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Professor brings Bedouin perspective to social work department

By Joel Magalnick, Editor, JTNews

    The struggle

    between keeping a centuries-old traditional society alive

    and adapting to the 21st century is a common one in the

    Middle East. The Bedouin population of Israel’s Negev desert

    is an important example of this struggle.

   

    One man,

    Professor Alean al-Krenawi, has been working to help his

    fellow tribesmen through the social issues of these changes.

    As the new chair at the Spitzer Department of Social Work at

    Ben Gurion University, al-Krenawi was in Seattle recently to

    talk about his new job.

   

    "This year I was

    elected to be chair of the department," al-Krenawi said,

    "which is the first Bedouin to be chair of a department of

    social work in Israel."

   

    He is also the

    first Bedouin to run a department at the university that

    serves the southernmost portions of Israel.

   

    "One of my goals

    is to strengthen the relationship between research and

    academia," he said. His visit, by meeting with the

    University of Washington’s social work department in an

    international exchange program, is one way he is attempting

    to achieve that goal. The relationship between the

    universities was facilitated by the late Jack Spitzer, who

    died in July. Spitzer,  with his wife Charlotte, helped to

    turn the Israeli university’s struggling social work

    department into a strong institution that serves the entire

    country.

   

    "I came here to

    be with Charlotte because of Jack," al-Krenawi said.

    "Without their support, it’s hard to say if we’d have such a

    great department."

   

    Al-Krenawi’s

    story could have been like one of the other 150,000 Bedouin

    that live in and around Southern Israel. He is one of 15

    children, and grew up in a small city that is among the

    poorest in the country. He is also, however, the only member

    of his family to attend university. He took as much

    advantage of his opportunity as he could, and found his

    calling in the fields of education and the social sciences.

   

    During his second

    year of school, al-Krenawi began working as a social worker.

   

    "I was the first

    one who came to the Negev for mental health services," he

    said.

   

    The years he

    spent in the field were eye-opening to him in how he saw his

    people.

   

    "When I completed

    my Master’s degree, I said to myself there’s something

    unacceptable here among the Bedouin community," al-Krenawi

    said. But it wasn’t until after he received his doctorate

    from the University of Toronto that he decided to return

    home. He had been weighing his options on what to do next

    when Ben Gurion University called. That was in 1995. He has

    been there ever since.

   

    Bringing the

    knowledge and methodology of mental health service to the

    traditional communities was not an easy task.

   

    "Within the

    culture itself there is what are called informal systems

    that exist within the community: the traditional healers,

    the religious aspect, the family in the community," he said.

   

    As part of his

    work in the university, al-Krenawi has trained social

    workers – Jewish and Arab alike – to be able to go into

    these communities while remaining sympathetic to the

    cultural differences.

   

    "The profession

    shapes the attitudes and view of the social workers," he

    said. "We try to put the social workers in a position to be

    more creative, and to deal with them a little more

    differently."

   

    The problems the

    Bedouin face are similar to many problems other Arab

    populations face when attempting to adapt to the modern

    world.

   

    "Our job is to

    help the social workers deal with that clash," al-Krenawi

    said. Problems range from domestic violence to simply

    allowing women to attend school at all. As little as 10

    years ago, al-Krenawi said, "Even high school was not

    accepted."

   

    Today, 51 percent

    of the Bedouin students in his department are female, though

    he said that number is a bit skewed because many males who

    enroll in social work programs have the freedom to leave

    their homes to attend universities elsewhere in the country.

   

    "But we see that

    education is getting more important for the Bedouin

    community," he said, and that typifies the type of change he

    deals with.

   

    Still, convincing

    the Bedouin to seek out and sustain mental health treatment

    holds its own set of challenges.

   

    "The termination

    of treatment after one or two sessions is very high," al-Krenawi

    said. "I think the issue here is stigma."

   

    In his tenure at

    the university, al-Krenawi has also worked to build

    Jewish-Arab relations through face-to-face meetings and

    education.

   

    "In bringing the

    issue of dialogue between cultures, in this case being

    Jewish and Arab, it’s very important, it’s really crucial,"

    he said. "When they talk about their attitudes, their

    values, their ideology…you tend to help to change the view

    and attitudes of each other."

   

    He said that by

    teaching the suffering of others, it better enables them to

    listen to each other and develop sensitivities.

   

    As chair of the

    department, al-Krenawi said he will continue to focus on

    multiculturalism while helping to ease the social problems

    that have beset the poorest area of his country.

   

    He said he is

    honored to have been elected to his three-year term as

    chair, while acknowledging his situation is unique for both

    the Bedouin and Israel. "When it happened," he said, "I said

    to myself, it’s really a political statement."