandingan end to the forcible displacement of Palestinians from their homes in Jerusalem.

In late April 2021, Palestinians began demonstrating in the streets of Jerusalem to protest the pending evictions and residents of Sheikh Jarrahalong with other activistsbegan to host nightlysit-ins. In early May, after a courtruledin favor of the evictions, the protests expanded with Israeli policedeployingforce against demonstrators. On May 7, following weeks of daily demonstrations and rising tensions between protesters, Israeli settlers, and police during the month of Ramadan, violence broke out at the al-Aqsa Mosquecompoundin Jerusalem, with Israeli policeusingstun grenades, rubber bullets, and water cannons in a clash with protestors that left hundreds of Palestinianswounded.

After the clashes in Jerusalems Old City, tensions increased throughout East Jerusalem, compounded by the celebration ofJerusalem Day. On May 10, after several consecutive days of violence throughout Jerusalem and the use of lethal and nonlethal force by Israeli police, Hamas, the militant group which governs Gaza, and other Palestinianmilitant groupslaunchedhundreds ofrocketsinto Israeli territory. Israel responded with air strikes and later artillery bombardments against targets in Gaza, including launching several air strikes thatkilledmore than twenty Palestinians. While claiming to target Hamas, other militants, and theirinfrastructureincluding tunnels and rocket launchersIsraelexpanded its aerial campaign and strucktargetsincluding residential buildings,media headquarters, andrefugeeandhealthcare facilities.

On May 21, Israel and Hamas agreed to a cease-fire, brokered by Egypt, with both sides claiming victory and no reported violations. More than two hundred and fifty Palestinians were killed and nearly two thousand others wounded, and at least thirteen Israelis were killed over the eleven days of fighting. Authorities in Gaza estimate that tens of millions of dollars of damage was done, and the United Nations estimates that more than 72,000 Palestinians were displaced by the fighting.

Background

TheIsraeli-Palestinian conflictdates back to the end of the nineteenth century. In 1947, the United Nations adopted Resolution 181, known as the Partition Plan, which sought to divide the British Mandate of Palestine into Arab and Jewish states. On May 14, 1948, the State of Israel was created, sparking the first Arab-Israeli War. The war ended in 1949 with Israels victory, but 750,000 Palestinians were displaced and the territory was divided into 3 parts: the State of Israel, the West Bank (of the Jordan River), and the Gaza Strip.

Over the following years, tensions rose in the region, particularly between Israel and Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. Following the 1956 Suez Crisis and Israels invasion of the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt, Jordan, and Syria signed mutual defense pacts in anticipation of a possible mobilization of Israel troops. In June 1967, following a series of maneuvers by Egyptian President Abdel Gamal Nasser, Israel preemptively attacked Egyptian and Syrian air forces, starting the Six-Day War. After the war, Israel gained territorial control over the Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip from Egypt; the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan; and the Golan Heights from Syria. Six years later, in what is referred to as the Yom Kippur War or the October War, Egypt and Syria launched a surprise two-front attack on Israel to regain their lost territory; the conflict did not result in significant gains for Egypt, Israel, or Syria, but Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat declared the war a victory for Egypt as it allowed Egypt and Syria to negotiate over previously ceded territory. Finally, in 1979, following a series of cease-fires and peace negotiations, representatives from Egypt and Israel signed theCamp David Accords, a peace treaty that ended the thirty-year conflict between Egypt and Israel.

Even though the Camp David Accords improved relations between Israel and its neighbors, the question of Palestinian self-determination and self-governance remained unresolved. In 1987, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip rose up against the Israeli government in what is known as the first intifada. The 1993Oslo I Accordsmediated the conflict, setting up a framework for the Palestinians to govern themselves in the West Bank and Gaza, and enabled mutual recognition between the newly established Palestinian Authority and Israels government. In 1995, the Oslo II Accords expanded on the first agreement, adding provisions that mandated the complete withdrawal of Israel from 6 cities and 450 towns in the West Bank.

In 2000, sparked in part by Palestinian grievances over Israels control over the West Bank, a stagnating peace process, and former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharons visit to the al-Aqsa mosquethe third holiest site in Islamin September 2000, Palestinians launched the second intifada, which would last until 2005. In response, the Israeli government approved construction of a barrier wall around the West Bank in 2002, despite opposition from the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court.

