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A kibbutz education: the collective farm was a powerful educational tool.


Working the earth purifies the soul" was one of the many mottos at Ben Shemen Ben Shemen (בן שמן) is a moshav in Israel approximately four kilometres east of Lod in the municipal territory of the Hevel Modi'in Regional Council. First founded in 1911, it was refounded in 1952 by Romanian immigrants. , the boarding school I attended as a teenager living in what was then British Palestine. The educational experience at Ben Shemen was grounded in the soil; students had to spend two hours each day working on the collective farm.

Ben Shemen's ingenious design called for each child to have close relations with four adults: a homeroom home·room  
n.
A school classroom to which a group of pupils of the same grade are required to report each day.

Noun 1. homeroom
 teacher who served as the main educator; a "house mother" who oversaw the dormitories; a youth leader with whom students hung out after school hours; and the farm foreman under whom the children worked each day.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The four adults met regularly to coordinate their guidance of the youngsters toward what Ben Shemen considered the needed direction. Thus, if a child disobeyed one of the foremen, his house mother would learn of it and would draw on the affection the child had for her in helping him to accept the foreman's authority.

The school's unique structure meant that children were members of four different peer groups: their classmates Classmates can refer to either:
  • Classmates.com, a social networking website.
  • Classmates (film), a 2006 Malayalam blockbuster directed by Lal Jose, starring Prithviraj, Jayasurya, Indragith, Sunil, Jagathy, Kavya Madhavan, Balachandra Menon, ...
 of the same age; their dormmates of various ages (which in my case included an older boy by the name of Shimon Peres); the coeducational co·ed·u·ca·tion  
n.
The system of education in which both men and women attend the same institution or classes.



co·ed
 members of their youth group; and their fellow workers on the farm. The elder boys were expected to foster communal mores among their juniors.

The whole idea of Zionism was summarized for us as an inverted pyramid For the structure in the Louvre in Paris, France, see .

The inverted pyramid is a metaphor used to illustrate how information should be arranged or presented within a text, in particular within a news story.

The "pyramid" can also be drawn as a triangle.
: in Europe, Jews were mostly middle-class intellectuals, merchants, and financiers, resting on a narrow base of relatively few Jewish blue-collar workers blue-collar worker nobrero/a

blue-collar worker nouvrier/ère col bleu

blue-collar worker n
 and even fewer farmers. We Israelis were to set the pyramid upright, by forming a strong base of farmers and workers. They relied on others to defend them; we would take our fate into our own armed hands.

At Ben Shemen one ritual came on the heels of another. One day we were raising the blue-and-white flag of a nation yet to be born. The next day we were moved by a speech by the local commander of the Hagana, the Jewish underground fighting the British occupation, who led us in taking an oath: "Never again will we go like lambs to the slaughter!" Staff and students frequently staged plays extolling the virtues of working the land and fighting for our homeland.

For me, Ben Shemen provided a powerful conversion experience. I entered as a youngster rebelling against my disciplinary mother, the loving weakness of my father, and the religious indoctrination Religious indoctrination refers to customary rites of passage for the indoctrination of persons into a particular religion and its extended community.

Terms generally vary by culture, custom, and language, though some terms, like "baptism," are pluralist and
 of my school. Two years later, in 1944, I returned to my parents' home, now comfortable with learning, authority figures, and the expectations of my peers. Above all, I departed from Ben Shemen as a young Israeli, with a sense of purpose that was as strong as it was focused: to join those lining up to fight a war of national liberation against the British occupation and to form a just Jewish society, a new Zion.

On my last day, the principal called me to his office. He smiled broadly, first showing me a rather unflattering letter I had brought with me from my previous school. The principal then pointed at my final report card from Ben Shemen. It was dotted with marks of "very good." He added, "You will do us proud." Then he warned me affectionately: "Just so you do not get too cocky cock·y  
adj. cock·i·er, cock·i·est
Overly self-assertive or self-confident.



cocki·ly adv.
, let me tell you that we figure that you will never become a soccer player or star in any other sport." Education never stopped at Ben Shemen.

--Amitai Etzioni is a University Professor at George Washington University George Washington University, at Washington, D.C.; coeducational; chartered 1821 as Columbian College (one of the first nonsectarian colleges), opened 1822, became a university in 1873, renamed 1904. . This essay is excerpted from his memoir, My Brother's Keeper Brother's Keeper was a band from Erie, Pennsylvania.

Formed in 1994 by members of a number of other local bands, they became the backbone of the Erie hardcore scene. Alongside bands like xDisciplex A.D.
: A Memoir and a Message (Rowman & Littlefield, 2003).
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Education Matters to Me
Author:Etzioni, Amitai
Publication:Education Next
Date:Mar 22, 2004
Words:615
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