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ISRAELI IMMIGRATION POLICY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   168844


Israeli Immigration Policy at Odds: Emerging Jewish Communities and the “Return” of the Converts from Latin America / Yezersky, Renen   Journal Article
Yezersky, Renen Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article demonstrates how current Israeli return policy is becoming increasingly exclusive in the face of the emergence of convert communities in developing countries. While retaining the traditional objective to secure Jewish dominancy, the return policy actively favors Western and Orthodox ethnoreligious affiliation. Critical policy analysis illustrates how the policy is currently implemented not only to limit and regulate the potential mass immigration of new converts from emerging Jewish communities in Latin America, but also to ensure their Orthodox affiliation.
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2
ID:   183749


Terrorism and migration: on the mass emigration of Iraqi Jews, 1950–1951 / Meir-Glitzenstein, Esther   Journal Article
Meir-Glitzenstein, Esther Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract During 1950-1951 approximately 125,000 Jews immigrated to Israel from Iraq, where they had constituted 95% of the Jewish community. The vast number of migrants surprised the governments of Iraq, Israel, and Britain and the Iraqi Jews themselves because this had been an ancient, established, wealthy community, well integrated socially, economically, and culturally into Iraq, its perceived homeland. Moreover, the migrants’ destination, the impoverished young State of Israel, lacked appeal. One explanation for this phenomenon links it with a series of terrorist acts that occurred in Baghdad during 1951-1950, portraying them as an Israeli provocation that sparked panic and mass emigration. Although historical studies based on archival documents from the time refute this claim, it still has supporters among Arab countries, Jews of Iraqi background in Israel and elsewhere, and academics. This article juxtaposes the terrorism narrative with the findings of historical scholarship on the mass migration of Iraqi Jews, in an effort to explain the endurance and lasting influence of this narrative.
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