Abigail Shrier: The
Kindergarten Intifada
There is a well-coordinated, national
effort between teachers, activist organizations, and administrators to
indoctrinate American children against Israel. A Free Press investigation.
10.30.24 — Antisemitism, Politics, and Education
In August, the second-largest teachers union chapter in the
country—there are more than 35,000
members of United
Teachers Los Angeles—met at the Bonaventure Hotel in L.A. to
discuss, among other things, how to turn their K-12 students against Israel. In
front of a PowerPoint that read, “How to be a teacher & an
organizer. . . and NOT get fired,” history teacher Ron Gochez
elaborated on stealth methods for indoctrinating students.
But how to transport busloads of kids to an anti-Israel
rally, during the school day, without arousing suspicion?
“A lot of us that have been to those [protest] actions have
brought our students. Now I don’t take the students in my personal car,” Gochez
told the crowd. Then, referring to the Los Angeles Unified School District, he
explained: “I have members of our organization who are not LAUSD employees.
They take those students, and I just happen to be at the same place and the
same time with them.”
Gochez was just getting warmed up. “It’s like tomorrow I go
to church and some of my students are at the church. ‘Oh, wow! Hey, how you
doing?’ We just happen to be at the same place at the same time, and look! We
just happen to be at a pro-Palestine action, same place, same time.”
The crowd burst into approving laughter.
Seated at a keffiyeh-draped table, Gochez said, “Some of the things that we can
do as teachers is to organize. We just have to be really intelligent on how we
do that. We have to know that we’re under the microscope. We have to know that
Zionists and others are going to try to catch us in any way that they can to
get us into trouble.”
He continued: “If you organize students, it’s at your own risk, but I think
it’s something that’s necessary we have to do.” He told the audience of
educators that he once caught a “Zionist teacher” looking through his files.
Gochez warned the crowd to be wary of “admin trying to be all chummy with you.
You got to be very careful with that, even sometimes our own students.”
John Adams Middle School teacher and panelist William
Shattuc agreed, a keffiyeh around his neck. “We know that good history
education is political education. And when we are coming up against political
movements, like the movement for Zionism, that we disagree with, that we’re in
conflict with—they [Zionists] have their own form of political education and
they employ their own tools of censorship.”
What are the “tools of censorship” employed by Zionists?
Apparently, they include accusing teachers who rail against Israel in the
classroom of antisemitism.
“They try to say antisemitism, which is really ridiculous,
right?” said Guadalupe Carrasco Cardona, ethnic studies teacher at Edward R.
Roybal Learning Center in Los Angeles. Cardona recently received a National
Education Association Foundation Award for excellence in
teaching. “What they do is they conflate. Part of that is by putting
the star on their flag,” Cardona said, referring to the Jewish Star of David.
“Religion has nothing to do with it.”
But, she insists, that the course she teaches, and whose
curriculum she helped develop—ethnic studies—is fundamentally incompatible with
supporting Israel. “ ‘Are you pro-Israel—are you for genocide?’ And if anybody
were to say, ‘Okay, sure,’ that’s really not ethnic studies.” (Gochez, Shattuc,
and Cardona did not return requests for comment.)
It’s tempting to dismiss this as one more bull session
among radical teachers leading a far-left public-sector union. If only.
Four years ago, I was among the first journalists to expose the
widespread incursion of gender ideology into our schools. Once-fringe beliefs
about gender swiftly took over large swaths of society partly thanks to their
inclusion in school curricula and lessons.
Today, extensive interviews with parents, teachers, and
nonprofit organizations that monitor the radicalism and indoctrination in
schools convinced me that demonization of Israel in American primary and
secondary schools is no passing fad. Nor is it confined to elite private
schools serving hyper-progressive families. As one Catholic parent who exposes
radicalism in schools nationwide on the Substack Undercover
Mother said to me: “They’ve moved on from BLM to gender unicorn to the new thing: anti-Israel
activism. Anti-Israel activism is the new gender ideology in the schools.”
