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Rereading the British Mandate in Palestine: Gender and the Urban–Rural Divide in Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 August 2007

ISLAH JAD
Affiliation:
Women's Studies Institute, Birzeit University, West Bank, Palestine; e-mail: i_jad@yahoo.com

Extract

Under Ottoman rule, the relations between native Arabs and Jews in Palestine were based on understanding and respect, as was the case between Muslims and Christians. Shared enrolment of Jewish, Muslim, and Christian students in the same schools—either the Jewish Alliance Israelite schools (established in 1882) or in the nizamiyya, the Ottoman public schools first established by the Turkish law of 1869—promoted mutual understanding for a small elite. In contrast, the British Mandate policy in education played a major role in reshaping national, regional, and class and gender identities. It was through education that two separate national entities were developed, the urban/rural division was deepened, class boundaries were rendered unbridgable, and gender identities were molded to suit the British model.

Type
QUICK STUDIES
Copyright
© 2007 Cambridge University Press

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