Aliyah ( ) is the
immigration of
Jews to
Eretz Israel. It is a basic tenet of
Zionist ideology, and a value in almost all
movements of
Judaism. The opposite action,
Jewish
emigration from Israel, is
referred to as
Yerida
("descent").
Religious, ideological and cultural concept
Aliyah is widely regarded as an important Jewish cultural
concept and a fundamental concept of
Zionism
that is enshrined in Israel's
Law of
Return, which accords any
Jew
(deemed as such by
halakha and/or
Israeli secular law) and eligible non-Jews (a
child and a grandchild of a Jew, the spouse of a Jew, the spouse of
a child of a Jew and the spouse of a grandchild of a Jew), the
legal
right to assisted immigration and
settlement in Israel, as well as automatic Israeli citizenship.
Someone who "makes
aliyah" is called an
oleh (m.
singular) or
olah (f. singular); the plural for both is
olim. Many Religious Jews espouse
aliyah as a
return to the
Promised land, and
regard it as the fulfillment of
God's
biblical promise to the descendants of the Hebrew
patriarchs
Abraham,
Isaac, and
Jacob. Aliyah is
included as a commandment by some opinions on the enumeration of
the
613 commandments.
In
Zionist discourse, the term
aliyah (plural
aliyot) includes both voluntary
immigration for ideological, emotional, or practical reasons and,
on the other hand, mass flight of persecuted populations of Jews.
The vast majority of Israeli Jews today trace their family's recent
roots to outside of the country. While many have actively chosen to
settle in Israel rather than some other country, many had little or
no choice about leaving their previous home countries. While Israel
is commonly recognized as "a country of
immigrants", it is also, in large measure, a
country of
refugees.
According to the traditional Jewish ordering of books of the
Bible, the very last word of the Bible (i.e.
the last word in the original Hebrew of verse 2 Chronicles 36:23)
is
veya‘al, a
jussive
verb form derived from the same
root as
aliyah, meaning "let
him go up" (to Israel).
Historical background
Mass return to the Land of Israel is a recurring theme in Jewish
prayers recited every day, three times a day, and holiday services
on
Passover and
Yom
Kippur traditionally conclude with the words "Next year in
Jerusalem." since Jews are members of both a nation and a religion,
aliyah (returning to Israel) has always had both a secular and a
religious significance. In all historical periods during which
return to the Land of Israel was possible, Jewish groups and
individuals have immigrated back to the Jewish homeland.
For generations of religious Jews,
aliyah was associated
with the coming of the
Jewish Messiah. Jews
prayed for their Messiah to come, who was to redeem the Land of
Israel from gentile rule and return world Jewry to the land under a
Halachic theocracy.
Pre-Zionist aliyah
Biblical
The Bible relates that the Jewish patriarch Abraham came to the
Land of Canaan with his family and followers in approximately 1800
BC. His grandson, Jacob, went down to Egypt with his family, and
after centuries there, they went back to Canaan under Moses and
Joshua, entering it in about 1250 BCE.
After the Babylonian exile of the Jewish people, approximately
50,000 Jews returned to Israel following the Cyrus Proclamation of
538 BCE.
The Jewish priestly scribe Ezra led about
50,000 Israelite exiles living
in Babylon
to their
home city of Jerusalem
in 459 BC. Others returned throughout the
era of the Second Temple.
200–500 AD
In late antiquity, the two hubs of rabbinic learning were Babylonia
and Israel. Throughout the Amoraic period, many Babylonian Jews
immigrated to Israel and left their mark on Israeli life, as rabbis
and leaders.
10th–11th century
In the 10th century, leaders of the
Karaite
Jewish community, mostly living under Persian rule, urged their
followers to settle in Eretz Yisrael.
The Karaites
established their own quarter in Jerusalem
, on the western slope of the Kidron Valley. During this period,
there is abundant evidence of pilgrimages to Jerusalem by Jews from
various countries, mainly in the month of
Tishrei, around the time of the
Sukkot holiday.
