Prophecy Preview: Amid Global Uncertainty, Record Numbers of Jews Return 'Home'
By Deborah Fineblum/JNS.org June 09, 2020
In a time of darkness, a time of pandemic, pandemonium and power struggles, a thin ray of light can be seen in the Jewish world.
The
results are in: In May, the number of North Americans applying to make
aliyah was double what it was last year at this time (814 vs. 424). In
fact, last month was the biggest ever in the 19-year history of Nefesh
B'Nefesh, the nonprofit that with the help of Israel's government and
the Jewish Agency for Israel has already shepherded some 60,000 North
American Jews to new homes in Israel.
"We've
seen small bumps, but nothing like this," says Marc Rosenberg, Nefesh
vice president for Diaspora partnerships. "What we saw this past month
is absolutely remarkable. And while they may not be major numbers, they
are major increases."
With New York, California
and New Jersey leading the way, this spring's uptick in new immigrants
isn't limited to North Americans. Though no hard numbers were available
as of press time, Jewish Agency officials say they're seeing a "definite
rise in the number of aliyah applications around the world," especially
in North America, France (where unrest, economic woes and anti-Semitism
are increasingly the norm) and Mexico (now carrying one of the world's
highest COVID-19 rates).
Folks seem ready to make the move, even though it means
spending their first two weeks as newly minted Israeli citizens in
badood (Hebrew for "quarantine").
The jump of interest in the number of individuals and families begs the question: "Why now?"
For
Jay and Michal Brown of Los Angeles, this time in history was the push
they needed to realize a long-deferred dream. "COVID-19 gave us an
opportunity to slow down our lives and find out what's really important
to us," says Brown. "My wife is Israeli and was ready to go home, but
it's only these last few months that I've been asking myself, what am I
holding onto here?
"I realized I've been
chasing money like a chicken without a head," he adds. "So I said, 'No,
our kids are not going to grow up like this. They're 7 and 10, and need
to be raised with Jewish values. It was during COVID-19 that I
surrendered to all that. At 53, I realized I had to change, and that
doing what's best for my family was going to be best for me, too."
'You no longer have to sacrifice your comforts'
It's
something Rosenberg hears from many of the incoming olim. "This period
of staying home has given them a rare opportunity for intense reflection
on what their life is about, what's important to them at whatever stage
they are in life."
And many, especially those
who having gotten habituated to working remotely during the global
coronavirus pandemic, are now looking to bring their jobs with them to
Israel--from the radiologist who's set to analyze images thousands of
miles from his office to the human-resources manager planning to run her
department from her new home in Israel.
Others
submitting applications this spring include students and young
professionals, many attracted to both the allure of living in Israel and
the low-cost colleges, universities and graduate schools that offer a
future unencumbered by massive student debt. Others plan to serve two or
three years as lone soldiers in the Israel Defense Forces before
attending college or graduate school.
And though idealism still drives them eastward, Rosenberg
says many of today's incoming Jews see Israel as a place for both the
head and heart.
This appeal of Israel as a
quality place to live has turned the idea of aliyah on its head, says
Ruth Wisse, a historian, retired Harvard University professor, and
author of Jews and Power (2008).
"Historically,
the natural course of immigration is always to move from a poorer
environment to a richer one; it's human nature that nobody moves for
downward mobility," says Wisse, now Distinguished Senior Fellow at the
New York-based think-tank the Tikvah Fund. "So, during the early days,
aliyah was unnatural; you were moving to a poorer place then. But now
it's not that kind of aliyah anymore," she adds. "Today, you no longer
have to sacrifice your comforts to live as a proud Jew in the land of
Israel."
This represents what Rosenberg calls
"a dramatic shift for Diaspora Jews--from seeing Israel as simply a safe
haven for Jewish refugees to being a smart choice for building a life
and a family. And they see that Israel with its good schools, vibrant
Jewish community and flourishing lifestyle has also handled the virus
well. So all of a sudden, they're recalibrating what Israel can be for
them."
