Jew-hatred a ‘recurrent problem’ in Dutch schools, ministry says

New study cites case of female pupil of Moroccan descent who told her class: ‘If I had a Kalashnikov, I’d gun down all the Jews’

Illustrative: A first grade teacher, instructs a class on the Spanish pronunciations of the alphabet in 2003 in Texas. (Villafuerte/Getty Images/AFP)
Illustrative: A first grade teacher, instructs a class on the Spanish pronunciations of the alphabet in 2003 in Texas. (Villafuerte/Getty Images/AFP)

AMSTERDAM — Anti-Semitism is a persistent problem in some Dutch schools and especially among Muslim pupils, according to a new government-commissioned report on discrimination in education.

The findings appeared in a 55-page report titled “Two Worlds, Two Realities – How Do You Deal with It as a Teacher,” which was published last week by Margalith Kleijwegt, a Dutch-Jewish journalist, at the request of the Dutch ministry of education.

The report, which is based on visits to schools and conversations with dozens of teachers since January 2015, say that teachers sometimes feel powerless to change the deep-seated biases and violent attitudes of some pupils, including on Jews.

One female teacher from Amsterdam of high school pupils following a vocational education program told Kleijwegt of a lesson about democratic values and against discrimination, in which a female pupil of Moroccan descent stood up and said: “If I had a Kalashnikov [assault rifle], I’d gun down all the Jews.” She then made shooting gestures and sounds.

Demonstrators wave national flags of the Netherlands as members of Pegida (Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the Occident) protest in central Amsterdam on February 6, 2016. (Remko De Waal/ANP/AFP)
Demonstrators wave national flags of the Netherlands as members of Pegida (Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the Occident) protest in central Amsterdam on February 6, 2016. (Remko De Waal/ANP/AFP)

Shocked, the teacher tried to make the pupil empathize with a Jew but felt she was not getting through to her.

“I wasn’t getting there,” the report quotes the teacher as saying. “I asked her to imagine a 5-year-old Jewish girl who lives here. What would she have to do with Israel’s policies? Unfortunately, there was no place for empathy. The pupil didn’t care about that girl. She had only one message: The Jews should die.”

In parallel, the report also found racist behavior directed at Muslim children by some classmates, particularly following the arrival to Europe of hundreds of thousands of migrants from the Middle East last year.

“Anti-Semitic behavior is a recurrent problem in some schools,” Kleijwegt wrote. “Some see it as a provocation [by pupils], others fear it goes deeper: That pupils receive anti-Jewish attitudes at home. The same applies to the growing group of Dutch pupils who say foreigners should rot and die. Is this provocation? Do they receive it at home?”

In the report, Dutch Education Minister Jet Bussemaker wrote that the document “shows a reality that is inconvenient and sometimes painful” but must be confronted and dealt with “in accordance to democratic values.”

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