1200–1882
The number of Jews returning to the Land of Israel rose
significantly between the 13th and 19th centuries, mainly due to a
general decline in the status of Jews across Europe and an increase
in
religious persecution. The
expulsion of Jews from England
(1290), France (1391),
Austria (1421) and
Spain (the
Alhambra decree of 1492) were seen by many
as a sign of approaching redemption and contributed greatly to the
messianic spirit of the time.
|
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| Aliyah 1948–2000: by numbers and by source. |
Aliyah was
also spurred during this period by the resurgence of messianic
fervor among the Jews of France, Italy, the Germanic states, Poland
, Russia
and North Africa. The belief in
the imminent coming of the
Jewish
Messiah, the ingathering of the exiles and the re-establishment
of the
kingdom of Israel
encouraged many who had few other options to make the perilous
journey to the
Land of Israel (Eretz
Yisrael).
Pre-Zionist resettlement in Palestine met with various degrees of
success. For example, little is known of the fate of the 1210
"aliyah of the three hundred rabbis" and their descendants. It is
thought that few survived the bloody upheavals caused by the
Crusader invasion in 1229 and their
subsequent expulsion by the Muslims in 1291. After the fall of the
Byzantine Empire in 1453 and the
expulsion of Jews from Spain (1492) and Portugal (1498), many Jews
made their way to the Holy Land.
Then the immigration in the 18th and early
19th centuries of thousands of followers of various Kabbalist and Hassidic rabbis, as well as the
disciples of the Vilna Gaon and the
disciples of the Chattam Sofer, added
considerably to the Jewish populations in Jerusalem
, Tiberias
, Hebron
, and
Safed
.
The messianic dreams of the
Gaon of
Vilna inspired one of the largest pre-Zionist waves of
immigration to Eretz Yisrael. In 1808, hundreds of the Gaon's
disciples, known as
Perushim, settled in
Tiberias and Safed, and later formed the core of the
Old Yishuv in Jerusalem. This was part of a
larger movement of thousands of Jews from countries as widely
spaced as Persia and Morocco, Yemen and Russia, who moved to Israel
beginning in the first decade of the nineteenth century - and in
even larger numbers after the conquest of the region by
Muhammad Ali of Egypt in 1832 - all
drawn by the expectation of the arrival of the Messiah in the
Jewish year 5600, English year 1840, a movement documented in Arie
Morgenstern's
Hastening
Redemption.
There were also those who like the British mystic
Laurence Oliphant
tried to lease Northern Palestine to settle the Jews there
(1879).
Zionist Aliyah (1882 on)
In Zionist
history, the different waves of aliyah, beginning with the
arrival of the Biluim from Russia
in 1882, are
categorized by date and the country of origin of the
immigrants.
First Aliyah (1882–1903)
Between 1882 and 1903, approximately 35,000 Jews immigrated to
Palestine, then a province of the
Ottoman
Empire.
The majority, belonging to the Hovevei Zion and Bilu
movements, came from the Russian Empire
with a smaller number arriving from Yemen
. Many
established agricultural communities.
Among the towns that
these individuals established are Petah Tikva
(already in 1878), Rishon LeZion
, Rosh
Pina
, and Zikhron Ya'aqov
. In 1882, the Yemenite
Jews settled in an Arab suburb of Jerusalem
called Silwan
located
south-east of the walls of the Old City
on the slopes of the Mount of Olives
.
Second Aliyah (1904–1914)
Between
1904 and 1914, 40,000 Jews immigrated mainly from Russia
to Palestine
following pogroms and outbreaks of anti-semitism in that country. This
group, many of whom were infused with
socialist ideals, established the first
kibbutz,
Degania, in 1909 and
formed self-defense organizations, such as
Hashomer, to counter increasing
Arab hostility and to help Jews to protect their
communities from Arab bandits.
The suburb of Jaffa
, Ahuzat
Bayit, established at this time, grew into the city of Tel Aviv
. During this period, some of the
underpinnings of an independent nation-state arose: The national
language
Hebrew was revived;
newspapers and literature written in Hebrew published; political
parties and workers organizations were established. The
First World War effectively ended the period of
the Second Aliyah.
Third Aliyah (1919–1923)
Between
1919 and 1923, 40,000 Jews, mainly from the Russian Empire
arrived in the wake of World
War I, the British
conquest of Palestine; the establishment of the Mandate, and the Balfour Declaration. Many
of these were pioneers, known as
halutzim, trained in agriculture and capable
of establishing self sustaining economies. In spite of immigration
quotas established by the British administration, the population of
Jews reached 90,000 by the end of this period.
