Peter started his speech with a message of peace — “Shalom” — but the mood swiftly soured. “It was a febrile atmosphere and the noise and the cat-calling started almost immediately. I couldn’t even finish my speech.”
The NEU told me that it has “condemned without equivocation, the actions of Hamas on October 7”, adding: “The call for a ceasefire is now imperative in the face of the destruction and loss of life in Gaza,” and insisting: “it is legitimate for the NEU to speak out, alongside bodies such as the TUC and the UN, to stand up for the urgent protection of children and teachers in Palestine.” But is there something darker at play?
Last July, the NEU hosted an event in London called “How to talk about Palestine in our schools”. “There was a whole bookshop of pro-Palestinian literature,” says Peter, who attended. “The conference had speaker after speaker going on about the evil of Israel. After lunch they broke up into groups and I went into a smaller room where they were meant to be discussing antisemitism. Except they weren’t. It was all about Israel. So I stood up and pointed out that we were supposed to be discussing antisemitism. But I was told I needed to sit down — because the other people were ‘threatened’ by me”.
Kate (not her real name), another Jewish teacher from London, attended the same event, only to discover one of her colleagues from school discussing how he used “every opportunity I can to share my views” on Palestine, including bringing the topic up when covering war poetry. He also boasted that he had set up an after-school “human rights group”, which he was using to tell children how evil Israel was. Although she wrote to her headteacher to complain, nothing was done. He still runs his after-school club.
The union is also a linchpin of the anti-Israel demonstrations taking place in our cities. Data taken from 41 major PSC protests between October 2023 and the end of November last year shows that NEU had 23 official speakers — nearly twice as many as the next union, the RMT. Other times they sponsor the demonstrations; for a February one in Leicester, the NEU’s symbol was next to extremist Islamist groups 5 Pillars and CAGE International.
“The NEU’s symbol was next to extremist Islamist groups 5 Pillars and CAGE International.”
Following the motion to circulate “educational material” on the conflict, Natasha says she is aware that one proposal is to “paint Israel as a colonialist endeavour” while Peter has been shown discussions about material which “seeks to say Jews have no history in the region”.
Last month, the NEU joined the call for Palestine Day of Action. In November 2023 this led to a series of school walkouts with children singing pro-Palestine songs. This year, the NEU told teachers in its North London branch: “Our plan is to wear red and green or keffiyehs, a fundraiser for Medical Aid for Palestine and a vigil in the park with floating lanterns.” Only a last-minute Government intervention — reminding teachers of the policy of the neutrality — scuppered some of the plans. Only a few teachers openly broke the rules. Never mind, the NEU is likely to figure at the heart of the next demonstration for Palestine later this month.
Faced with this sort of behaviour, a group of Jewish teachers met with Kebede last year to ask for a more balanced approach to the conflict. They are not holding out much hope; Kebede is a long-time admirer of Jeremy Corbyn who once claimed the former Labour leader’s critics were being offered “30 pieces of silver” — an ancient antisemitic trope. While he later apologised, the following year, at an anti-Israel rally, he issued a call to “globalise the intifada”. An NEU spokesperson later claimed that it was merely “an expression of solidarity and support for civic protests”.
How such “solidarity” manifests in the classroom is often anecdotal, but it certainly isn’t making schools safer. One parent at the Norwood School in South London told me about two incidents in which she felt children at the school were being subtly educated against Israel. Her 14-year-old son brought home teaching material which had been passed out in a “citizenship class” about refugees, which had an incorrect map of Israel and erroneously claimed that “since 1948 more than five million Palestinians have been displaced” — when the 1948 war displaced 700,000 Palestinians (the five million figure comes from the number of their descendants). At another school, in West London, a substitute teacher asked her eight-year-old primary school pupils to put their hands up if they were Jewish. When a couple put their hands up, the teacher told them: “I’m Free Palestine.”
For Jewish parents this is a difficult time. According to the CST, which monitors anti-Jewish hate crimes, instances of antisemitism affecting schools continue to rise, with 162 incidents in just the first half of last year. Sometimes anti-Jewish bullying has been so bad in schools that parents have felt forced to remove their children.
Meanwhile, as the NEU continues to focus on a war on the other side of the world, problems the union should be looking at barely get a look in. “I know I am not the only one who wonders what all of this obsession with Israel has got to do with a teaching union when we have plenty of problems at home,” says Peter. “We have a huge problem with teacher retention, with violence in schools against teachers, with crumbling schools — but all they want to talk about is Palestine.”
The word antisemitic is thrown about unwisely by many during this war but in truth the NEU is antisemitic. When do they get the time to discuss education in the midst of their lefty pamphleteering ? A bigger problem is that low quality university educated members and leaders of this ratty rabble control Labour who govern for the next five years.