In 2013, the United States attempted to revive thepeace processbetween the Israeli government and the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. However, peace talks were disrupted when Fatahthe Palestinian Authoritys ruling partyformed a unity government with its rival faction Hamas in 2014. Hamas, a spin-off of Egypts Muslim Brotherhood founded in 1987 following the first intifada, is one of two major Palestinian political parties and was designated a foreign terrorist organization by the United States in 1997.

In the summer of 2014,clashesin the Palestinian territories precipitated a military confrontationbetween the Israeli military and Hamas in which Hamas fired nearly three thousand rockets at Israel, and Israel retaliated with a major offensive in Gaza. The skirmish ended in late August 2014 with acease-firedeal brokered by Egypt, but only after 73Israelis and 2,251Palestinians werekilled. After a wave of violence between Israelis and Palestinians in 2015, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbasannouncedthat Palestinians would no longer be bound by the territorial divisions created by theOslo Accords. In March and May of 2018, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip conducted weekly demonstrationsat the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel. The final protest coincided with the seventieth anniversary of theNakba, the Palestinian exodus that accompanied Israeli independence. While most of the protesters were peaceful, some stormed the perimeter fence and threw rocks and other objects.According to the United Nations, 183 demonstrators were killed and more than 6,000 were wounded by live ammunition.

Also in May of 2018, fighting broke out between Hamas and the Israeli military in what became the worst period of violence since 2014. Before reaching acease-fire, militants in Gaza fired over one hundred rockets into Israel; Israel responded with strikes on more than fifty targets in Gaza during the twenty-four-hourflare-up.

The Donald J. Trump administration setachieving an Israeli-Palestinian deal as a foreign policy priority. In 2018, the Trump administration canceled funding for the UN Relief and Works Agency, which provides aid to Palestinian refugees, and relocatedthe U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, a reversal of a longstanding U.S. policy. The decision to move the U.S. embassy was met with applause from the Israeli leadership but wascondemnedby Palestinian leaders and others in the Middle East and Europe. Israel considers the complete and united Jerusalem its capital, while Palestinians claim East Jerusalemas the capital of a future Palestinian state. In January 2020, the Trump administration released its long-awaited Peace to Prosperity plan, which wasrejected by Palestinians due to its support for future Israeli annexation of settlements in the West Bank and control over an undivided Jerusalem.

In August and September 2020, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and then Bahrainagreedto normalize relations with Israel, making them only the third and fourth countries in the regionfollowing Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994to do so. The agreements, named theAbraham Accords, came more than eighteen months after the United StateshostedIsrael and several Arab states forministerial talksin Warsaw, Poland, about the future of peace in the Middle East. Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas rejectedthe accords; Hamas alsorejectedthe agreements.

Concerns

There is concern that a thirdintifadacouldbreak outand that renewed tensions will escalate into large-scale violence. The United States has an interest in protecting the security of its long-term ally Israel, and achieving a lasting deal between Israel and the Palestinian territories, which would improve regional security.

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Israeli-Palestinian Conflict | Global Conflict Tracker

Palestine – Roman Palestine | Britannica

Posted By on February 17, 2022

After the destruction of Jerusalem, a legion (X Fretensis) was stationed on the site, and the rank of the provincial governor was raised from procurator to legatus Augusti, signifying a change from equestrian to senatorial rank. Caesarea Maritima, the governors residence, became a Roman colony, and, as a reward for the loyalty of the Greeks in the revolt, a new pagan city, Neapolis (modern Nbulus in the West Bank), was founded at Shechem, the religious centre of the Samaritans.

The Jews, deprived of the Temple, founded a new religious centre in the rabbinical school of Jamnia (Jabneh). When a revolt broke out in 115 ce, the Roman emperor Trajan appointed the first consular legate of Judaea, Lucius Quietus, to suppress it. The rank of the legate confirms that two legions were stationed in Judaea, one at Jerusalem, the other at Caparcotna in Galilee, and thenceforth the province must have held consular status.