The Jezreel
Valley
and the Hefer Plain marshes were drained and
converted to agricultural use. Additional national
institutions arose: The
Histadrut (General
Labor Federation); an elected assembly; national council; and the
Haganah.
Fourth Aliyah (1924–1929)
Between
1924 and 1929, 82,000 Jews arrived, many as a result of
anti-semitism in Poland
and Hungary
. The immigration quota of the United States
kept Jews out. This group contained many
middle class families that moved to the growing towns, establishing
small businesses and light industry. Of these approximately 23,000
left the country.
Fifth Aliyah (1929–1939)
Between
1929 and 1939, with the rise of Nazism in
Germany
, a new wave of 250,000 immigrants arrived, the
majority of these, 174,000, arrived between 1933–1936, after which
increasing restrictions on immigration by the British made
immigration clandestine and illegal, called Aliyah
Bet. The Fifth Aliyah was again driven mostly from
Eastern Europe as well as professionals, doctors, lawyers and
professors, from Germany. Refugee artists introduced
Bauhaus (Tel Aviv has the highest concentration of
Bauhaus architecture in the world) and founded the Palestine
Philharmonic Orchestra.
With the completion of the port at Haifa
and its
oil refineries, significant industry
was added to the predominantly agricultural economy. The
Jewish population reached 450,000 by 1940.
At the
same time, tensions between Arabs and Jews grew during this period,
leading to a series of Arab riots
against the Jews in 1929 that left many dead and resulted in
the depopulation of the Jewish community in Hebron
. This
was followed by more violence during the "
Great Uprising" of 1936–1939. In response to
the ever increasing tension between the Arabic and Jewish
communities married with the various commitments the British faced
at the dawn of World War II, the British issued the
White Paper of 1939, which severely
restricted Jewish immigration to 75,000 people for five years. This
served to create a
relatively peaceful 8 years in
Palestine while tragically The Holocaust unfolded in Europe.
Shortly after their rise to power, the Nazis negotiated the
Ha'avara or "Transfer" Agreement
with Zionists under which 50,000 Jews and $100 million of their
assets would be moved to Palestine.
Aliyah Bet: Illegal immigration (1933–1948)
The
British government limited Jewish immigration to Palestine with
quotas, and following the rise of Nazism to
power in Germany
, illegal immigration to Palestine commenced.
The illegal immigration was known as
Aliyah Bet
("secondary immigration"), or
Ha'apalah, and was organized
by the
Mossad Le'aliyah Bet, as
well as by the
Irgun.
Immigration was done
mainly by sea, and to a lesser extent overland through Iraq
and Syria
.
Beginning in 1939 Jewish immigration was further restricted,
limiting it to 75,000 individuals for a period of five years after
which immigration was to end completely. The British made it
illegal to sell land to Jews in 95% of the Mandate. During
World War II and the years that followed until
independence,
Aliyah Bet became the main form of Jewish
immigration to Palestine.
Following the war,
Berihah ("flight"), an
organization of former
partisans and
ghetto fighters was primarily
responsible for smuggling Jews from Poland and Eastern Europe to
the Italian ports from which they traveled to Palestine.
Despite British efforts to curb the illegal immigration, during the
14 years of its operation, 110,000 Jews immigrated to
Palestine.
In 1945 reports of the
Holocaust with its
6 million Jewish dead, caused many Jews in Palestine to turn openly
against the British Mandate, and illegal immigration escalated
rapidly as many Holocaust survivors joined the Aliyah.
Early statehood (1948–1950)
After Aliyah Bet, the process of numbering or naming individual
aliyot ceased, but immigration did not. A major wave of immigration
of over half a million Jews went to Israel between 1948 and 1950,
many fleeing renewed persecution in Eastern Europe, and
increasingly hostile Arab countries.
This period of immigration is often termed
kibbutz galuyot
(literally, ingathering of exiles), due to the large number of
Jewish
diaspora communities that made
aliyah. However,
kibbutz galuyot can also refer to aliyah
in general.
