In a
decision that is being called "historic," the government has resolved
to allow the remaining 7,232 members of the Bnei Menashe Jewish community in
The decision comes ten months after another Cabinet decision demanding Cabinet
approval each time a group of ten or more Bnei Menashe wished to immigrate to
The welcoming decision was made over the past few days by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, after Interior
Minister Meir Sheetrit was
finally convinced to remove his objections. It was Sheetrit
who led the original decision of last October, voluntarily transferring to the
Cabinet his authority to approve immigration - and thus essentially preventing Bnei Menashe from arriving.
Background
The Bnei Menashe claim
descent from the tribe of Menashe, one of the Ten
Tribes exiled from the
The Bnei Menashe in
300 Each Month
With the new government decision, it is hoped that all the remaining Bnei Menashe will be brought to
Israel within a two-year period, at a rate of some 300 per month. This, in
order not to antagonize the Indian government, and apparently to ease the
immigration process as well.
Community is Jewish, Individuals Must
Convert
Michael Freund, head of Shavei Israel, has been
working for over 15 years to provide Jewish and general education to the Bnei Menashe in Israel, and to
persuade the Israeli government that they should be allowed to immigrate. Their
aliyah [immigration to
Approximately 100 Bnei Menashe
used to arrive in
Freund countered at the time that the reason why most of the Bnei Menashe live in Yesha (Judea,
Rabbi Amar
Rules
Freund later achieved a breakthrough in the matter when he succeeded in
having
The remaining 7,232 Bnei Menashe
members in
Post-Zionist Decision Replaced by
Welcoming Hand
Regarding last year's decision, Freund told Arutz-7 at the time, "The
Chief Rabbinate is willing to convert them, but the government is saying it
does not wish to allow these people to be candidates for conversion. This
is an unconscionable act... Requiring full cabinet approval every time a group
of people wishes to move here and undergo conversion is a recipe for
bureaucratic inertia, as there is little chance of getting such an item onto
the busy agenda of the entire government. Hence, by creating a virtually
insurmountable obstacle to approval, [Sheetrit] hopes
to bury the issue once and for all."
"Why, you might be wondering, would Sheetrit and
his cabinet colleagues do such a thing?" Freund wrote at the time.
"The answer is really quite simple. It is post-Zionism of the ugliest
sort, tinged by prejudice and sheer ignorance."
If so, the government's latest decision has replaced its "ugly
post-Zionism" with a warm and welcoming hand to Jews the world over.