In 132 the emperor Hadrian decided to build a Roman colony, Aelia Capitolina, on the site of Jerusalem. The announcement of his plan, as well as his ban on circumcision (revoked later, but only for the Jews), provoked a much more serious uprising, the Second Jewish Revolt, led by Bar Kokhba. It was ruthlessly repressed by Julius Severus; according to certain accounts, almost 1,000 villages were destroyed and more than half a million people killed. In Judaea proper the Jews seem to have been virtually exterminated, but they survived in Galilee, which, like Samaria, appears to have held aloof from the revolt. Tiberias in Galilee became the seat of the Jewish patriarchs. The province of Judaea was renamed Syria Palaestina (later simply called Palaestina), and, according to Eusebius of Caeseria (Ecclesiastical History, Book IV, chapter 6), no Jew was thenceforth allowed to set foot in Jerusalem or the surrounding district. This prohibition apparently was relaxed sometime later to permit Jews to enter Jerusalem one day a year, on a day of mourning called Tisha be-Ava. Although this ban was officially still in force as late as the 4th century ce, there is some evidence that from the Severan period onward (after 193) Jews visited the city more frequently, especially at certain festival times, and even that there may have been some Jews in residence. About the time the Bar Kokhba revolt was crushed (135), Hadrian proceeded to convert Jerusalem into a Greco-Roman city, with a circus, an amphitheatre, baths, and a theatre and with streets conforming to the Roman grid pattern. He also erected temples dedicated to Jupiter and himself (Aelia was his clan name) on the very site of the destroyed Temple of Jerusalem. To repopulate the city, Hadrian apparently brought in Greco-Syrians from the surrounding areas and even perhaps some legionary veterans. The urbanization and Hellenization of Palestine was continued during the reign of the emperor Septimius Severus (193211 ce), except in Galilee, where the Jewish presence remained strong. New pagan cities were founded in Judaea at Eleutheropolis and Diospolis (formerly Lydda) and at Nicopolis (formerly Emmaus) under one of Severuss successors, Elagabalus (218222). In addition, Severus issued a specific ban against Jewish proselytism.

After Constantine I converted to Christianity early in the 4th century, a new era of prosperity began for Palestine. The emperor himself built a magnificent church on the site of the Holy Sepulchre, the most sacred of Christian holy places; his mother, Saint Helena, built two othersat the place of the Nativity at Bethlehem and of the Ascension in Jerusalemand his mother-in-law, Eutropia, built a church at Mamre. Palestine began to attract floods of pilgrims from all parts of the empire. It also became a great centre of the eremitic life (idiorrhythmic monasticism); men flocked from all quarters to become hermits in the Judaean wilderness, which was soon dotted with monasteries. Constantine added the southern half of Arabia to the province, but in 357358 (or perhaps as late as the 390s) the addition was made a separate province under the name of Palaestina or Salutaris (later Palaestina Tertia). At the end of the 4th century, an enlarged Palestine was divided into three provinces: Prima, with its capital at Caesarea; Secunda, with its capital at Scythopolis (Bet Shean); and Salutaris, with its capital at Petra or possibly for a time at Elusa. It is clear that the province of Palaestina underwent several territorial changes in the 4th century ce, but the details and the chronology remain obscure. The governor of Prima bore the high rank of proconsul from 382 to 385 and againas part of East Rome, which came to be known as the Byzantine Empire after 476from 535 onward. A dux of Palestine commanded the garrison of all three provinces.

The bishop of the civil capital, Caesarea, was, according to the usual rule, metropolitan of the province, but the bishops of Jerusalem were claiming special prerogatives as early as the first Council of Nicaea (325). Eventually, Juvenal, bishop of Jerusalem from 421 to 458, achieved his ambition and was recognized by the Council of Chalcedon (451) as patriarch of the three provinces of Palestine.

There was a revolt of the Jews in Galilee in 352, which was suppressed by Gallus Caesar. Under Marcian (450457) and again under the Byzantine emperor Justinian I (527565), the Samaritans revolted. Palestine, like Syria and Egypt, was also troubled by the Monophysite controversy, a debate among Christians who disagreed with the Council of Chalcedons assertion that the person of Jesus Christ comprised two natures, human and divine. When Juvenal returned from Chalcedon, having signed the Councils canons, the monks of Palestine rose and elected another bishop of Jerusalem, and military force was required to subdue them. Gradually, however, the Chalcedonian doctrine gained ground, and Palestine became a stronghold of orthodoxy. Apart from these disturbances, the country enjoyed peace and prosperity until 611, when Khosrow II, king of Persia, launched an invasion of Byzantine territory. His troops captured Jerusalem (614), destroyed churches, and carried off the True Cross. In 628 the Byzantine emperor Heraclius recovered Palestine, and he subsequently restored the True Cross to Jerusalem, but 10 years later Arab armies invaded both the Persian and the Byzantine empires.

