Available Formats
Teaching Palestine on an Israeli University Campus: Unsettling Denial
By (Author) Daphna Golan-Agnon
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
16th November 2020
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Educational administration and organization
Higher education, tertiary education
378.95694
Hardback
150
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
The word occupation is not heard in classrooms on the Hebrew University campus, at the heart of Palestinian East Jerusalem. The war outside is not spoken of. Israeli and Palestinian students unsettle this denial for the first time in a practice-led course on human rights in the reality around them.
Readers join the students for a walking tour of the Palestinian neighborhoods surrounding the Mt. Scopus campus. They explore the complex relations between education, civil engagement, and the occupation, which present themselves in the Palestinian neighborhoods of Issawiyye, Sheikh Jarrah, and Lifta. These relations then make their way into the classroom where Palestinian and Israeli students engage with one another for the first time.
An outstanding and valiant teacher Daphna Golan does the extraordinary thing in this book of revealing the officially sanctioned states of denial that shield the students at her University from looking around them.
This excellent book will open your mind to the multitudinous levels of denial prevalent in Israeli society and how one courageous professor attempted to challenge them and open the minds of her students to the many lies that shield them from the reality surrounding them. Raja Shehadeh is a writer and lawyer his latest book is Going Home A Walk Through Fifty Years of Occupation.
Daphna Golan teaches human rights at the Faculty of Law, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is the director ofthe Minerva Human Rights Fellowship Program.