Aliyah from Arab countries
.jpg/260px-Op_Magic_Carpet_(Yemenites).jpg)
Yemenite Jews on their way to
Israel
In the course of
Operation Magic Carpet
(1949–1950), nearly the entire community of
Yemenite Jews (about 49,000) immigrated to
Israel. Most of them had never seen an airplane before, but they
believed in the Biblical prophecy that according to the
Book of Isaiah (40:31),
God promised to return the
children of Israel to
Zion on "wings".
In three and a half years, the Jewish population of Israel had
doubled, inflated by nearly 700,000 immigrants, which was one of
the causes of the
austerity.
Huge numbers of Jewish refugees were temporarily settled in "cities
of tents" called
Ma'abarot. As
the residents were gradually absorbed into Israeli society, the
Ma'abarot were phased out.
Many Israeli immigrants were
Sephardi and
Mizrahi Jews who left Arab countries to
move to Israel. In many of these cases they had been persecuted and
sometimes forced to leave their homes.
114,000 Jews came
from Iraq
in 1951 in
Operation Ezra and
Nehemiah.
Aliyah from Iran
Over 30,000
Iranian Jews immigrated to
Israel following the
Islamic
Revolution.
Most Iranian Jews, however, settled in the
United States (especially in New York City
and Los Angeles
).
Ethiopian Aliyah
The massive airlift known as
Operation
Moses began to bring
Ethiopian
Jews to Israel on November 18, 1985 and ended on January 5,
1986.
During those six weeks, some 6,500–8,000
Ethiopian Jews were flown from Sudan
to
Israel. An estimated 2,000–4,000 Jews died en route to Sudan
or in Sudanese refugee camps.
In 1991,
Operation Solomon was launched to
bring the Beta Israel Jews of Ethiopia
. In one day, May 24, 34 aircraft landed at
Addis
Ababa
and brought 14,325 Jews from Ethiopia
to Israel
.
Since that time, Ethiopian Jews have continued to immigrate to
Israel bringing the number of Ethiopian-Israelis today to over
100,000.
Aliyah from the Soviet Union and post-Soviet states
| Year |
Exit visas
to Israel |
Olim from
the USSR |
| 1968 |
231 |
231 |
| 1969 |
3,033 |
3,033 |
| 1970 |
999 |
999 |
| 1971 |
12,897 |
12,893 |
| 1972 |
31,903 |
31,652 |
| 1973 |
34,733 |
33,277 |
| 1974 |
20,767 |
16,888 |
| 1975 |
13,363 |
8,435 |
| 1976 |
14,254 |
7,250 |
| 1977 |
16,833 |
8,350 |
| 1978 |
28,956 |
12,090 |
| 1979 |
51,331 |
17,278 |
| 1980 |
21,648 |
7,570 |
| 1981 |
9,448 |
1,762 |
| 1982 |
2,692 |
731 |
| 1983 |
1,314 |
861 |
| 1984 |
896 |
340 |
| 1985 |
1,140 |
348 |
| 1986 |
904 |
201 |
|
A mass emigration was politically undesirable for the Soviet
regime. The only acceptable ground was family reunification, and a
formal petition ("вызов",
vyzov) from a relative from
abroad was required for the processing to begin. Often, the result
was a
formal refusal. The
risks to apply for an exit visa compounded because the entire
family had to quit their jobs, which in turn would make them
vulnerable to charges of
social parasitism, a criminal
offense. Because of these hardships, Israel set up the group
Lishkat Hakesher in the early 1950s
to maintain contact and promote aliyah with Jews behind the
Iron Curtain.
In the
wake of Israel
's victory in
the Six-Day War in 1967, the USSR broke
off the diplomatic relations with the Jewish state. Anti-Zionist propaganda campaign in the
state-controlled
mass media and the rise
of
Zionology were accompanied by harsher
discrimination of the Soviet Jews.By the end of 1960s, Jewish
cultural and religious life in the Soviet Union had become
practically impossible, and the majority of Soviet Jews were
assimilated and
non-religious, but this new wave of state-sponsored
anti-Semitism on one hand, and the
sense of pride for victorious Jewish nation over Soviet-armed Arab
armies on the other, stirred up
Zionist
feelings.