The successful unification of the Arabian Peninsula under Islam by the first caliph, Ab Bakr (632634), made it possible to channel the expansion of the Arab Muslims into new directions. Ab Bakr, therefore, summoned the faithful to a holy war (jihad) and quickly amassed a large army. He dispatched three detachments of about 3,000 (later increased to about 7,500) men each to start operations in southern and southeastern Syria. He died, however, before he could witness the results of these undertakings. The conquests he started were carried on by his successor, the caliph Umar I (634644).

The first battle took place at Wadi Al-Arabah, south of the Dead Sea. The Byzantine defenders were defeated and retreated toward Gaza but were overtaken and almost annihilated. In other places, however, the natural advantages of the defenders were more effective, and the invaders were hard-pressed. Khlid ibn al-Wald, then operating in southern Iraq, was ordered to the aid of his fellow Arab generals on the Syrian front, and the combined forces won a bloody victory on July 30, 634, at a place in southern Palestine that the sources call Ajndayn. All of Palestine then lay open to the invaders.

In the meantime, the emperor Heraclius was mustering his own large army and in 636 dispatched it against the Muslims. Khlid concentrated his troops on the Yarmk River, the eastern tributary of the Jordan River. The decisive battle that delivered Palestine to the Muslims took place on August 20, 636. Only Jerusalem and Caesarea held out, the former until 638, when it surrendered to the Muslims, and the latter until October 640. Palestine, and indeed all of Syria, was then in Muslim hands. After the surrender of Jerusalem, Umar divided Palestine into two administrative districts (jund) similar to the Roman and Byzantine provinces: they were Jordan (Al-Urdn) and Palestine (Filasn). Jordan included Galilee and Acre (modern Akko, Israel) and extended east to the desert; Palestine, with its capital first at Lydda (modern Lod, Israel) and later at Ramla (after 716), covered the region south of the Plain of Esdraelon.

Umar lost no time in emphasizing Islams interest in the holy city of Jerusalem as the first qiblah toward which, until 623, Muslims had turned their faces in prayer and as the third holiest spot in Islam. (The Prophet Muhammad himself had changed the qiblah to Mecca in 623.) On visiting the Temple Mount areawhich Muslims came to know as Al-aram al-Sharf (Arabic: The Noble Sanctuary)and finding the place suffering from neglect, Umar and his followers cleaned it with their own hands and declared it a sacred place of prayer, erecting there the first structure called Al-Aq Mosque.

Under the Umayyads, a Muslim dynasty that gained power in 661 from the Meccans and Medinans who had initially led the Islamic community, Palestine formed, with Syria, one of the main provinces of the empire. Each jund was administered by an emir assisted by a financial officer. This pattern continued, in general, until the time of Ottoman rule.

For various reasons, the Umayyads paid special attention to Palestine. The process of Arabization and Islamization was gaining momentum there. It was one of the mainstays of Umayyad power and was important in their struggle against both Iraq and the Arabian Peninsula. The caliph Abd al-Malik ibn Marwn (685705) erected the Dome of the Rock in 691 on the site of the Temple of Solomon, which the Muslims believed had been the halting station of the Prophet on his nocturnal journey to heaven. (See isr and mirj.) This magnificent structure represents the earliest Muslim monument still extant. Close to the shrine and to the south, Abd al-Maliks son, al-Wald I (705715), rebuilt Al-Aqa Mosque on a larger scale. The Umayyad caliph Umar II (717720) imposed humiliating restrictions on his non-Muslim subjects, particularly the Christians. Conversions arising from convenience as well as conviction then increased. These conversions to Islam, together with a steady tribal inflow from the desert, changed the religious character of Palestines inhabitants. The predominantly Christian population gradually became predominantly Muslim and Arabic-speaking. At the same time, during the early years of Muslim control of the city, a small permanent Jewish population returned to Jerusalem after a 500-year absence.

