"Please pray for
the Peace of Israel" Psalm 122 [Chapter-18]
Israel
to Help European Jews Flee Anti-Semitism
"Save us, Lord our God, and gather us from the nations,
that we may give thanks to your holy name and glory in your praise."
(Psalm 106:47)
In response to the continued rise of anti-Semitism in
Europe, Israel is investing NIS 30 million ($17 million) to help European Jewry
make aliyah (immigrate to Israel under the Law of Return) in 2014 and 2015. "In light of increasing
anti-Semitic incidents in Europe, there is a real need to encourage aliyah from
Europe," Israeli
Immigration Absorption Minister Sofa Landver said. Aliyah as a whole has gone up 55 percent, drawing record numbers
from the Ukraine and from France—four times as many as last year. "Never in the history of the State of Israel has there
been a Jewish community in the free world that has sent such a large proportion
of its Jews to Israel," Jewish Agency Chairman Natan Sharansky said to
reporters last Sunday. (Israel
Hayom) The 2,250 French Jews who have immigrated to Israel since
January should more than double by the year's end, Sharansky said. During this
same period, the number of Jews making aliyah from Ukraine more than doubled to
1,590.
French
immigrants arrive in Israel.
"Not war, not peace—what we are living in now is a wild
agony, waiting for something terrible to happen," writes Ukrainian-Jewish
mining engineer and Hebrew teacher Sasha Ivashchenko in a letter to the Jewish
Agency. In a June 8, 2014 letter written in his hometown, Donetsk, Ivashchenko
affirmed his intention to make aliyah with his family to save them from the
country's turmoil. "Tears choke me out
in shame over this injustice, over this destruction of the future, over my pain
in having to take my child far away—and I am terrified that if I don’t move
quickly, one day, I will be unable to take him away," he wrote. Another Donetsk resident, Alisa Voronova, said, "Every
moment is one of loss—one person loses calm, another loses his home, another a
loved one, another his own life. We have all become hostages and victims
of an undeclared war." (Tablet
Mag)
Bnei Menashe men have fun in Israel.
Israel's
recent immigrants also include the Bnei Menashe of India, who are of the Ten
Lost Tribes of Israel, exiled by the Assyrian Empire more than 2,700 years ago. (Jspace News) "After 2,700 years, the Bnei Menashe are returning to our
people and our land, and we won’t stop until all the remaining 7,000 community
members still in India will be able to come here," said Michael Freund, founder and chairman of Israel Returns
(Shavei Israel), an organization committed to shepherding home "lost
Jews." While Israel's neighbours try to remove the Jewish People from the
land, Israel can take comfort in God's faithfulness to His covenant with them
and the end-time fulfilment of His promises to bring His people home to the
land He gave them. "He remembers His covenant
forever, the promise He made, for a thousand generations, the covenant he made
with Abraham, the oath He swore to Isaac. He confirmed it to Jacob as a
decree, to Israel as an everlasting covenant: 'To you I will give the land of
Canaan as the portion you will inherit.'" (Psalm
105:8–11)
Israeli children visit the Palestinian village of Tuwani and
participate in
bilingual activities together during summer camp.
No comments:
Post a Comment