After the
Dymshits-Kuznetsov hijacking
affair and the crackdown that followed, strong international
condemnations caused the Soviet authorities to increase the
emigration quota. In the years 1960–1970, the USSR let only 4,000
people leave; in the following decade, the number rose to 250,000.
Many of those allowed to leave to Israel chose other destinations,
most notably the United States. In 1989 a record 71,000 Soviet Jews
were granted exodus from the USSR, of whom only 12,117 immigrated
to Israel. Since the
dissolution
of the USSR, over one million Soviet Jews have immigrated to
Israel.
See
The collapse of the Soviet Union and Jewish immigration to
Israel and Jackson-Vanik
amendment.
Argentine Aliyah
In the
1999–2002
Argentine political and economic crisis that caused a run on
the banks, wiped out billions of dollars in deposits and decimated
the country's
middle class, most of
Argentina's estimated 200,000 Jews were directly affected. Some
chose to start over and move to Israel, where they saw
opportunity.
More than 10,000
Jews from
Argentina immigrated to Israel since 2000, joining the
thousands of previous olim already there. The crisis in Argentina
also affected its neighbour country Uruguay, from which over 500
Jews made aliyah in the same period. During 2002 and 2003 the
Jewish Agency for Israel
launched an intensive public campaign to promote aliyah from the
region, and offered additional economical aid for immigrants from
Argentina. Although the
economy of
Argentina improved, Jews continue to immigrate to Israel,
albeit in smaller numbers than before.
French Aliyah
From 2001
to 2005, 11,148 Jews made Aliyah from France
, including a
35-year high in 2005, with 3,300 immigrants. With the start of the
Second Intifada in Israel
,
anti-Semitic incidents became more frequent in France. In
2002, the
Commission
nationale consultative des droits de l'homme (Human Rights
Commission) reported six times more anti-Semitic incidents than in
2001 (193 incidents in 2002). The commission's
statistics showed that anti-Semitic acts
constituted 62% of all racist acts in the country (compared to 45%
in 2001 and 80% in 2000). The report documented 313 violent acts
against people or property, including 38 injuries and the murder of
one person with
Jewish Maghrebin origins by Muslims. Since 2005, the number
of acts dropped but is still at a significantly higher level than
during the previous decade.
North American Aliyah
There are approximately 110,000 North American immigrants in
Israel. There has been a steady flow of olim from
North America since Israel’s inception in
1948. Record numbers arrived in the late 1960s after the
Six-Day War, and in the 1970s. Many immigrants
began arriving in Israel after the
First and
Second
Intifada, with a total of 3,052 arriving in 2005 — the highest
number since 1983. Like Western European olim, North Americans tend
to immigrate to Israel more for religious, ideological and
political purposes, and not financial ones .
Nefesh B'Nefesh, founded in 2002 by Rabbi
Yehoshua Fass and Tony Gelbart, works to encourage Aliyah from
North America and the UK by providing Hebrew Language assistance
for potential olim, streamlining the process already offered by the
Jewish Agency and Israeli
Government.
A group of students at Brandeis
University
founded ImpactAliyah in 2007 to support campus
communities of student pre-olim and run pilot trips to
Israel.
From the 1990s
Since the
mid 1990s, there has been a steady stream of South African Jews, American Jews, and French Jews who have either made aliyah, or
purchased property in Israel
for
potential future immigration. Specifically, many
French Jews have purchased homes in
Israel
as insurance
due to the rising rate of anti-Semitism in France
in recent
years.
The
Bnei Menashe Jews from India
, whose
recent discovery and recognition by mainstream Judaism as
descendants of the Ten Lost Tribes
is subject to some controversy, slowly started their Aliyah in the
early 1990s and continue arriving in slow numbers.
Organizations such as
Nefesh
B'Nefesh and
Shavei Israel help
with aliyah by supporting financial aid and guidance on a variety
of topics such as finding work, learning
Hebrew, and
assimilation into
Israeli culture.
In early 2007
Haaretz reported that
aliyah for the year of 2006 was down approximately 9% from 2005.
They state that: "Only 19,264 people immigrated to Israel in 2006,
down nine percent from 2005. It is the lowest number of immigrants
recorded since 1988"
The number of new immigrants in 2007 was 18,127, the lowest since
1988. Only 36% of these new immigrants came from the former Soviet
Union (close to 90% in the 90's) while the number of immigrants
from countries like France and USA is stable.
