Become a Member
Life

Interview: Michael Rosen

The poet Zionists can’t bear

July 2, 2009 11:23
Michael Rosen believes Israel should be shared by Jews and Palestinians.

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

5 min read

Children love Michael Rosen. As one of the most successful and prominent children’s poets of the past 30 years, he has brought laughter, entertainment and a love of literature to youngsters all over the country. Not all adults are so complimentary about him though — particularly those Jews who see his stand against Zionism as hateful and, indeed, self-hating.

Rosen is aware of the apparent dichotomy between much-loved poet and a man whose politics were thought to be so revolutionary that MI5 had a file on him. But he does not see it as a contradiction. Not only does he have a mission to write for children, he is also on a mission to ensure that they are taught to read in what he sees as the proper manner. And yes, he has always been politically motivated.

On educational policy, he contends that primary school children have been failed by the system. Speaking with the authority of children’s laureate (his year in the post finished in June), he says: “The government has over-emphasised drilling — doing endless worksheets. Meanwhile, kids are being turned off reading and writing. It’s a disaster.

“If you take the biblical story of Abraham and Isaac as an example, there are all sorts of interesting things you can ask children. Why did Abraham do it? Should he have defied God? Would you have done it? If the story was on the national curriculum, teachers would probably have come up with a worksheet asking what was Abraham carrying in his right hand.”