首页
登录
职称英语
To Get on the Same Page Sami Adwan is the very model of a soft-spoken pr
To Get on the Same Page Sami Adwan is the very model of a soft-spoken pr
游客
2024-12-29
39
管理
问题
To Get on the Same Page
Sami Adwan is the very model of a soft-spoken professor. He measures his words, and listens carefully to what others have said. Yet while pursuing a Ph.D. at the University of San Francisco in the 1980s, Adwan not only refused to listen to Jewish students, he says but he dropped out of classes if he knew they included Jews. A Palestinian born in the village of Surif, near Hebron, Adwan had grown up under the shadow of the Israeli occupation, hearing tales from his father and grandfather of how Jews had seized the family’s orange groves and wheat fields in 1948. Returning to his homeland with his degree, Adwan joined the then outlawed Fatah Party and was thrown into an Israeli jail in 1993.
That was his real education. While awaiting charges, Adwan overheard two Israeli soldiers arguing over whether he should be made to sign a document in Hebrew that he couldn’t read. Shocked to hear one of his enemies defending his rights, Adwan decided that he had some things to learn about the Jewish nation.
So much of the gulf in understanding that plagues the Middle East has to do with the willful disregard for the other’s point of view. Israelis refer to the 1948 conflict that gave birth to their nation as the War of Independence; Palestinians know it as the Nakba, or Catastrophe. What Israelis call "the riots of 1920"—when Palestinians attacked Jewish neighborhoods around Jerusalem and Jaffa—are termed "the popular uprisings" by the other side. Adwan, a lecturer at Bethlehem University, has spent much of his professional career trying to bridge this gap.
Together with Dan Bar-On, a social psychologist at Ben Gurion University in southern Israel, he now co-directs the Peace Research Institute in the Middle East (PRIME). Since 2002 the group has produced three booklets to use in Palestinian and Israeli high schools that force each side to confront a contradictory vision of history. Each page is divided into three: the Palestinian and Israeli narratives and a third section left blank for the pupil to fill in. "The idea is not to legitimize or accept the other’s narrative but to recognize it," Adwan says. "The [historical] dates may be the same, but the interpretation of each side is very different."
Side by side, the divergent world views are striking. Zionism is described in the Israeli column as "a result of ... the continuation of anti-Semitism [in Europe], the inspiration of other national movements, and the continual connection of the people of Israel to the land of Israel." It bears little resemblance to the "imperialist political movement that bestowed a nationalist characteristic to the Jews" known to Palestinians.
Educators in other conflict-ridden societies are taking notice. Last year the Center for Human Rights and Conflict Resolution at Skopje University in Macedonia published their own parallel Macedonian-Albanian narratives based on PRIME’S model. "If the Israeli and Palestinian teachers managed to overcome the incredible gap between themselves, we can do it here," says Skopje University professor Violeta Petroska-Beska. In France, which suffers from its own tensions between Muslims and non-Muslims, the PRIME booklet "Learning the Other’s Narrative" has sold more than 23,000 copies. It’s also been translated into English, Spanish, Italian, Catalan and Basque, and later this year will be produced in German. American educators in Virginia and Philadelphia have expressed interest in introducing the narratives into classes on conflict resolution.
Closer to home, however, the text has had a harder time. "When we established PRIME in 1998, we thought peace was around the corner," says Adwan. "Today both Dan and I know it was a wishful thinking." Shortly after the beginning of the second Palestinian intifada in 2000, Bar-On and Adwan found themselves stand on different sides of an Israeli checkpoint near Bethlehem, begging soldiers to let them shift a couple of yards closer to each other so they could discuss the project. In 2004, right-wing Israeli Education Minister Limor Livnat threatened teachers with disciplinary action if they used the booklet. One West Bank teacher has given lessons in her house for fear of reprisal and another, from a refugee camp near Jerusalem, was threatened by colleagues and parents for teaching what they called "normalization under occupation."
Asked whether the booklets will ever be a part of the local school curriculum, Adwan shakes his head slowly, shrugs and looks out his office window. From there he has a fine view of the wall that snakes between Jerusalem and Bethlehem, dividing Israel from the West Bank. [br] According to the passage, which of the following is the real cause of the gap in understanding in the Middle East?
选项
A、Different religions that they have.
B、Indifference to each other’s point of view.
C、Warfare that took place between Israel and Palestine.
D、Economic differences that separate Israel and Palestine.
答案
B
解析
由第二段的第一句可知,造成中东地区在理解上的鸿沟的原因是对他人的观点不管不顾,故B为正确答案。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3889654.html
相关试题推荐
ToGetontheSamePageSamiAdwanistheverymodelofasoft-spokenpr
ToGetontheSamePageSamiAdwanistheverymodelofasoft-spokenpr
ToGetontheSamePageSamiAdwanistheverymodelofasoft-spokenpr
ToGetontheSamePageSamiAdwanistheverymodelofasoft-spokenpr
ToGetontheSamePageSamiAdwanistheverymodelofasoft-spokenpr
随机试题
Sheisso______thatshedoesn’tevenknowwhereBeijingis.A、foolishB、compete
Alreadyoverwhelmedchildren’sservicesarefacingrisingdemandasbenefit
Auctionedgoodsaresold_______.[br]Theendofbiddingiscalled"knockingdo
简答肖像权的内容。
CAD绘图中,PLINE可以创建直线段、弧线段或两者的组合线段,并且可以设定不同
对于安置人口大于( )人的安全区,经论证后堤防永久性水工建筑物级别可提高为1级。
对上市公司所处经济区位内的自然条件与基础条件分析,有利于()。 Ⅰ.分
丁老师在工作中常以自己的想法代替学生的想法,以自己的思维方式推测学生的思维方式。
预制构件采用钢筋套筒灌注连接时,其浆料应做的试块尺寸正确的是()。A.10
按照世界银行有关规定进行的国际竞争性招标,在中标人确定后还应进行合同谈判。下列主
最新回复
(
0
)