Parents who watched in alarm as gender theory swept through
schools will recognize the sudden, almost religious conversion to this newest
ideology. And very few educators are standing against it.
Much of the anti-Israel vituperation slides into classrooms through a subject called ethnic studies. In 2021, California became the first state to adopt it as a requirement for receiving a high school diploma. Legislatures of more than a dozen states have already followed suit, incorporating ethnic studies into K–12 curricula.
The
above was shown to students at Lowell High School as part of their Ethnic
Studies class. (Image obtained by The Free Press)
In principle, these laws require schools to teach the
histories and cultures of African Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific
Islanders, Latinos, and Native Americans. In practice, they grant teachers
license to incorporate lessons that often divide civilization into
“oppressed” and “oppressor.” A primary fixation of ethnic studies is demonizing Israel.
Activist-led organizations readily supply instructional
materials. Arab Resource & Organizing Center (AROC),
Middle East Children’s Alliance (MECA; creators of the Teach Palestine Project), Teaching
While Muslim, Jewish Voice for Peace, Unión del
Barrio, and the Zinn Education Project regularly furnish
distorted histories with eliminationist rhetoric against Israel.
Especially in the year since the Hamas massacre of Israelis
on October 7, 2023, the anti-Israel materials have become pervasive. It’s not
surprising that they are found in world history and current events lessons. But
demonization of Israel is now taught in art, English, math, physics, and
social-emotional learning classes.
Anti-Israel activism spreads through online curricula that
are password protected, eluding parental oversight. It is pushed by teachers
unions, furnished by activist organizations, and communicated to children
through deception. (“We just happen to be at the same place at the same time.”)
Anti-Israel radicals willingly stake their jobs for their cause.
“So how do we do all this without getting fired?” Gochez
asked his assembled audience of public school teachers. “That’s the
million-dollar question. And I don’t know how in the hell we have not been
fired yet because I know for sure they have tried, but we have to organize.
That’s the bottom line. If they come after one of us, the district has to know
that it will be a bigger headache for them to try to touch one of us than it
would be to just leave us alone.”
All for the sake of indoctrinating other people’s
children.
Jewish Students Fend for Themselves
Last year, Ella Hassner was a senior at Fremont High School
in Sunnyvale, California. In the weeks and months after October 7, she says,
her school erupted with anti-Israel propaganda.
To combat the anti-Israel posters that appeared in
classrooms and hallways, the school’s Jewish club received approval from the
principal to put up posters of the hostages. Within thirty minutes, the posters
were torn down, Ella, who has U.S.-Israeli citizenship and is now 18 years old,
told me. Another Jewish student I spoke to, “Benny,” confirmed this, adding
that he and his friends had witnessed one teacher tearing the posters
down.
Teachers regularly pushed the idea to students—in class and
on social media, where they were followed by their students—that “Zionists”
were committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza. A large majority of
American Jews, 85 percent, support the State of Israel.
Zionism refers to the movement that established a modern
Jewish state in the Jewish people’s ancestral homeland. Given the quantity of
anti-Israel propaganda flooding American K–12 schools, it’s perhaps
unsurprising that children would turn against their Jewish classmates.
This past year saw a sharp
rise in antisemitic incidents in K–12 schools. Students
verbally attacked Jewish classmates in terms that echoed the very charges laid
by their teachers against the State of Israel. “Baby killer” and “Violent
Zionist” became popular epithets.
Two girls in Ella’s class began to harass her, she told me.
A subsequent school district investigation report, obtained by The Free
Press, confirms her account. The girls said to her: “Your people are
terrorists.” The girls created posts on social media that claimed “Israeli
babies are not real humans,” and attacked Ella’s family, tagging Ella’s younger
brother.
Ella filed a “bullying report” with the school in February.