Statistics
The number of immigrants to Israel during 1919–2006 period is given
in the table below. The table details the number of olim for the
specific time periods by country of birth. (For the year 2006, the
last country of residence is also given).
| Region |
2006 LCR |
2006 COB |
2005 |
2000–2004 |
1990–1999 |
1980–1989 |
1972–1979 |
1961–1971 |
1952–1960 |
1948–1951 |
1919–1948 |
TOTAL |
| GRAND TOTAL |
19,269 |
19,269 |
21,180 |
60,647 |
956,319 |
153,833 |
267,580 |
427,828 |
297,138 |
687,624 |
482,857 |
3,374,275 |
| Asia |
1,777 |
1,261 |
2,239 |
8,048 |
61,305 |
14,433 |
19,456 |
56,208 |
37,119 |
237,704 |
40,895 |
478,668 |
| Iran |
74 |
90 |
146 |
449 |
0 |
8,487 |
9,550 |
19,502 |
15,699 |
21,910 |
|
75,833 |
| Afghanistan |
0 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
57 |
132 |
516 |
1,106 |
2,303 |
|
4,116 |
| India |
304 |
308 |
61 |
211 |
1,717 |
1,539 |
3,497 |
13,110 |
5,380 |
2,176 |
|
27,999 |
| Israel |
0 |
192 |
105 |
69 |
954 |
288 |
507 |
1,021 |
868 |
411 |
|
4,415 |
| Lebanon |
0 |
7 |
8 |
4 |
0 |
179 |
564 |
2,208 |
846 |
235 |
|
4,051 |
| Syria |
0 |
0 |
4 |
16 |
0 |
995 |
842 |
3,121 |
1,870 |
2,678 |
|
9,526 |
| China |
10 |
14 |
4 |
16 |
192 |
78 |
43 |
96 |
217 |
504 |
|
1,164 |
| Iraq |
11 |
11 |
12 |
50 |
0 |
111 |
939 |
3,509 |
2,989 |
123,371 |
|
130,992 |
| Yemen |
9 |
10 |
4 |
3 |
0 |
17 |
51 |
1,066 |
1,170 |
48,315 |
|
50,636 |
| Other |
14 |
26 |
18 |
29 |
7,362 |
594 |
213 |
349 |
103 |
1,254 |
|
9,948 |
| USSR (As) |
1,287 |
533 |
1,814 |
7,069 |
49,524 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
58,940 |
| Africa |
3,801 |
4,508 |
4,518 |
2,912 |
48,558 |
28,664 |
19,273 |
164,885 |
143,485 |
93,282 |
4,041 |
514,126 |
| Ethiopia |
3,595 |
3,595 |
3,573 |
2,213 |
39,651 |
16,965 |
306 |
98 |
59 |
10 |
|
66,470 |
| South Africa |
114 |
139 |
135 |
202 |
2,918 |
3,575 |
5,604 |
3,783 |
774 |
666 |
|
17,796 |
| Libya |
0 |
3 |
3 |
6 |
0 |
66 |
219 |
2,466 |
2,079 |
30,972 |
|
35,814 |
| Egypt/ Sudan |
0 |
19 |
17 |
15 |
176 |
352 |
535 |
2,963 |
17,521 |
16,024 |
|
37,622 |
| Morocco |
53 |
233 |
284 |
205 |
2,623 |
3,809 |
7,780 |
130,507 |
95,945 |
28,263 |
|
269,649 |
| Algeria |
0 |
275 |
280 |
131 |
1,317 |
1,830 |
2,137 |
12,857 |
3,433 |
3,810 |
|
26,070 |
| Tunisia |
32 |
236 |
218 |
125 |
1,251 |
1,942 |
2,148 |
11,566 |
23,569 |
13,293 |
|
54,348 |
| Other |
6 |
8 |
8 |
15 |
888 |
125 |
544 |
645 |
105 |
244 |
|
2,582 |
| Europe |
9,872 |
10,063 |
10,736 |
46,516 |
812,079 |
70,898 |
183,419 |
162,070 |
106,305 |
332,802 |
377,381 |
2,112,269 |
| Austria |
12 |
12 |
24 |
23 |
317 |
356 |
595 |
1,021 |
610 |
2,632 |
|
5,590 |
| Italy |
42 |
37 |
35 |
40 |
595 |
510 |
713 |
940 |
414 |
1,305 |
|
4,589 |