Israel has fared better than much of the
world in containing the virus, immediately going into emergency mode,
using intelligence, technological, medical and military resources to
grapple with the threat of widespread contamination.
To
date, there were more than 17,000 confirmed cases in the country, with a
total of 298 resulting deaths and some 15,000 people recovered from the
illness. They also put into place measures to assist the Palestinian
Authority and the leadership in the Gaza Strip to help them contain
potential spread as well.
New immigrants also
include empty-nesters, who see Israel as a viable, affordable and Jewish
place to spend their retirement, including the appeal of low-cost and
comprehensive health care.
Moshe and Shelly
Kamionski, also of Los Angeles, are retirees-in-process (she's finished
with her optician job; he's a semi-retired lawyer and a rabbi) with
three sons already living in Israel and a daughter, a recent "corona
bride," planning to follow soon.
"We have 14
grandchildren in Israel," says Moshe, who was born there 70 years ago to
a mother who came as a teenaged Polish halutzet ("pioneer") and a
father who fought in Israel's War of Independence in 1947-48. "It's nice
to see our grandchildren over FaceTime" he says. "But we can't hug them
or take them to school. I also feel safer in Israel than in LA now."
'We have to decide where we really belong'
What
we're seeing in this increase also is a shift the "someday" mindset to
hitting "send" on aliyah applications. So says Rabbi Menachem Penner,
the Max and Marion Grill dean of Yeshiva University's Rabbi Isaac
Elchanan Theological Seminary, or REITS. "Typically, the number of
people who actually go through with the process represents a tiny
percentage of all those who've been thinking of doing it for years," he
says.
Another factor moving folks from the latter group into
the former one, Penner maintains, is "that our existence in America
feels a bit more fragile than it did before. Rising anti-Semitism and
certainly COVID have shown us that the world can change in a day. And
when we realize we are living in historic times, we have to be open to
changing our lives accordingly as part of the tide that's turnin
What's
more, coronavirus-related travel restrictions mean that Diaspora Jews
can no longer get to Israel without making aliyah. "Many of us always
thought we can have one foot in America and the other in Israel," says
Penner. "But this has taught us that we can't have two homes--that at
the end of the day, we have to decide where we really belong."
And
he says, though his work at YU keeps him in New York for now, he's
"jealous of people whose purpose is now there, and I very much look
forward to when it's my time."
At 23, Sophie
(aka Shira) Hudes has already decided where she wants to build her
future. Starting with a move this summer to Beersheva where she's
enrolled in the medical school at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.
"Living
in Israel has always been my dream," says the native New Yorker. Though
she was initially pursuing a student visa, "the pandemic reminded me of
what's important, and it pushed me to take action. I realized then that
I've always wanted to make aliyah someday, so why not just do it now?"
Zionism
and the love of Israel was something her late father transmitted to
her, says Hudes. And with her knowledge of Russian (her mother was born
in Georgia) and her rapidly improving Hebrew, as a future doctor, Hudes
is hoping to be able to communicate with Israeli patients in any of
three languages.
And, now that she's finally
made up her mind, she says, "I feel so much more connected to Israel.
When I'm there, I feel like I can breathe better, that everything is
clearer. Especially with what the world is going through now, Israel
feels like an anchor keeping me grounded amid the chaos."
Given
the challenges of the past few months, "this new wave of Jews seeking
to return to their homeland fills us with hope, energy and optimism,"
says Rabbi Yehoshua Fass, co-founder and executive director of Nefesh
B'Nefesh. "We look forward to welcoming each and every one of the olim
to their new home."
Do those in the field,
which includes the Jewish Agency for Israel, the Jewish National
Fund-Keren Hayesod, the International Fellowship for Christians and
Jews, and the International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, think the
trend will continue?
It's too soon to tell for
certain, attests Rosenberg. "Whenever there's a paradigm shift, it's
hard to see it while it's going on, but this much I can tell you: The
people who preparing to come now, in addition to having their lives
enriched by living here, are going to be contributing so much to the
future of Israel."
Originally published at JNS.org - reposted with permission.
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