Although the principal had personally witnessed some of the behavior, he and
the associate superintendent consulted the school district’s legal counsel and
decided “that the complaint would not be investigated by the district,”
according to the investigation report.
In February, the school hosted the annual district-wide vocal talent show. Several students sang songs celebrating their ethnic heritage. Ella and a female friend sang their approved song, “Someone Like You” by Adele, and then added another: a Hebrew pop anthem, “Yesh Bi Ahava,” which translates to “There’s Love Inside Me.” They announced the song was “dedicated to their families in Israel.”
Classmates
said to Ella Hassner, “Your people are terrorists.” The same girls created
posts on social media that claimed “Israeli babies are not real humans,” and
attacked Ella’s family, tagging Ella’s younger brother. (Yadid Levy
for The Free Press)
Ella says the associate superintendent pulled the duo aside
after the performance and said the staff and other students were greatly upset
and offended by the Hebrew song and the dedication. According to the district
investigation report, the associate superintendent also informed the girls that
“she would be following up with the principal the following week to discuss the
matter.” The investigation found that the district did not take disciplinary
action against Ella. (In response to request for comment, a spokeswoman from
the district stated that the district could not discuss specific cases. She
also wrote that staff was “made aware of several allegations of antisemitism.
We took each complaint seriously and responded with great care to make sure our
community of students, staff and families felt safe.”)
In March of 2024, Ella stood at a town hall with U.S. Rep.
Ro Khanna and recounted many of these incidents to
get them on record. (Khanna said there should be “zero tolerance”
for what Ella described and offered to help if the district did not respond to
her complaints.)
Ella ended her town hall speech with the advice that she
gives her younger siblings: If anyone mistreats them for being Jewish, “they
should come to me, not to the school.” Conversations with seventeen Jewish
parents whose children attend public school in Northern California suggest that
that is an understandable reaction.
Since October 7 of last year, hundreds of incidents
involving the harassment of Jewish K–12 students have been reported to Act Now K12,
a grassroots effort to catalog and combat antisemitism in Northern California
schools. Ilana Pearlman of Berkeley, Viviane Safrin of San Francisco, and Maya
Bronicki of Santa Clara County—all mothers of Jewish children in public
schools—helped spearhead the effort to track the escalating antisemitism
tearing through school districts in Northern California. Bronicki says two
hundred incidents were reported last school year in Santa Clara County
alone.
Jewish families reported incidents like this one:
An Israeli American girl walked into her first period
French class at Cupertino High School to find that many of the other students
and the teacher were wearing a Palestinian flag or keffiyeh in solidarity with
the Palestinian resistance, on the occasion of the Middle Eastern club’s
pro-Palestine day. The club handed out a map of Israel labeled only as
“Palestine.”
In another incident, a 12-year-old middle school student at
a charter school in San Jose arrived visibly upset on the first school day
following the October 7 Hamas massacre. According to a complaint against the
school district later filed by her parents in federal district court, the girl
had close family members in Israel whose whereabouts were unknown. The girl
asked her world history teacher if she could go to the bathroom to collect
herself.
The history classroom “was decorated with maps of the
modern Middle East in which Israel was erased.” The history teacher knew the
girl was Israeli American because she had identified herself as such at the
start of the year during an icebreaker exercise. He told her she could not go
“until she read aloud to the entire class a passage he had selected to the
effect that in the past, Palestinians and Jews had gotten along,” according to
the complaint. “The requirement to publicly espouse a position that was at odds
with present reality was overwhelmingly oppressive and humiliating.” She read
the passage aloud, as directed.
The next day at lunch, two female classmates wearing hijabs approached her,
according to the complaint, “and demanded ‘What do your people think about the
conflict?’ ” When the girl tried to answer, they screamed, “You’re lying—Jews
are terrorists.” One demanded: “Do you know that your family in Israel is
living on stolen land?”