| Nordic |
36 |
34 |
35 |
41 |
1,071 |
1,178 |
903 |
886 |
131 |
85 |
|
4,364 |
| Bulgaria |
22 |
19 |
38 |
199 |
3,673 |
180 |
118 |
794 |
1,680 |
37,260 |
|
43,961 |
| Belgium |
91 |
78 |
70 |
102 |
891 |
788 |
847 |
1,112 |
394 |
291 |
|
4,573 |
| USSR (Eu) |
6,185 |
7,069 |
7,763 |
43,801 |
772,239 |
29,754 |
137,134 |
29,376 |
13,743 |
8,163 |
|
1,049,042 |
| Germany |
112 |
87 |
112 |
177 |
2,150 |
1,759 |
2,080 |
3,175 |
1,386 |
8,210 |
|
19,136 |
| Netherlands |
50 |
45 |
36 |
30 |
926 |
1,239 |
1,170 |
1,470 |
646 |
1,077 |
|
6,639 |
| Hungary |
63 |
63 |
108 |
180 |
2,150 |
1,005 |
1,100 |
2,601 |
9,819 |
14,324 |
|
31,350 |
| Yugoslavia |
25 |
26 |
7 |
98 |
1,894 |
140 |
126 |
322 |
320 |
7,661 |
|
10,594 |
| Greece |
3 |
8 |
7 |
6 |
121 |
147 |
326 |
514 |
676 |
2,131 |
|
3,936 |
| UK |
594 |
506 |
341 |
318 |
4,851 |
7,098 |
6,171 |
6,461 |
1,448 |
1,907 |
|
29,101 |
| Spain |
33 |
20 |
23 |
16 |
242 |
321 |
327 |
406 |
169 |
80 |
|
1,604 |
| Poland |
36 |
90 |
94 |
169 |
2,765 |
2,807 |
6,218 |
14,706 |
39,618 |
106,414 |
|
172,881 |
| Czechoslovakia |
16 |
26 |
15 |
61 |
479 |
462 |
888 |
2,754 |
783 |
18,788 |
|
24,256 |
| France |
2,411 |
1,781 |
1,836 |
842 |
10,443 |
7,538 |
5,399 |
8,050 |
1,662 |
3,050 |
|
40,601 |
| Romania |
50 |
76 |
107 |
330 |
5,722 |
14,607 |
18,418 |
86,184 |
32,462 |
117,950 |
|
275,856 |
| Switzerland |
85 |
69 |
52 |
71 |
904 |
706 |
634 |
886 |
253 |
131 |
|
3,706 |
| Turkey |
67 |
70 |
61 |
131 |
1,095 |
2,088 |
3,118 |
14,073 |
6,871 |
34,547 |
|
62,054 |
| Other |
6 |
17 |
33 |
12 |
646 |
303 |
252 |
412 |
91 |
1,343 |
|
3,109 |
| America/Oceania |
3,813 |
3,437 |
3,687 |
21,718 |
33,367 |
39,369 |
45,040 |
42,400 |
6,922 |
3,822 |
7,754 |
211,329 |
| Australia/NZL |
66 |
44 |
53 |
68 |
1,017 |
959 |
1,275 |
833 |
120 |
119 |
|
4,488 |
| Uruguay |
73 |
76 |
107 |
105 |
724 |
2,014 |
2,199 |
1,844 |
425 |
66 |
|
7,560 |
| Cen Am |
91 |
120 |
77 |
102 |
125 |
8 |
104 |
129 |
43 |
17 |
|
725 |
| Argentina |
293 |
299 |
413 |
9,917 |
8,886 |
10,582 |
13,158 |
11,701 |
2,888 |
904 |
|
59,041 |
| USA |
2,159 |
1,809 |
1,706 |
1,098 |
15,480 |
18,904 |
20,963 |
18,671 |
1,553 |
1,711 |
|
81,895 |
| Brazil |
232 |
226 |
278 |
225 |
1,937 |
1,763 |
1,763 |
2,601 |
763 |
304 |
|
9,860 |
| Venezuela |
134 |
98 |
84 |
62 |
319 |
180 |
245 |
297 |
0 |
0 |
|
1,285 |
| Mexico |
72 |
76 |
56 |
70 |
916 |
993 |
861 |
736 |
168 |
48 |
|
3,924 |
| Paraguay |
4 |
3 |
6 |
7 |
21 |
62 |
73 |
210 |
42 |
0 |
|
424 |
| Chile |
61 |
56 |
77 |
85 |
521 |
1,040 |
1,180 |
1,790 |
401 |
48 |
|
5,198 |
| Colombia |
142 |
179 |
154 |
54 |
545 |
475 |
552 |
415 |
0 |
0 |
|
2,374 |
| Canada |
228 |
210 |
214 |
163 |
1,717 |
1,867 |
2,178 |
2,169 |
276 |