I used to be concerned by the falling birth rate but less so now. If our young are going to pass through the hands of these poisonous fools it’s better there aren’t any young people.
But there will be young people – just not the same young people.
The really baffling part of all this is the left don’t seem to understand that their theories will destroy them too.
They should interested be interested in producing productive members of society but instead large numbers of the young are on illness benefits.
True. But in a world where ambition means to work from home, why would anybody want to go to work?
Trade unions should be forbidden from getting involved in political campaigning the same way that civil servants are meant to be neutral. It is absolutely insane that a teaching union is dedicating so much time and effort to breaking obligations on neutrality and commenting on a war on the other side of the world.
It is odd. We see it everywhere. Organisations having opinions, wasting time and ultimately wasting money on things outside of their remit.
Focus on the core purpose seems lost. Why do they think anyone cares about their thoughts on this thorniest of issues?
Is UK teaching in such fantastic health that it can afford the time and effort to get involved in this issue? It appears not.
Maybe teaching maths and English is beneath these people. Maybe they were meant to do more than that. Maybe they were meant to man barricades and fight for the oppressed and downtrodden.
Or maybe they could just do the damn job of teaching. And let the geopolitics of the world go on without their half baked thoughts.
Perhaps all our unions and institutions should bring their thoughts back closer to home. Maybe once we’ve fixed the UK we can then start lecturing the world on how to improve the lives of Gaza, LGBTQ+, Africa, (insert your cause of choice here!)
‘One motion attacked Israel for its LGBT+ positive policies which it called ‘pinkwashing’ – LGBT people are actually the ones used by the left to promote the foreign policy outlook they want. You’d think that LGBT people would be interested in promoting the rights of LGBT people and would have the approach to the conflict that promoted LGBT rights. Instead they promote ‘destroy israel at all costs’, even if the successor regime does not uphold pro-lgbt legislation.
I’m indifferent to the teachers’ stupidity. It’s the parents and voters who put up with their folly who are the true fools. After all, “Who is more foolish? The fool, or the fool who follows him?” 🙂
What can parents do?
Many English schools are now in the grip of ideologues, and other teachers keep stum to protect their jobs and promotion prospects. It is the same pattern as seen in the criminal justice system that permits the grooming outrage to continue.
Parents are faced with three choices:
– Change schools. But most state schools are oversubscribed and private schools are even more out of the reach of ordinary people thanks to Labour’s education tax. Labour has new plans to remove the independence some state funded schools have, giving the ideologues control over the entire sector.
– Criticise the school or reveal your political leanings to the right and your child will be ridiculed by the miilitant teachers. Even worse, social services might take an interest.
– Homeschool, but this is very difficult and many local authorities can and do use social services to intimidate those who do.
If you are not from the UK you may not understand the fear social workers strike in good parents. For decades social service failures have been front and centre of all child protection scandals, such is their iron will to judge good people as bad and bad people as good.
Agreed 100%; parents are powerless. The teachers represent the state – are the state – and the state chooses how children will be indoctrinated. But SM does accuse the voters as well and they are definitely guilty.
This argument reminds me of a book called ‘Second Hand Time’ in which the author in Russia interviews hundreds of people about their reaction to Perestroika – surprisingly, life was said to be awful under the Soviets but many yearned to go back to it because life was comfortable – you didn’t have to think or try to rock the boat. Things just happened. Very few voters (or parents) want to rock the boat.
Yes Britain’s comprehensively failed state (suddenly revealed in all its top-to-toe awfulness for all the world to see) was forged in its classrooms and lecture theatres. Teachers get ‘trained’ in our Lefty sheep-dips (otherwise known as universities) where they pick up all sorts of trendy virtue-signalling nonsense when they’re still too young to know better….and groupthink then does the rest. As I wrote here: https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/invasion-of-the-virtue-signallers “The academy’s pied-piper hold on the ambitious young minds of the future ‘opinion-forming’ elite – including crucially the teaching profession – has proceeded unchecked, such that its seductive virtue-signalling mentality has now taken hold in most graduate-entry professional walks of life.”
Your first sentence says it all: a brilliant condensation of a complete paradigm into one succinct sentence.
Well thank you Gordon for that….there’s plenty more like it on STB
Is it really any wonder at all why so many people think teachers are underworked when they read this stuff. Even if it was a focus on some other pet project the same outcome.
As for the substitute teacher – an utter racist disgrace.
Recruiting teachers directly from university is as disastrous a policy as recruiting wannabe politicians in the same way.
Teachers should walk away from the neu. Cancel the direct debit and resign their membership. I did just that last year. The political agitation was too much for me. I am interested in tedious stuff such as pay and conditions, not Gaza , climate activism or solidarity with Venezuala.