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Thread: 28% of Israel Not Jewish (Jerusalem Post)

  1. #1
    cerulean
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    28% of Israel Not Jewish (Jerusalem Post)

    From the Jerusalem Post:

    Slightly more than one in every four Israelis is not Jewish, according to a new study due to be released today by Bar-Ilan University's Rappaport Center for Assimilation, Research, and Strengthening Jewish Vitality.

    The study comes on the heels of a statement released yesterday by demographer Hebrew University Sergio Della Pergola who heads the Institute of Contemporary Jewry that more Jews are emigrating from Israel than are immigrating.

    ...
    http://www.jpost.com/NASApp/cs/Conte...=1023716458562

    ========
    The article mentions that half of those immigrating to Israel under the Law of Return are not Jewish (but related to or married to Jews).

    Although not specifically mentioned in this article, demographic studies also indicate that within a given period of time, due to high Arab birth and relatively lower Jewish birth rates, that Jews might become a minority in Israel if current trends continue.

    What, if anything, should be done and what are the likely effects of these demographics and demographic projections?

  2. #2
    Vic
    Guest

    Thumbs down

    The article doesn't offer any statistics on the so-called non-halakhic Jews. Such people more often then not define themselves as Jews, yet they are expected to go through the whole conversion procedure sometimes just because they lack written proof of the Jewishness of their maternal grandmothers.

    The trouble is that - afaik - it's mostly the educated and well-off who are leaving. Such "brain (and private finance) drains" have already had desastrous effects in other countries.

    As to what can be done about it - the obvious, I suppose: decent living conditions, security situation, good employment and business chances *sigh*

    Maybe a better access to higher education too, I know young Israelis who leave the country to study abroad just because they or their families cannot afford the Israeli university fees. Given the better material living conditions in the West they tend to stay too.

  3. #3
    cerulean
    Guest
    Originally posted by Vic
    The article doesn't offer any statistics on the so-called non-halakhic Jews. Such people more often then not define themselves as Jews, yet they are expected to go through the whole conversion procedure sometimes just because they lack written proof of the Jewishness of their maternal grandmothers.
    I assume the article above is discussing Jews by halachic definition only. I wonder what the statistic is for people who fall into the category of not being able to provide satisfactory proof? Obviously a lot of people from Europe and the former Soviet Union would have trouble getting such records, due to war and devastation during WWII, or subsequent bureaucratic chaos.

    Maybe a better access to higher education too, I know young Israelis who leave the country to study abroad just because they or their families cannot afford the Israeli university fees. Given the better material living conditions in the West they tend to stay too. [/B]
    So maybe a good charity project would be to fund more scholarships and bursaries for students to remain in Israel?

  4. #4
    elke
    Guest
    It's equally true that many of those "non-Jews", from Russia anyway, consider themselves Israeli, know more about the history and culture of the Jews than do their Jewish spouses, and are generally extremely patriotic. They won't say that they are Jewish in the sensus - because technically they are not, but for all intents and purposes, if you define "Jewish" as identification with the culture, they are no demographic threat to Israel.

  5. #5
    Senior Member Mediocrates's Avatar
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    Just like American Reform and Conservative convertions are now accepted it is becoming easier for non Orthodox to make aliyah and to be counted as 'Jew' on their identity card.

    Only about 20-30% Israelis are what you would call strictly observant; otherwise it is a secular society.

  6. #6
    L@mplighterM
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    Originally posted by Mediocrates
    Just like American Reform and Conservative convertions are now accepted it is becoming easier for non Orthodox to make aliyah and to be counted as 'Jew' on their identity card.

    Only about 20-30% Israelis are what you would call strictly observant; otherwise it is a secular society.
    I thought the identity cards were eliminated a few months back.

  7. #7
    Senior Member Mediocrates's Avatar
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    Originally posted by L@mplighterM


    I thought the identity cards were eliminated a few months back.
    ...could be I thought the big change was that conservative and reform conversions weren't permitted to be stamped Jewish and now they are.

  8. #8
    cerulean
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    Rabbi calls for mass conversions during IDF service

    http://www.jpost.com/NASApp/cs/Conte...=1023716471195

    From the article:

    Ish-Shalom said a recent survey conducted by the Dahaf Institute, under the direction of Dr. Mina Zemach, revealed that 87 percent of the non-Jewish immigrants wanted to feel part of the Jewish people, and that 14% wanted to convert to Judaism. He added that among those taking courses provided by the Institute, 80% wanted to convert.

    ...