A few days later, two boys chased her around the school
yelling, “We want you to die.” Kids began to refer to her as “Jew.” They would
say, “Hi, Jew” or “Hey Jew.” If she protested, they said they thought it was
funny.
The rest of the kids isolated and ignored her when they
weren’t whispering about her, the complaint alleges. She lost all but one
friend. Her parents met several times with school faculty; according to the
complaint, they did nothing to ensure her safety or improve the girl’s
situation.
A Jewish ninth grader, “Sam,” attends a Bay Area high
school where, after October 7 of last year, posters declaring, “Ceasefire Now!”
and “Free Palestine” began appearing on the walls. Because Sam’s family
considers itself very progressive, Sam was not bothered by the posters.
Then one of Sam’s friends sent him a long diatribe that
read in part (spelling from the original), “I would just like to say that u are
an ignorant ass white ass privileged boy u are so privileged to not b one of
those children being killed rn in Gaza…solidarity and indigenous solidarity is
something you could never understand as you have grown up your whole life with
no culture and money and you been brainwashed by isreali and western media the
world stands with Palestine and frankly it’s embarrassing to be anything
different, when mostly all people of color stand with Palestine and you stand
with ISREAL, that’s how yk ur in the wrong bud oppressed people stand with
oppressed people in solidarity SOMETHING YOU COULDD NEVER UNDERSTAND.” The text
concluded: “FREE PALESTINE TILL ITS BACKWARDS BITCH!!!!”
I spoke to Sam’s mother, and her perception was that the
message didn’t sound like her son’s friend. The jargon and gist appeared to
come from adults. Only the self-righteous fury and the message’s abusive
conclusion belonged to the boy.
I also spoke to the mother of “Dana,” a sixth-grade girl at
a Bay Area elementary school. In a social studies unit on ancient civilizations
last year, the teacher encouraged students to share their “feelings” about
“Israel and Palestine.” Students shouted: “Fuck Israel!” and “Israel sucks!”
Dana was the only Jewish child in the class.
When Dana told her mother what had happened, her mother
drove back to the school and asked the teacher, who admitted that the classroom
exchange had occurred. Dana’s mother asked the teacher what “Israel and
Palestine” had to do with the sixth-grade curriculum. The teacher claimed she
couldn’t teach ancient civilizations without talking about the Palestinians.
Dana’s mother knew the lesson offered neither historical nor archaeological
evidence to tie the modern Palestinian national identity back to antiquity. But
teachers today often consume and regurgitate anachronistic propaganda
uncritically.
I spoke to a San Francisco middle schooler, “Zoe,” who told
me her ethnic studies teacher so relentlessly preached anti-Israel sentiment,
and the school was so engulfed in anti-Israel propaganda, that it changed how
students treated her. Zoe told me one classmate came up to her and said: “A
Zionist is someone who wants Palestinians dead.” Zoe replied, “That is actually
not what it means at all.”
Ilana Pearlman of Berkeley is a midwife who has three Jewish children. Her son “Danny,” who was a student at Berkeley High School, told her that after October 7, a teacher used the school’s printing press to make “Free Palestine” T-shirts that were then distributed to students.
Ilana
Pearlman of Berkeley has three Jewish children. Her son Danny, who is black,
said to her, “If there was an image of a noose, we would not hear the end of
it. There would be protests, people would be going crazy. But it’s always okay
if it’s anything anti-Jewish.” (Jason Henry for The Free Press)
One of Danny’s teachers posted a running tally, in the
front of the classroom, of the number of Palestinians allegedly killed by the
IDF. She says, “So every day, when my son came into class, it would say how
many people Israel has killed today.” (The Free Press has confirmed
this with photographic evidence.)
Danny, who is black, said to her, “If there was an image of
a noose, we would not hear the end of it. There would be protests, people would
be going crazy. But it’s always okay if it’s anything anti-Jewish.”
