Following are excerpts
from a Lebanese TV report on the incorporation of an English reader
recounting the diary of Anne Frank in Lebanese schools. The report aired
on Al-Manar TV on October 30, 2009.
Reporter: A new
book, with indications of normalization [with Israel], has been monitored
by Al-Manar TV. The English reader is taught in eighth grade in several
schools in Beirut. The 60-page book recounts, in one of its chapters,
the diary of a Jewish girl during World War II, who hid, along with
her family, in Holland, to flee the Nazi persecution of the Jews, and
out of fear of being killed or burned.
To avoid confusion or
distortion, we purchased a copy of the book from a Beirut bookshop.
In the bookshop
Reporter: I asked
Mr. Abbas to get me “Interactive Reader Plus.”
Saleswoman: What
grade is it for?
Reporter: For
eighth grade.
Saleswoman: This
is English for eighth grade.
Reporter: This
is it? He told me it costs 30,000 [Lebanese lira]. It’s “Advantage.”
It comes with a CD.
Is it taught in other
schools as well?
Saleswoman: Of
course.
Reporter leaves bookshop
with the English reader
Reporter (holding
the book): This is the book that is taught in several schools in
Beirut, which recounts the diary of an Israeli girl during World War
II. Let’s delve together into the details of this diary.
There is an entire chapter,
titled “Drama,” at the top of which there is a Star of David, along
with clarification measures not found in other chapters, which aim to
focus on the notion of the persecution of the Jews during World War
II. Even worse than this is the dramatic way in which this diary is
emotionally recounted.
Naim Kalaani, Chairman
of the Authority for Banning Zionist Products: Such a book is definitely
in violation of the penal code. This is clearly a violation, and they
must be prosecuted. This is tantamount to running towards normalization.
The prosecution must automatically take action, because this is a criminal
offense taking place in a school.
Hizbullah MP Hussein
Al-Hajj Hassan: Nobody teaches from a textbook without checking
its content first. These respected schools teach the so-called “tragedy”
of this girl, but they are ashamed to teach the tragedy of the Palestinian
people, the tragedy of the Lebanese people, the history of the resistance,
the history of the resistance in Lebanon, and the suffering of the South
Lebanese, and the Lebanese in general, at the hand of the Zionist occupation.
[...]
Reporter: Al-Manar
tried unsuccessfully to obtain the response of the Education Ministry.
So it contacted General Wafiq Jazini, Director-General of the General
Security, who said he knew nothing about the issue, and ordered an investigation
into the details, and into the necessary measures to be taken.
Until then, the question
remains: Until when will the cultural scene in Lebanon be wide open
to a Zionist cultural invasion, and were those involved in the matter
aware of it, or not?