[Education For Tomorrow: No 98, 2008]International newsPalestineFasayil School — A Jordan Valley success story In Summer 2007 a small group of activists from Brighton began talking to villagers in Fasayil, a small village in the Israeli occupied Jordan Valley. The villagers said that many of their children could not go to school because Israeli military law prevented them from building one. The majority of land in the Jordan Valley is either militarised, colonised by illegal Israeli settlers or designated Israeli controlled. This means that the majority Palestinian population cannot build any stone structure; houses, schools, and agricultural facilities have all been subject to demolitions by the Israeli military. Most Palestinians live in tents or shacks. The people of Fasayil, with help from the Brighton-Tubas Friendship and Solidarity group, decided to begin building a school in defiance of the military orders. The original building was built from mud bricks to minimise costs in case the Israelis came to destroy it. Volunteers from Brighton travelled to Palestine to help with the building. In November 2007 the villagers received an injunction stating that the Civil Military authorities intended to apply for a demolition order for the partially built school and that any further building would be illegal. Villagers remained defiant saying "They can knock our school down as often as they want. We cannot stop them from doing so. We will build the school again and again and again. They cannot destroy our determination to give proper education to our children." An international petition, translated into five languages, was launched against the demolition gathering tens of thousands of signatures. The school became an international issue; letters were written to the Israeli Civil Military Administration and to foreign governments, demonstrations were held in several countries. In an interview with The Independent Zidki Maman of the Civil Military Administration was forced to admit that the army would consider “humanitarian concerns" before demolishing the school. The building work continued, the villagers now building a stone building in their village for the first time in decades. One year on the school has been completed and the Palestinian Ministry of Education, who had been powerless to provide education for the people of Fasayil because of the Israeli military restrictions, are planning to send a teacher next year. However, more importantly the pressure placed on the Civil Military Administration has meant that the issue of Fasayil has been brought up in negotiations and Upper Fasayil has been designated as an area where Palestinians are entitled to build. The story of Fasayil has been one of success. However, the majority of Palestinians in the valley still do not have the right to build on their own land and many communities face creeping ethnic cleansing through the Israeli policies of pushing Palestinians out of all but a few tiny enclaves. A popular Palestinian phrase to describe the situation is “To exist in occupied Palestine ... is to resist." www.brightonpalestine.org Venezuela Venezuelans from low-income backgrounds graduate Almost 6,000 Venezuelan university students recently graduated through the government’s scholarship program, with a further 700 doctors to graduate at the end of the year, significantly filling skills shortages that Venezuela has previously suffered from. In October, 5,949 students who participated in the programme Mission Sucre graduated in areas of administration, computing, social communication, agricultural production, environmental management and social management for local development. Additionally, 700 community medicine doctors will graduate from the National Experimental University Romulo Gallegos at the end of the year. Mission Sucre is a programme created five years ago for including low-income Venezuelans in university education. The mission currently has 527,134 students and 108,000 applicants registered to enroll. Venezuela Information Centre |