One mother reported to grassroots organizers that her
seven-year-old daughter came home from elementary school in Marin County last
year and asked: “Mommy, if someone asks me if I’m Jewish, do I have to tell
them?”
Learning to Hate Israel
Los Angeles Unified School District is failing its students. In the 2023–24 school year,
fewer than half the students met reading proficiency standards, and less than
33 percent were proficient in math. But instead of a laser focus on how to
educate kids, teachers are coming up with ever more ways to attack the existence
of Israel.
It’s hard to imagine what U.S. arms sales to Israel has to
do with the district’s core educational goals, but recently, the L.A. teachers
union voted in opposition to it. They spend
considerable union time and resources on organizing opposition to Israel. In
the union’s recent Motions Report from October 10 of this year,
half the measures put to a vote related to Israel. One motion, which passed
unanimously, endorsed a discussion about “how to organize your workplace to
support the Palestine Liberation Movement” and against “the ongoing genocide in
Palestine.”
The First Amendment protects teachers’ political advocacy
in union meetings. But public school teachers have no First Amendment right to
express their political viewpoints in the classroom. “When it comes to K–12
education, the precedents are pretty clear that the school district or
legislature or the principal or whoever the political process leaves in charge
can set the curriculum and can require the teachers to go along with it,”
Eugene Volokh, First Amendment scholar and distinguished professor of law at
UCLA, told me.
But while the school board or legislature sets the agenda
for what must be taught in schools, it can also choose not to police teachers
who skirt those rules or even brazenly violate them.
Curriculum decisions, Volokh said, are “subject to the
political process and not the legal process,” generally speaking. If the school
district doesn’t object to teacher speech—or in fact encourages it—parents’
only recourse is through the political process: voting out state legislators or
school board members.
Dillon Hosier, Chief Executive Officer of the Israeli-American Civic
Action Network, explained that for generations, the Jewish community
has poured its resources into nonprofits, which are not legally permitted to
lobby. “Our opponents,” he said, referring to organizations like Council on
American-Islamic Relations, “are putting people in public office and getting
bills passed.”
That strategy has paid off. School boards and state
legislators are reluctant to confront the growing problem in their schools.
In Brooklyn, teachers led third graders at PS 705 in
Prospect Heights in a chorus of “The Wheels on the Tank,” which encouraged them
to despise Israel and the Israel Defense Forces, according to the New York Post: “The wheels on the tanks go
round and round, all through the town. The people in the town they hold their
ground, and never back down.” The rhyme continued: “Free Palestine till the
wheels on the tanks fall off.” The book was illustrated with Palestinian kids
hurling rocks at Israeli tanks.
In Portland, pre-K lesson plans included the story of
Handala, a fictional Palestinian cartoon character who symbolizes the
resistance. “When I was only ten years old, I had to flee my home in
Palestine,” the boy tells readers. “A group of bullies called Zionists wanted
our land so they stole it by force and hurt many people,” it continues,
according to a piece in City Journal.
At a Fort Lee, New Jersey, high school, world history
teachers confiscated students’ cell phones before giving a lesson that presented Hamas as a
“resistance movement” rather than an internationally designated terrorist
organization. Teachers also showed a map of Israel that falsely presented
Palestinians as the sole indigenous natives of Israel. (The Free Press has
obtained a copy of the presentation. Click here to see it.)
The Black Lives Matter Week of Action is a standard program at thousands of schools across the country. It now routinely shifts from a focus on white racism against black Americans to the “other brown people” allegedly subjected to apartheid in the West Bank at the hands of the “white” settler colonialist Israelis, according to several grassroots organizers I spoke to who track radicalism in America’s public schools. (A majority of Israeli Jews are from non-white, non-European heritage.)
