Students' Quilted Letters Aim for Peace in Mideast
Messages Fight Hatred Found
in School Textbooks
Dot Paul/Raxin Chin
The Detroit
News
August 5, 1999
Molly Resnick has gathered about 2,000 letters from Jewish
children to Palestinian children that will be sewn into 10 quilts.
She hopes to produce 20. The letters, once stitched into quilts
will head for display in Washington and then go overseas.
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -- One by one, Molly Resnick stitches
the hand-written letters together, weaving a large quilt to combat
hatred. The individual panels are written by Jewish children to
Palestinian children, all part of a Kids for Peace program
organized by the 1-year-old group Mothers Against Teaching
Children to Kill and Hate.
"Please stop! Don't hate me just because I'm Jewish. I don't
hate you. I'm just a human being. So please stop!," writes Sarah,
12, from upstate New York. Another letter from Marni, 10, of
Maryland, asks Palestinian children to respect Jews because they
are no different.
Their letters, along with almost 2,000 other letters from
children in Michigan and other states, were written on
construction paper and sown into quilts that Resnick plans to
display at the U.S. Capitol.
So far, Resnick she has gathered almost 2,000 letters to make
10 quilts. She plans to make 20.
Resnick said the letters are in response to recent reports that
Palestinian children are growing up to hate Jews because their
textbooks contain numerous references to Jews as the enemy, liars
and wild animals.
But Jim Zogby, president of the Arab-American Institute in
Washington D.C., said Israeli textbooks also contain negative
stereotypes of Palestinians.
"Israeli kids learn terrible things about Arabs as well," Zogby
said. "Arabs are portrayed as traitors and killers.
"I'm not going to justify the (Palestinian) textbooks. But if
they want to solve the problem, acknowledge that both sides are
doing this, don't point the finger. We are supposed to be in the
middle of a peace process, this is not the way to solve it. It's
unfortunate that these children are used as a pawn in a propaganda
war. I would like to see them do something more positive."
Resnick insists her quilt program is a positive way to teach
children that hatred is wrong.
"We formed M.A.T.C.H.K. to draw attention to the violence in
Palestinian textbooks," Resnick said, adding that the Center for
Monitoring the Impact of Peace, a New York-based Jewish research
group, recently researched 140 Arab Palestinian textbooks and
found them to have violent material promoting hatred.
"More than 800,000 Palestinian students are exposed to daily
incitement against Israel," Resnick said. "Every Jew should be
frightened about this, and every human being outraged. How do you
brain-wash children to hate? The mind of a child is like wet
cement; whatever they learn is engraved forever."
Peace Quilts
Molly Resnick has visited schools and summer camps in Michigan,
Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey to gather letters for her
"Kids for Peace" quilts. Mothers Against Teaching Children to Kill
and Hate was formed in 1998 by Bloomfield Hills and West
Bloomfield residents Resnick, Janet Aronoff and Rae Sharfman.