professionals – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Tue, 29 Oct 2019 13:18:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg professionals – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 Event for young Diaspora professionals in Israel draws thousands https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/10/29/event-for-young-diaspora-professionals-in-israel-draws-thousands/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/10/29/event-for-young-diaspora-professionals-in-israel-draws-thousands/#respond Tue, 29 Oct 2019 13:18:13 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=429763 Thousands of Masa Israel Journey fellows, alumni and community members joined together on Monday at Ra'anana Park Amphitheater in Israel to celebrate the start of Masa Israel Journey's 2019-20 programming year. The Oct. 28 event marks Israel's largest-ever single gathering of Diaspora Jews volunteering and working in Israel. More than 2,500 attendees enjoyed a performance […]

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Thousands of Masa Israel Journey fellows, alumni and community members joined together on Monday at Ra'anana Park Amphitheater in Israel to celebrate the start of Masa Israel Journey's 2019-20 programming year.

The Oct. 28 event marks Israel's largest-ever single gathering of Diaspora Jews volunteering and working in Israel. More than 2,500 attendees enjoyed a performance by international pop star and 2018 Eurovision Song Contest winner Netta Barzilai and a keynote address by Masa's Acting CEO Ofer Gutman.

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Attendees participated in community-building workshops consisting of games, an art wall and a volunteer event: Sixty-seven bicycles were assembled and donated to Potchim Atid, a Jewish Agency initiative that supports children and their families living in Israel's social and demographic periphery.

"We are proud to open the new year with thousands of new fellows who are excited to experience Israel firsthand and deepen their connection with the country and its people. Together, our growing global community displays an unparalleled commitment to support and strengthen Israel," said Gutman.

Masa also announced the full-fledged launch of its MasaTech program. A first-of-its-kind, innovative initiative, MasaTech will bring more than 200 full-time high-tech professionals to Israel for unmatched work opportunities at the highest echelons of Israel's high-tech sector.

"MasaTech will completely transform the way Israel's robust high-tech industry conducts business, recruits talent and engages with the global workforce," said Gutman.

At the event, attended by people from 41 different countries, participants posed with Barzilai for a photograph.

Reprinted with permission from JNS.org

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'Without an emergency plan, French Jews will stop making aliyah' https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/07/10/without-an-emergency-plan-french-jews-will-stop-making-aliyah/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2019/07/10/without-an-emergency-plan-french-jews-will-stop-making-aliyah/#respond Wed, 10 Jul 2019 11:00:03 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=392063 Data published Tuesday by the Central Bureau of Statistics pointing to a continued decrease in the number of French Jews making aliyah come as no surprise to officials involved in efforts to help new immigrants integrate into Israeli life. Ariel Kendall, director general of the Qualita organization, the umbrella organization for French immigrants in Israel, […]

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Data published Tuesday by the Central Bureau of Statistics pointing to a continued decrease in the number of French Jews making aliyah come as no surprise to officials involved in efforts to help new immigrants integrate into Israeli life.

Ariel Kendall, director general of the Qualita organization, the umbrella organization for French immigrants in Israel, told Israel Hayom on Tuesday that "the continued drop in the number of French immigrants to Israel is very painful.

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"The situation in France, a country that currently suffers from numerous anti-Semitic incidents and increasing instances of violence against Jews, provides an opportunity to prompt many Jews from France to make aliyah, and Israel is missing that opportunity because it isn't prepared to take in immigrants from France and hasn't laid out any strategic plan that will allow it to absorb and settle tens of thousands of immigrants in an appropriate, effective manner," Kendall said.

Kendall warned that if Israel does not create absorption solutions that address employment, education, and housing for French Jews, as it does for immigrants from other countries, the Jews of France will remain in danger or prefer to leave France for a third country.

"They won't come to Israel, and that's a shame," he said.

Qualita recently conducted a survey among some 800 new immigrants from France. The results showed that the new immigrants faced a number of difficulties upon arriving in Israel, the main one being finding work. According to the study, 40% of French immigrants are unemployed.

The problem of unemployment affects not only the new immigrants themselves, but also deters other French Jews from making the move, fearing that they, too, will be unable to find work. According to Qualita, the French immigrant population includes hundreds of registered nurses who are unable to work in Israel because the country does not recognize their qualifications, even though the Israeli health care system lacks trained nurses.

Other professionals who qualified in France, including psychologists and engineers, arrive in Israel to find that their training, too, is not recognized by the Israeli regulatory bodies and they are therefore unable to work in their professions.

Some French immigrants take any available work to support themselves, such as telemarketing. Others choose to keep their jobs in France to support their lives in Israel, meaning constant travel back and forth, which has been termed "Boeing aliyah." Still others despair and wind up returning to France.

The Qualita survey showed that 10% of French immigrants return to France within three years of making aliyah.

In addition, the survey indicated that the government's Immigration and Absorption Ministry does very little to help French arrivals. Only one-quarter of respondents said that the ministry was doing well in helping French immigrants integrate, and only 27% said they took advantage of services offered by the ministry beyond the initial benefits extended to all immigrants and an introductory Hebrew course.

The survey also appears to bust the myth that French immigrants are "snatching up" property. Some 60% of respondents said they did not own the homes in which they lived, and half the French immigrants who rent homes pay 4,000-6,000 shekels ($1,100-$1,700) a month in rent.

The French immigrants are urging the relevant authorities to put together a plan to help Jews from France and as Israel heads into the second election of 2019 are calling on politicians to right the wrong and create a special plan tailored to the needs of French Jewish immigrants.

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