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More and more senior citizens are making aliyah, report reveals

by  Nadav Shaham
Published on  07-12-2018 00:00
Last modified: 07-12-2018 00:00
More and more senior citizens are making aliyah, report reveals

A new immigrant from France receives a warm welcome at Ben-Gurion International Airport. In 2017

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The idea of aliyah – Jews immigrating to Israel from the Diaspora – generally conjures up the image of young single people or young families. But plenty of people aged 65 and over also make the decision to come to Israel once they've already raised children and grandchildren, according to a new report from the Knesset Research and Information Center.

The report, based on figures from the Central Bureau of Statistics, reveals that 3,625 senior citizens made aliyah in 2017, comprising 14% of the total new immigrants for that year.

Nearly half of the senior immigrants arrived from Russia and Ukraine (28% and 20%, respectively). Another 628 seniors (17%) moved to Israel from France; 349 made aliyah from the U.S.; and the rest came to Israel from other countries.

The report also provided an overview of aliyah by senior citizens from 1990-2017, during which a total of 228,039 senior citizens relocated to Israel from all over the world. The figures show that the gender breakdown among senior olim resembles that of the rest of the country's senior citizen population, with 60% of new immigrants over age of 65 being women compared to 40% men.

The vast majority of senior citizens who made aliyah in this 27-year period came from the former Soviet Union (82%). Another 3% of senior citizens came to Israel from Ethiopia, 2% arrived from the U.S. and Canada, and 1% from France.

The Knesset report also includes less pleasing data: Numbers from the National Insurance Institute for 2016 show that poverty was more prevalent among senior citizen immigrants than among the general population of senior citizens in Israel, with 20.2% of new immigrants over 65 living below the poverty line, compared to 16.7% of Israel's senior population as a whole.

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