Three years ago, Nicole Neily founded Parents
Defending Education, a nonprofit that exposes radicalism in schools,
largely in response to the race and gender ideologies she saw coursing through
public schools. This year, when her organization reached out to school
districts to inquire whether they planned to include the war in Gaza in their
BLM Week of Action instruction, the president of a school board in Rochester,
New York, wrote back to confirm that they did. The school board
president added, “I would ask that you study the history of the Jewish
nation and their involvement in slavery–financing the slave ships to bring
Africans into the Americas and the Carribbeans,” referring to a spurious canard associated with Nation of
Islam leader, Louis Farrakhan.
Last spring, millions of Americans watched in disbelief as
university students, particularly at our most elite schools, vandalized
buildings, set up illegal encampments, and cheered for Hamas. But there was far
less attention paid to the parallel dramas unfolding at K–12 schools across the
country.
Aware of their ability to shape young minds, teachers
encouraged schoolchildren to join “Walkouts” for Palestine, don keffiyehs,
chant the eliminationist slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be
free,” and tell their Jewish classmates, “It is excellent what Hamas did to
Israel,” according to a complaint filed to the U.S. Department of
Education by the Brandeis Center and the Anti-Defamation League on behalf of
Jewish students.
“We had been tracking a lot of antisemitic incidents in
school even prior to October 7. Obviously, in the wake of October 7, we saw
things explode,” Neily told me. “This had sort of been simmering below the
surface for a long time. You look at everything that happened on college
campuses, and it’s not that kids turn 18, go to college campus, and think, ‘I’m
going to underage drink and hate the Jews.’ So much of this was baked into the
curriculum before.”
Neily, who is Catholic, has now become a national leader in
the grassroots effort to expose antisemitism in schools. Her team regularly
submits hundreds of FOIA requests, wrangling with schools that hide behind
copyright law to avoid disclosing materials taught to American school children.
And what she has found is that radical anti-Israel NGOs are training teachers
and supplying materials used in thousands of American classrooms.“This stuff is
really going viral, coast to coast,” Neily said.
Federal law gives parents the right to
inspect their children’s educational materials. But schools routinely decline
to turn over lessons on the grounds of copyright law.
“So long as a parent isn’t asking for the material to duplicate it and sell it, there is no copyright violation in providing that material to parents,” Lori Lowenthal Marcus told me. Marcus is the legal director at The Deborah Project, which protects the civil rights of Jews in education. She added, “It is a bullshit excuse that takes advantage of parents who aren’t lawyers.”
Online textbooks are easily supplemented with material from
Al Jazeera or other radical sources. Smartboards allow teachers to
display fraudulent histories of Israel and outright
propaganda.
This video, shown to tenth to twelfth graders in
the Sequoia Union school district in Northern California as part of the
mandatory ethnic studies curriculum, was produced by the virulently anti-Israel
Turkish News site, TRT World. It ignores 3,000 years of Jewish
history in Israel and instead frames Jewish connection to Israel as
illegitimate or what is often called “settler colonialism.”
The video omits mention of Jews’ historic connection to the
West Bank—called Judea and Samaria in the Hebrew Bible—and ignores the fact
that the State of Israel accepted several peace proposals throughout its
76-year history that would have created a Palestinian state. It also omits that
the Second Intifada and its 138 Palestinian suicide bombings of primarily
civilian Israeli targets was the impetus for Israel erecting a security
barrier.
An Undercover, Front-Row Seat
Dr. Brandy Shufutinsky, director of education and community
engagement at the Jewish
Institute for Liberal Values, first noticed an uptick in antisemitic
K–12 materials in 2018, when she was getting her PhD in education. “What I saw
was what seemed to be a very well-coordinated effort between activist teachers,
activist organizations, and administrators that were trying to do a lot of
kowtowing to progressive social ideology through programming and bringing that
programming into their schools,” she said.
“There is just this insidious idea that it is okay to hate
Jews or attack Jews if they feel any connection to the Jewish homeland—to
Israel; if there’s any expression of Jewish pride, especially when that pride
is Zionism,” she said.
