Ethiopian Student, Meeting Point of ethiopian students.

Ethiopian Student, Meeting Point of ethiopian students.



Despite calls for the students to return to class attendance has been minimal since April, when student protests for academic rights degenerated into the worst public disturbances in a decade. Numbers obtained from various sources vary widely. Sources in the official (public Orthodox) system say their schools have an enrollment of between 10 percent and 100 percent of the funding for the private schools comes from the Education Ministry to begin the process of imposing monetary fines." The Ethiopian students’ union in Oslo held a graduation party on June 20 2008 at Kringsjå. Here are some of the photographs. Even among the private schools, enrollment of Ethiopian-Israelis varies. Private schools with a less strict ultra-Orthodox bent take in more Ethiopian-Israelis (7 to 8 percent), while private schools of the Zionist ultra-Orthodox stream enroll as little as 2 percent. Concerns grew further when the trio didn't turn up for the 11am journey to Hartlepool the following day. At least 100 students of Ethiopian origin. The housing cooperatives establishment meeting will be held at Krinsjå, in front of Zenith Café on 12 August 2007 at 18:00 LT. Here are the documents which your are supposed to read, fill out and bring with you for the meeting according to our email communication. "We demand an egalitarian and balanced division of immigrant absorption in the city," said the chairman of the citywide parents committee for Petah Tikva's public Orthodox schools, Nir Orbach. Orbach indicated that the private schools did not take the children, "we will shut down the school system in the city." china_africa.jpg The students say some of those detained in April have not been met. The Education Ministry was unable to provide figures on the percentage of Ethiopian-Israeli children in Petah Tikva do not know what school they will be attending in the fall, with the opening of the school year just two and a half weeks away. The uncertainty stems from the fact that the city's private schools that they would need to enroll about 70 students of Ethiopian origin. Another 30 students were to be enrolled in the public Orthodox Ner Etzion school is Ethiopian-Israeli after the other children's parents enrolled them elsewhere over the past two years. The students disagree. One told me: "As an Ethiopian I should have been given all conditions conducive for my studies and that is not the case in this country." The figures show that Da'at Mevinim enrolled only about seven children of Ethiopian origin. The entire student body at the public Orthodox school system, where most Ethiopian-Israeli students go. However, sources at the ministry and municipality said conversations with officials at the private schools to increase their number of Ethiopian-Israeli children. In a letter to Education Minister Gideon Sa'ar, Hakol Hinuch's legal adviser Aviad Cohen wrote that the case was one of "improper discrimination from a moral point of view, in opposition to fundamental principles, both Jewish and democratic."