    Here is the Haaretz article on the same study mentioned in the first post:

    http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/pa...&itemNo=175853

    From the article:

    Cohen discovered the true figures in the research of Prof. Arnon Sofer of Haifa University. For years, demographer Sofer has been monitoring with concern the dissolution of the Jewish majority in Israel. According to these statistics, updated as of the end of 2001, only 72 percent of the residents of Israel are Jews according to halakha, or traditional Jewish law - 5,000,000 people in all. Another 270,000, or 4 percent, are non-Jewish immigrants granted citizenship under the provisions of the Law of Return. Arab citizens of Israel account for another 18 percent, or 1.25 million. An additional 2 percent, or 150,000 people, are Palestinians illegally living in Israel. There are as well 280,000 foreign workers, representing another 4 percent of the total population. These figures will be among a range of other data Cohen is to present at the opening next Wednesday of a conference he initiated on the topic of "Israeli assimilation."
    Last edited by cerulean; 06-14-2002 at 01:51 AM.

  9. #9
    alexbmn
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    things arent as bad as they would seem.At first i was freaked by the number 72% but when I saw that it's five million Jews then it didnt look so bad. The Jewish population of Israel is still growing unlike in the USA.

  10. #10
    Vic
    Guest
    Another peculiarity:

    When the child falls through a loophole in Jewish law
    Not knowing the intricacies of halakha can cause problems for generations to come
    http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/pa...&itemNo=177011
    section 22 of the Population Registry Law states that a man cannot be registered as the father of the child of a woman who was married to another man within 300 days before the birth of the child, except by order of an authorized court or rabbinical court. The Interior Ministry clerk told her that by religious law, her son might be considered a mamzer (the offspring of incest or adultery between Jews) or a possible mamzer.

    ...

    The terms "mamzer" and "possible mamzer" are religious ones, but impact on the civil law related to marriage and divorce.

    ...

    Only religious marriages are recognized in Israel and the Interior Ministry only registers marriages carried out by the rabbinate (and marriages conducted abroad). That is why men and women seeking to register for marriage in the rabbinate sometimes discover, perhaps for the first time in their lives, that they are halakhically considered mamzerim or at least possible mamzerim, a status involving serious prohibitions, based on Deuteronomy 23:3: "A mamzer shall not enter into the congregation of the Lord, even unto the tenth generation shall he not enter in the congregation of the Lord." They will soon realize that their opportunities to marry in Israel are limited, not only for them, but for their future offspring as well. According to halakha - and the state - mamzerim can only marry other mamzerim or converts. A "possible mamzer" must have his or her status clarified before they can marry. Unless the rabbinical court releases a person from their status of being a mamzer, "according to halakha, a mamzer is forever," explains Rabbi Shlomo Dichovski, a member of the Great Rabbinical Court. Dichovski is aware that in view of the current norms, "the country should seemingly be filled with mamzerim, but in reality this does not occur because, in certain cases, the rabbinate releases people from their status as mamzerim, and over the years, the mamzerim become assimilated into the general population and are no longer recognized as such."

    ...

    A "possible mamzer" is one whose mamzerut has not been proved and the circumstances of whose birth are not clear, for example, when the mother refuses to say who the father is and the father denies paternity. A child born to an unknown father and an unmarried mother is called a shtuki. A shtuki may not marry an ordinary Jewish woman, or a mamzeret - because she may only marry a definite mamzer - or a shtukit because she may ultimately turn out to be permissible.
    Are "(possible) mamzers" full Jews for the statistics?

  11. #11
    Vic
    Guest

    And the remedy is...

    Welcome, converts

    By MICHAEL FREUND
    Jun. 19, 2002

    http://www.jpost.com/NASApp/cs/Conte...=1023716517775

  12. #12
    damnedyankee
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    There is only one final solution

    The ultimate outcome that will intercede in the cycle of violence would be a truely democratic Israel and a nascently democratic Palestine. This isn't dreaming, this isn't idealism, this is the only functional solution.

    History has shown, after all the suffering and recriminations, after all the belligerents have exhausted all their options to the logical extremes, nothing less will work.

    If Israel and Palestine are to become what their various peoples aspire to, they both have to turn their backs to patronage, revenge, hatred and theocracy.

    It takes _real_ leadership to keep their eye on the right prize, the ultimate goal, not the immediate gratification of revenge or the ignorance of fear.

    To do otherwise is to willfully ignore history and to ensure the continuance of the cycle of suffering and ignorance.

    Respectfully,
    --DY

  13. #13
    ibrodsky
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    Re: There is only one final solution

    Originally posted by damnedyankee
    The ultimate outcome that will intercede in the cycle of violence would be a truely democratic Israel and a nascently democratic Palestine. This isn't dreaming, this isn't idealism, this is the only functional solution.
    Yes, but show us how Israel isn't a true democracy.

  14. #14
    Vic
    Guest

    Re: There is only one final solution

    Originally posted by damnedyankee
    The ultimate outcome that will intercede in the cycle of violence would be a truely democratic Israel and a nascently democratic Palestine.
    Define "nascently democratic".

  15. #15
    damnedyankee
    Guest

    Re: Re: There is only one final solution

    Originally posted by Vic
    Define "nascently democratic".
    Define "define."

    Nascent = new.

    "Democratic," that's a whole long debate for another day.

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