Life & Work Magazine
Life & Work Magazine


3 mins

Letter from the Holy Land

The Rev Muriel Pearson asks how the Church of Scotland’s Tabeetha School can continue to flourish.

‘BECAUSE of Tabeetha I have learned to be myself everywhere,’ Daniel, a grade 11 student explains. He is sitting with half a dozen fellow students around a table in the library, talking to visitors from Scotland.

Daniel and his fellow students talk about how they value the diversity they find in Tabeetha, of how they feel they belong to one family, of how their social skills benefit. Tabeetha School is a unique Christian School in Jaffa, Israel, run by the Church of Scotland. It is the only mainstream school the Church of Scotland runs anywhere in the world. You might say it is an accident of history, as it came under the Church of Scotland’s governance because its founder Miss Jane WalkerArnott left her school to the Church in her will in 1911.

Today, Christians, Jews and Muslims study together. They know their own identity as Palestinians or Israelis or Ukrainians or Russians, as Greek Orthodox or Catholic, and they are not afraid of difference. They talk about how to explore difficult topics; recognising multiple viewpoints and assessing sources for reliability. It is no wonder these young people go on to brilliant careers in business, commerce, diplomacy, medicine and law.

Miss Walker-Arnott had left her native Scotland to live in Palestine because of her delicate health, but in 1863 she and her sister started a school in her house with 14 girls as students, Christian and Muslim together. Thomas Cook, the travel entrepreneur, was so impressed that he gifted the Walker-Arnotts land and enough money to build a proper school. In 2023, 160 years later, the school has 330 students from kindergarten to grade 12, studying in English and sitting A-levels.

You might say it is an accident of history, but because of this legacy there is a Christian school in Jaffa where Jews, Christians and Muslims learn together and live together as living proof that the intractable and polarised issues that hold the whole country of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory in a terrible grip can be challenged and overcome. There are other Christian schools of course, but the combination of English tuition, small classes and an independent curriculum make Tabeetha different.

Yet while the difference can be celebrated it also leaves the school vulnerable.

Tabeetha receives a smaller grant from the Ministry of Education than other Christian schools because it does not follow the bagruit: the curriculum specified by the Israeli government. This in turn increases reliance on income from fees. It is hard to get the balance right to employ the best teachers and staff and keep the fees within reach of ordinary people. The school buildings, built in the airy Ottoman style of Old Jaffa, are beautiful: but not fit for purpose. A multi-million pound refurbishment is needed.

The Board of Governors, based in Scotland apart from the two ministers of St Andrew’s Jerusalem and Tiberias, the Rev Dr Stewart Gillan and the Rev Muriel Pearson, can see changes are needed. A strategic review and programme of investment are required to keep the Tabeetha star shining bright.

Within the Church of Scotland, Tabeetha is not perhaps as well-known as it should be. It is a witness to unity in diversity which should be highly prized. In a recent assembly at Tabeetha School I described it as a tartan school: made up of many colours woven together in a unique pattern and as a Christian school, threaded through with love.

I believe Tabeetha School is not an accident of history but a witness to the world. The question is: How do we support and develop and create the conditions where Tabeetha School can continue to flourish? Are there church partners prepared to support and invest in Tabeetha?

In a climate of ever-increasing segregation in terms of both areas of residence and opportunity, where Israelis are divided amongst themselves and Palestinian or Arab Israelis are disadvantaged in Israel and viewed with suspicion by Palestinians in the occupied Palestinian territories, Tabeetha School defies the norm. It is our hope and prayer that the school will continue to be a good news story and bring many to believe that new life is possible.

If you’d like to know more about Tabeetha School follow us on Instagram or Facebook or get in touch with Kenny Roger, Secretary to the Board of Tabeetha School kroger@ churchofscotland.org.uk Or me, Rev Muriel Pearson mpearson@churchofscotland.org. uk You can make a donation direct to the school through the Tabeetha website https://tabeethaschool.org/donate-to-tabeetha/

This article appears in the September 2024 Issue of Life and Work

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This article appears in the September 2024 Issue of Life and Work