236 |
|
9,030 |
| Other |
258 |
241 |
462 |
94 |
1,159 |
522 |
500 |
1,125 |
91 |
327 |
|
4,521 |
| Not known |
6 |
0 |
3 |
4 |
419 |
469 |
394 |
911 |
3,307 |
20,014 |
52,786 |
78,307 |
|
References
- The Jerusalem Cathedra: Studies in the History,
Archaeology, Geography and Ethnography of the Land of Israel,
"Aliya from Babylonia During the Amoraic Period (200–500 CE)",
Joshua Schwartz, pp.58–69, ed. Lee Levine, 1983, Yad Izhak Ben Zvi
& Wayne State University Press
- The Jerusalem Cathedra: Studies in the History,
Archaeology, Geography and Ethnography of the Land of Israel,
"Aliya and Pilgrimage in the Early Arab Period (634–1009)", Moshe
Gil, 1983, Yad Izhak Ben Zvi & Wayne State University
Press
- The Messiah brought the first immigrants
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/941834.html
- Morgenstern, Arie: Hastening Redemption: Messianism and the
Resettlement of the Land of Israel Published in Hebrew, 1997,
Jerusalem, Ma’or; Published in English, 2006, Oxford University
Press
- .http://www.transferagreement.com/
- Евреи диаспоры в наши дни (Jews of diaspora
today)
- ИСТОРИЯ ИНАКОМЫСЛИЯ В СССР (The History of Dissident
Movement in the USSR) by Ludmila Alekseyeva. Vilnius, 1992
[1]
- Article in the Jewish Week
- USATODAY.com - As attacks rise in France, Jews
flock to Israel
- French Jews invest in old Tel Aviv neighborhood - Israel
Money, Ynetnews
- Aliyah sees 9% dip from 2005 by Moti
Bassok
- [2]
- http://www.cbs.gov.il/shnaton58/download/st04_04.xls
Further reading
- Ben-Gurion, David From
Class to Nation: Reflections on the Vocation and Mission of the
Labor Movement (Hebrew), Am Oved (1976)
External links
- Jewish
Agency for Israel Aliyah from all over the world since
1948
- Nefesh
B'Nefesh Aliyah from North America & The United
Kingdom
- Moving to Israel - The Complete Resource Guide
- Aliyaing.com A helpful guide on aliyah and its
challenges written by olim for olim
- ISRAEMPLOY
- Israel Aliyah Job List & Employment information
- NOAM -
Informations about Aliya Israel from German spreaking
Countries
- "Aliyah" - the word and its meaning
- Dispersion and the Longing for Zion, 1240–1840, by Arie
Morgenstern
- Aliyah - Moving to Israel - Resource Directory
- ImpactAliyah advocating Aliyah as a means to make a
positive impact.
- Kumah, a
self-described "Neo-Zionist" group, calling for mass
aliyah of American Jews.
- Aliyah, aliyah website including articles, interviews,
blog and information, hosted by Laura Ben-David, author of MOVING
UP: An Aliyah Journal
- Volunteer
in Israel for wildlife and community programs
- Israel tries to increase immigration
- Yossi Klein Halevi, The Historic Significance of American Aliya
September 2003.
- Israel Focus-Migration