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Five hundred Jewish immigrants from France and the Ukraine were welcomed by Jewish and Christian leaders earlier this week at Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport – part of a mass return to their homeland that was prophesied in the Bible in the Old Testament.
As Israel celebrates its 70th anniversary of being reestablished as a nation after two millennia of its people being dispersed across the world, hundreds are returning home – marking a sign of the End Times to fulfill Bible prophesy heading toward the Second Coming of Christ.
The mass return to the modern-day Jewish State is called “aliyah” in Hebrew, which means “going up to the land of Israel,” and over the years, thousands of new immigrants have joined millions of other Jews who have already returned home in this period that many Bible scholars have recognized as the last days.
Anti-Semitism in France speeding up aliyah
As Israel celebrates its 70th anniversary of being reestablished as a nation after two millennia of its people being dispersed across the world, hundreds are returning home – marking a sign of the End Times to fulfill Bible prophesy heading toward the Second Coming of Christ.
The mass return to the modern-day Jewish State is called “aliyah” in Hebrew, which means “going up to the land of Israel,” and over the years, thousands of new immigrants have joined millions of other Jews who have already returned home in this period that many Bible scholars have recognized as the last days.
Anti-Semitism in France speeding up aliyah
Outgoing Jewish Agency Chairman Natan Sharaksy and the nonprofit group’s new chairman, Isaac Herzog, greeted one of the latest batches of Jews to return to Israel – most of whom are escaping religious persecution suffered in France as a result of the increasing Muslim population spurred by the so-called “refugee crisis.”
“Nearly 200 of these brand-new, soon-to-be Israelis are from France, and many of them are children,” CBN News announced. “France is just one of a number of countries in Europe and throughout the globe where the danger to Jews is growing.”Angels of Zion Director Danielle Mor said that the hatred of Jews in Europe is nothing new – as was especially witnessed during the holocaust of World War II – but most of today’s anti-Semitism is at the hands of militant Muslims, not Nazis, who refer to Israel as “Little Satan.”
"It's very concerning what's happening in western Europe [and] also in other parts of the world, where you see anti-Semitism raising its ugly head – whether it's in the form of anti-Semitism or anti-Israel sentiments, which are basically just masking anti-Semitism," Mor told CBN News.She stressed that the Jewish Agency’s promise to offer Jews throughout the world a safe haven back in Israel has been kept since 1948 – when Israel was put back on the map as a nation after being eradicated 2,000 years ago.
"Never again!” Mor exclaimed. “Never again will there be a Jewish person who is in danger, who is full of hope, who wants to come to Israel and the doors are closed."Thierry Haddad – a French Jew newly arrived from France – shared how anti-Semitic violence spurred by Islam and carried out by its adherents helped him make up his mind to make the move to Israel.
"It's more and more true," Thierry insisted, according to CBN News.. "Also, the politics [politicians] try to protect, but it's difficult."One Jewish immigrant from Paris said that it was not anti-Semitism that drove her to move, noting that she just felt a personal calling to leave France for Israel.
"I would be with my people and my God on my land,” new immigrant Sarah Rachel Levy, who made the trip by herself, told CBN News. “It was an obligation for me. If I didn't do that, it's like I am dead. I don't know how to say it."Exodus from the Ukraine
Joining the 200 French Jews who arrived in Israel Monday, nearly 300 Jews from the Ukraine arrived at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport on Tuesday after representatives of the Israeli Interior Ministry issued them Israeli ID cards in Europe prior to their flight – as a means to cut through the red tape once they set foot in the Holy Land.
Instead of fleeing persecution at the hands of Muslims, it was pointed out by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ) – which flew 293 new immigrants from the Ukraine into Israel – that most Ukrainian Jews are fleeing their country for Israel to escape economic hardship and ongoing violence due to the Ukrainian Civil War.
Instead of fleeing persecution at the hands of Muslims, it was pointed out by the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ) – which flew 293 new immigrants from the Ukraine into Israel – that most Ukrainian Jews are fleeing their country for Israel to escape economic hardship and ongoing violence due to the Ukrainian Civil War.
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