Umayyad rule ended in 750. Along with Syria, Palestine became subject to Abbsid authority, based in Baghdad, and, like Syria, it did not readily submit to its new masters. Unlike the Umayyads, who leaned on the Yemeni (South Arabian) tribes, the Abbsids, in Syria, favoured and indeed used the Qays (North Arabian) tribes. Enmity between the two groups was, therefore, intensified and became an important political factor in Palestine. Pro-Umayyad uprisings were frequent and received Palestinian support. In 840/841 Ab arb, a Yemenite, unfurled the white banner of the Umayyads and succeeded in recruiting a large number of peasant followers, mainly among the Palestinian population, who regarded him as the saviour whose appearance was to save the land from the hated Abbsids. Though the insurrection was put down, unrest persisted.

The process of Islamization gained momentum under the Abbsids. Abbsid rulers encouraged the settlement and fortification of coastal Palestine so as to secure it against the Byzantine enemy. During the second half of the 9th century, however, signs of internal decay began to appear in the Abbsid empire. Petty states, and some indeed not so petty, emerged in different parts of the realm. One of the first to affect Palestine was the Tlnid dynasty (868905) of Egypt, which marked the beginning of the disengagement of Egypt and, with it, of Syria and Palestine from Abbsid rule. During that period Palestine also experienced the destructive operations of the Qarmaians, an Isml Shite sect that launched an insurrection in 903906. After Abbsid authority was briefly restored, Palestine came under Ikhshdid rule (935969).

In the meantime, the Shite Fimid dynasty was rising to power in North Africa. It moved eastward to seize not only Egypt but also Palestine and Syria and to threaten Baghdad itself. The Fimids seized Egypt from the Ikhshdids in 969 and in less than a decade were able to establish a precarious control over Palestine, where they faced Qarmaian, Seljuq, Byzantine, and periodic Bedouin opposition. Palestine was thus often reduced to a battlefield. The country suffered even greater hardship, however, under the Fimid caliph al-kim (9961021), whose behaviour was at times erratic and extremely harsh, particularly toward his non-Muslim subjects. He reactivated earlier discriminatory laws imposed on Christians and Jews and added new ones. In 1009 he ordered the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which was severely damaged as a result.

In 1071 the Seljuqs captured Jerusalem, which prospered as pilgrimages by Jews, Christians, and Muslims increased despite political instability. The Fimids recaptured the city in 1098 only to relinquish it a year later to a new enemy, the Crusaders of western Europe.

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Palestine - Roman Palestine | Britannica

Kaln reiterates Turkey’s support for Palestine in talks with Abbas | Daily Sabah – Daily Sabah

Posted By on February 17, 2022

Presidential Spokesperson Ibrahim Kaln and Deputy Foreign Minister Sedat nal highlighted Turkey's commitment to the Palestinian cause in their meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah on Wednesday.

According to sources, the Turkish delegation assured continued support to the Palestinian people within the framework of a two-state solution.

Turkey-Palestine relations were also discussed in the meeting, the sources added.

The Turkish delegation also met Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki and discussed bilateral ties.

Turkish Consul General in Jerusalem Ahmet Rza Demirer also attended the meeting.

Kaln and nal are scheduled to meet the Israeli Foreign Ministry and presidency officials on Thursday.

The two senior Turkish officials began a two-day visit to Palestine and Israel on Wednesday.

The trip comes ahead of an expected visit to Turkey by Israeli President Isaac Herzog in March, as recently announced by President Recep Tayyip Erdoan. Herzog is expected to be in Turkey in early March for a rare trip following years of frayed ties between the two countries.

The visit to Ramallah comes as Turkey is on a path toward normalizing ties with Israel and after Ankara had stated it may mediate between Israel and Palestine.

After that, the Turkish delegation headed by Kaln and nal will also hold political consultations in Israel and discuss preparations for Herzog's upcoming visit.

Relations between Turkey and Israel hit a low in 2010 following an Israeli naval raid on a Turkish aid ship, the Mavi Marmara, en route to deliver humanitarian aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip. The raid killed 10 activists. The event caused an unprecedented crisis in Turkish-Israeli relations that had been peaceful for decades. Both countries even recalled their diplomatic envoys following the incident.

