The future in another country. large Escape from the judaic State

angora24.pl 1 month ago

In 2024, about 82,000 people left the 10 million - dollar state permanently. There will most likely be even more migrants this year. As the Times of Israel says, emigration is being considered by all 4th citizen. Most, due to the fact that as many as 43 percent of these people want to settle in the European Union. 27 percent think about moving to the United States or Canada. Many preventatively developed passports of EU countries, including Poland and Germany, which grant citizenship to descendants of the Holocaust survivors. Spain and Portugal give passports to descendants of Jews. The Facebook group “Israelis in Portugal” has more than 50,000 members and the “Israelis in Berlin” group has 38 000 members. The Greek Government encourages judaic citizens to come without complicated formalities by issuing them residence visas and work permits. The Israeli community in Hellada has about 10,000 people. In Athens, she found a fresh place to live Cynthia Tager, a young computer scientist who arrived from Tel Aviv with her husband and small child. “I like everything here. The climate, the way people are, the cost of surviving are akin to those in Israel. I made the decision to emigrate primarily due to my family. My children deserve to have a childhood like the another kids in the world. So that they do not worry about whether present they will bomb us again or where the nearest shelter is.”

Avraham Binnenfeld, mobilized as a reservist, survived until the ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. But then he started packing his bags. He intends to shortly settle in Switzerland and undertake postgraduate studies in astrophysics. "There can always be alarm sirens. Terrorist attacks, regional war, missiles fired on us by Iran or Lebanon – that is truly besides much. I'd be fine if I knew our government was leading the country in the right direction. But that is not the case,” the man explains.

Retired writer and peace activist Izar Beer He kept his home in Israel, but spends most of his time abroad. He accuses the government of Prime Minister Netanyahu of destroying democracy. "For 3 years, I participated in all the protests, but nothing helped. It did not aid to halt this trend towards fascism. What happened to our society? What happened to our hopes that 1 day our conflict (with the Palestinians) would end with any compromise?" he asks helplessly.

Michal Bar-Or, a teacher and artist from Tel Aviv, moved to Hamburg 5 months ago primarily due to her opposition to the devastating war in Gaza. The female and her three-month-old boy were given German passports. The emigrant partner who works remotely for the Israeli company has a Polish passport. The teacher relates that in her Tel Aviv school, she could not bear the situation erstwhile students wanted to carry out artistic projects utilizing individual IDs, prayer beads and individual items that their brothers or fathers had taken from the Gaza Strip.

The Israelis settle willingly even in Morocco, a Muslim state whose residents are friendly to the oppressed by the Netanyahu government of Palestine. A large judaic community had previously existed in this African country. The Israelis now find their Moroccan roots and apply for their citizenship.

39 years old Neta Hazan She got into a taxi in Rabat and boasted on the telephone to her father in the judaic state that she had just received Moroccan ID. He heard it from a taxi driver and said Israel did not exist. He showed her a video of football fans from Casablanca chanting: “Free Palestine!”. Neta Hazan later said: “I didn’t care at all. I didn't let myself ruin this moment. I made my dream come true. I am a Moroccan citizen!’ Commentators point out that emigration is most frequently chosen by young and educated people, scientists, doctors, IT professionals, entrepreneurs, artificial intelligence specialists.

Read Entire Article