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Jake Wallis Simons

ByJake Wallis Simons, Jake Wallis Simons

Opinion

Living a true life outside Israel

June 26, 2014 13:47
2 min read

It is an old cliché that Jews should have a packed suitcase by the door. But now, it seems, European Jewry has decided that the time has come to put the suitcase to good use. This week, Natan Sharansky announced that global aliyah has grown this year by an astonishing 55 per cent.

By the end of the year, more than 5,000 Jews from France alone are expected to move to Israel, a record-breaking one per cent of the entire French Jewish community. "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," said Mr Sharansky.

Europe has a far more serious problem of anti-Semitism than Britain. The failure of the immigration system in a swathe of countries - from Sweden to France - has led to pockets of poor, angry, Muslim men who have failed to assimilate into their host countries. This is one of the principle drivers of the Jew-hatred that is reaching unprecedented post-war levels on the continent.

But for some Zionists, the only way to live an authentically Jewish life is in the land of Israel, whether you fear persecution or not. When I appeared at the Jerusalem Writers' Festival in May, the distinguished Israeli novelist AB Yeshoshua restated his position that living outside of Israel is "a very deep failure of the Jewish people".