In 2013, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus apology to Turkey and the payment of $20 million (about TL 38 million at the time) in compensation to the Mavi Marmara victims, Turkish-Israeli relations entered a period of normalization.

In December 2016, both countries reappointed ambassadors as part of the reconciliation deal and reiterated several times the necessity to further improve bilateral relations.

The two countries once again expelled each other's ambassadors in 2018 after another bitter falling out, and relations have since remained tense. In recent months, however, the two countries have been working on a rapprochement with Erdoan, a vocal supporter of the Palestinian cause, holding telephone talks with his Israeli counterpart and other Israeli leaders.

Erdoan has said that Herzogs visit could open a new chapter in relations between Turkey and Israel and that he was ready to take steps in Israels direction in all areas, including natural gas.

Despite the recent rapprochement, Turkish officials continue to criticize Israels policies targeting Palestinians, including the illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Known for its unbreakable solidarity with the Palestinians, Turkey has been voicing support for the Palestinian cause in the international realm for decades. Turkish authorities emphasize that the only way to achieve lasting peace and stability in the Middle East is through a fair and comprehensive solution to the Palestinian issue within the framework of international law and United Nations resolutions.

Turkey has frequently underlined that normalization with Israel will not be at the cost of Palestine.

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Civil Society and the Question of Palestine – NGO Action News – 10 February 2022 – occupied Palestinian territory – ReliefWeb

Posted By on February 17, 2022

THIS PAGE MAY CONTAIN LINKS TO THIRD-PARTY WEB SITES. THE LINKED SITES ARE NOT UNDER THE CONTROL OF THE UNITED NATIONS AND THE UNITED NATIONS IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CONTENT OF ANY LINKED SITE OR ANY LINK CONTAINED IN A LINKED SITE. THE UNITED NATIONS PROVIDES THESE LINKS ONLY AS A CONVENIENCE, AND THE INCLUSION OF A LINK OR REFERENCE DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT OF THE LINKED SITE BY THE UNITED NATIONS. THIS NEWSLETTER IS A PROJECT OF THE DIVISION FOR PALESTINIAN RIGHTS, AND IS INTENDED TO PROVIDE INFORMATION ON NGO ACTIVITIES RELEVANT TO THE QUESTION OF PALESTINE . NGOS INTERESTED IN CONTRIBUTING INFORMATION ON THEIR ACTIVITIES SHOULD COMMUNICATE IT BY EMAIL.THE DIVISION RESERVES THE RIGHT TO MAKE THE FINAL SELECTION WITH REGARD TO MATERIAL TO BE INCLUDED IN THIS NEWSLETTER. IT CANNOT TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ACCURACY OF THE INFORMATION.

Middle East

On 7 February 2022, The Palestinian Center for Human Rights, Al Mezan, and Al-Haq jointly issued a statistical report on the assault on the Gaza Strip between 10-21 May 2021. The Israeli offensive saw 240 Palestinians killed by Israeli occupation forces, including 151 civilians and 59 children. The report also presents information regarding the damage to civilian objectsparticularly residential housesand commercial, industrial, health, and educational facilities, places of worship, agricultural lands, water and sanitation facilities, vehicles and others. According to the report, the occupation forces destroyed 1,313 residential units and damaged another 6,367. The number of forcibly displaced people due to the destruction of their house was 38,020, including 17,444 children and 10,218 women. The organizations reiterate their strong condemnation of the crimes committed by the Israeli occupying forces in the Gaza Strip, which continue to be perpetrated while the collective punishment of the population is implemented through closure and blockade. The organisations call on the international community and international legal bodiesincluding the International Criminal Court and the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israelto investigate the apparent Israeli violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL)and human rights in the Gaza Strip and to hold perpetrators accountable.

On 3 February 2022, Addameer reported that leading Palestinian human rights and civil society organizations filed a procedural objection to the Military Commander of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) in the West Bank, against the declaration of the groups as unlawful associations, under the 1945 Emergency (Defense) Regulations. The declarations were made following the decision by Israel on 21 October 2021, to designate the groups as terrorist organizations under Israels domestic 2016 Counter-Terrorism Law. The organizations that objected are Addameer, Al-Haq, Bisan Center for Research and Development, Defence for Children International Palestine, and the Union of Palestinian Womens Committees.