“I think that antisemitism, like the Jew hatred, isn’t the
end goal. I think it’s the symptom of a bigger anti-Western illiberalism that
has taken over a lot of our institutions,” Shufutinsky told me.
Curious to learn more about the goals of these anti-Israel
educators, Shufutinsky began hanging out in their virtual meetings. As a grad
student at the University of San Francisco, she spent almost two years, she
says, “undercover” in chat rooms where educators were developing a new
curriculum: “Liberated Ethnic Studies.” This would eventually become the
mandatory California Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum. In discussions about the
need for ethnic studies, educators were uniquely fixated on promoting an anti-Israel
agenda. “The whole goal for pushing ethnic studies, making it a requirement,
was so that they could teach Palestine,” she said.
When in 2021, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed into
law a requirement that schools make completion of ethnic studies a condition of
graduation, he effectively made antisemitism a formal feature of California
schooling. The original curriculum, “Liberated Ethnic Studies,” was so outrageously antisemitic, it was officially
abandoned. In The Free Press, Shufutinsky called it “a Trojan horse to
institutionalize antisemitism in California schools.”
But even the successor course—implemented by many of the
same educators who had proposed the Liberated Ethnic Studies curriculum in
California—has provided a vehicle for anti-Israel indoctrination of American
schoolchildren.
Shufutinsky told me that the reformed curriculum teaches
that “Israel is something that it isn’t. That it’s the ultimate evil. That it
is apartheid. That it is a settler colonial state that deserves to be
dismantled. That Zionism is racism.”
Elina Kaplan, a former manager in Northern California’s tech sector and self-described “lifelong Democrat,” was quick to recognize the problems posed by ethnic studies in the classroom. A childhood spent as a Jew in the former Soviet Union taught her to recognize state-sponsored antisemitic propaganda.
She formed a nonprofit to organize against the
inclusion of politicized ethnic studies in California schools and maintains an
archive of the antisemitic materials promulgated in American classrooms. While
her organization helped defeat the worst excesses of the original curriculum,
the broader effort to keep antisemitism out of the schools failed. Since 2021,
she has seen the antisemitism once confined to ethnic studies sprout in
virtually every subject.
Kaplan says, “In math class, they can be studying charts
and are told, ‘Look at this pie chart of the number of Palestinians murdered.
This slice shows the number of Israelis that were killed.’ ”
That example was actually presented to elementary school students in New Haven Unified School District, California. The chart is labeled “People Killed Since September 29, 2000” divided into Palestinians and Israelis and asks: “What information is this pie graph showing us?” The obvious answer: Far more Palestinians have been killed than Israelis.
Another mother sent me an example of an assignment used in a physics class at Cupertino High School, which asked students to consider the “Effect of Israel’s Bombing of Gaza” on climate change.
At schools where anti-Israel propaganda is promulgated,
schoolchildren are turning against their Jewish classmates. Dozens of
interviews with parents, teachers, and people at nonprofits revealed that
discussions of Israel quickly become personal, and American Jews—even
children—are the inevitable targets.
“Tammy” is a Jewish substitute teacher in Oakland who asked
not to be identified. She said in the past year, she’s been astonished by the
sheer volume of anti-Israel messaging to school kids across Oakland. She says
only the Jewish families object. Where there are no Jewish students, the
material goes entirely unopposed.
“We’re raising a generation of antisemites,” she told me.
“I have a necklace that says my name in Hebrew. And I wear
it every day and I don’t take it off. It’s pretty small,” Tammy told me. One
day last year, when she was substitute teaching in middle school, a boy saw her
necklace and said, “Oh, I’m Jewish too.”
The boy went and got his backpack and pulled from it a
necklace with a Star of David pendant. She remembers thinking, “Why is it in
your backpack? Why aren’t you wearing it?”
Abigail Shrier is a contributing editor to The Free Press,
a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, and the New York Times best-selling
author of Bad Therapy.