- TEL AVIV, Israel (Reuters/Hollywood
Reporter) -- Where countless politicians and diplomats have failed, Elmo,
Cookie Monster and their "Sesame Street" buddies are on a mission
to promote peace and tolerance in the Middle East.
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- A programming experiment using the Muppet characters
was launched six months ago and was widely welcomed by parents, educators
and the media. But the Muppets are not without their critics in Israel,
the Palestinian Authority and Jordan.
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- Sesame Workshop partnered with local producers to create
"Sesame Stories," an adventurous initiative to use new and existing
"Sesame Street" characters to foster respect and understanding
among children in the region.
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- Gary Knell, president and chief operating officer of
Sesame Workshop, says in an interview that producers knew that not everybody
would be open to the idea of Elmo & Co. teaching Israeli kids to respect
Palestinians and vice versa.
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- "It's a highly charged environment, and the press
is going to reflect some of that," Knell says. "Yes, some Israeli
reports accused us of being lackeys of the Palestinians, while another
article accused us of being lackeys of the Bush White House and charged
that Elmo was carrying the will of the White House to the Middle East.
A Jordanian Internet site accused us of being Zionist lap dogs."
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- Knell stresses that the majority of media reports about
the Muppets experiment had been positive.
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- "Sesame Stories" is now airing as three parallel
productions on Jordan Television, the HOP! Channel in Israel and the Ma'an
Network in the West Bank and Gaza.
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- Daniella Hellerstein, whose family emigrated to Israel
three years ago from the United States, says she encourages four young
kids to watch the show.
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- "I like the overall message -- tolerance and respect
-- and I support the effort 100%," she says. But she adds: "My
children don't completely appreciate the point of the characters -- they
don't differentiate between the Jewish and Arab characters."
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- Havi Livne, another mother in the region, welcomes the
show unreservedly. "Suddenly, a program is dealing with Arabs not
just as terrorists. For me, it opened a window to talk with the children
about something very important. And it's very important for me to know
it's shown in the Palestinian Authority and Jordan."
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- Ayman El Bardawil, director of Ramallah-based independent
broadcaster Al Quds Educational Television, a co-producer of the Palestinian
Authority version, reports that "the children are happy about it.
The feedback we've been getting is very good."
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- Sesame Workshop's Knell says that there have been problems
other than inflammatory media reports to overcome during the past months.
Just living and working in such a highly charged environment is a challenge
for the producers. "One day there was a bus bombing (in Israel), and
our producers dropped everything to get to the scene because they feared
their children might be on the bus.
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- "Then one of the Palestinian writers -- on his way
to a production meeting --was strip-searched in the street by Israeli soldiers.
Now you know he's not coming into that meeting in a good mood."
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