Israel

Europe

North America

On 10 February 10, the Center for Middle East Studies at Brown University hosted a conversation with Gil Hochberg about her new book, Becoming Palestine: Toward an Archival Imagination of the Future (Duke, 2021).

On 10 February, the Foundation for Middle East Peace and the American Friends of Combatants for Peace, launched the Gaza 101 series. Discussion will continue weekly through Thursday, March 3rd.

United Nations

On 8 February, the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People held its 406th meeting. With the Secretary-General presiding, the Committee re-elected the incumbent members of the Bureau, with the Permanent Representative of Senegal as the Chair of the Committee, and the Permanent Representatives of Cuba, Indonesia, Namibia and Nicaragua as Vice-Chairs. The State of Palestine remains an Observer on the Bureau, while one position of Vice-Chair and Rapporteur remains vacant, and consultations are continuing. The Committee also adopted its Programme of Work for 2022.

On 3 February 2022,UNRWA reported that the Government of Austria, through the Austrian Development Agency (ADA), the operational unit of Austria Development Cooperation, signed an agreement for a total of EUR 1 million for the 2022 United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) Emergency Appeal.

*This newsletter informs about recent and upcoming activities of Civil Society Organizations affiliated with the United Nations Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. The Committee and the Division for Palestinian Rights of the UN Secretariat provide the information as is without warranty of any kind, and do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, or reliability of the information contained in the websites linked in the newsletter.*

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Civil Society and the Question of Palestine - NGO Action News - 10 February 2022 - occupied Palestinian territory - ReliefWeb

Schools issued guidance on teaching partisan issues like BLM and Israel-Palestine conflict – Sky News

Posted By on February 17, 2022

Teachers should avoid partisan support on issues like the Israel-Palestine conflict, the Black Lives Matter movement and NHS reform when in classrooms, according to new guidance published by the government.

The document, which runs to 23 pages, outlines scenarios on how it believes schools can stay in compliance with the legal requirement to be impartial in their teaching, without "seek[ing] to limit the range of political issues and viewpoints schools can and do teach about".

Some 19 different examples are given within the guidance, explaining ways in which teachers and schools can approach scenarios.

One explains how, if an online resource on the Israel-Palestine conflict appears useful, but is found to contain one-sided political judgements presented as fact on past and present events, it is best avoided from being used in classrooms.

Another scenario explains how, when teaching about racism, "teachers should be clear that racism has no place in our society and help pupils to understand facts about this and the law".

It adds: "Where schools wish to teach about specific campaigning organisations, such as some of those associated with the Black Lives Matter movement, they should be aware that this may cover partisan political views.

"These are views which go beyond the basic shared principle that racism is unacceptable, which is a view schools should reinforce.

"Examples of such partisan political views include advocating specific views on how government resources should be used to address social issues, including withdrawing funding from the police."

Racial injustice 'baked into curriculum', says teacher

When it comes to historical issues, the guidance states that political balance is not required for periods like the renaissance and the reformation.

For more recent historical issues like empire and imperialism, the guidance states that "differing partisan political views" should be taught "in a balanced manner".

Controversial figures should be taught about in ways which focus on "factual information" if teachers do not think pupils can understand a "complex analysis" of their lives.

The publication also provides information on teaching about sensitive political issues.

In the case of decriminalisation of homosexuality in the UK, the guidance states that the views of those opposed to the move are not required to be presented "as acceptable in our society today".

The government also provides direction for the public display of political beliefs.

It states that, in the case of thanking the NHS for the work done during the pandemic, displaying a banner saying "thank you NHS" or something similar is ok.

But a school displaying a banner "demanding reform to the NHS or changes to NHS funding levels" would not be appropriate.

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Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi said: "Teaching about political issues, the different views people have, and the ways pupils can engage in our democratic society is an essential part of a broad and balanced curriculum.

"It is an important way in which schools support pupils to become active citizens who can form their own views, whilst having an understanding and respect for legitimate differences of opinion."

Martyn Oliver, chief executive of Outwood Grange Academies trust, said: "The requirement for schools to act with political impartiality has existed for many years and the vast majority of schools manage this with great sensitivity and expertise."

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Schools issued guidance on teaching partisan issues like BLM and Israel-Palestine conflict - Sky News


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