Top New York Jews Moving To Israel

From the Jerusalem Post:

Rabbi Ari Berman had until June 1 to decide whether he would make Israel his permanent home. That’s the deadline his synagogue, The Jewish Center, one of the largest modern Orthodox synagogues in the US, gave him when he took a sabbatical last year and advised them he might never come back.

He did come back, but only to say good-bye.

Berman is one of several prominent Orthodox leaders ranging from rabbis to Orthodox feminists in the New York area who will be making aliya this summer.

The annual sendoff organized by the Jewish Agency, which took place Thursday in New York, honored 250 of the 900 New Yorkers expected to move to Israel. That number is about one third of the 3,000 North American olim this year.

The sendoff follows recent calls by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert for a dramatic change in the relationship between Israel and the Diaspora.

“Now, for the first time since the destruction of the Second Temple, Israel is the largest concentration of Jews in the world and the overwhelming majority of Jews live in security. The era of mass aliya from countries of distress may have come to a close,” Olmert declared.

To accommodate that change, the Jewish Agency has gradually shifted its approach towards aliya, moving from the all-or-nothing approach towards a more flexible one. Earlier this month, the JA and the government announced a co-sponsored program called “flexible aliya” under which Jews from around the world will be able to move to Israel for a period ranging from several months to several years, during which they will be able to work, study and volunteer in the country.

Meanwhile, Orthodox Jews continue to represent roughly 60 percent of North American olim.

Berman, who has been the rabbi at the Jewish Center since 2000, said he is moving to Israel because “the Jewish future is in the State of Israel.” By that he does not mean the Diaspora has no place. Quite the opposite, Berman said Diaspora Jewry is critical for Israel. But he wants to raise his children in a “fully Jewish environment and culture.” Berman and his family will move

Other Orthodox rabbis who are making aliya this year include: Rabbi Shalom Rosner, Rabbi of Woodmere Congregation in Long Island, who heads the Beit Midrash program at Yeshiva University, who is moving to Nofe Hashemesh, a new part of Beit Shemesh where he will be a rabbi of a new synagogue; Rabbi Dovid Wadler, principal at Moshe Aaron Yeshiva High School in Highland Park, NJ; and Rabbi David Silverstein, a teacher at SAR, a yeshiva school in Riverdale, NY and assistant rabbi at Riverdale Jewish Center, who will be joining Yeshivat Hesder in Petah Tikva.

Jenny Rosenfeld, 27, who has worked to break the taboos on talking about sexuality in the Orthodox world, will also be among this year’s olim, with her husband Pinchas Roth, who made aliya at 10, and their three-month-old daughter, Neshama.

In 2005, Rosenfeld co-founded Tzelem, a special project of Yeshiva University’s Center for the Jewish Future that provides educational resources about intimacy and sexuality to the Orthodox community.

 

About Luke Ford

Raised a Seventh-Day Adventist at Avondale College in Australia, Luke Ford moved to California in 1977. He graduated from Placer High School in 1984, reported the news at KAHI/KHYL radio for three years, attended Sierra College and UCLA, was largely bedridden by Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for six years, and converted to Judaism in 1993. From 1997-2007, Luke made his living from blogging. Living by Beverly Hills (Alexander90210.com), he now teaches the Alexander Technique (moving the way the body likes to move). Lessons cost $100 each and last about 45 minutes. In 2011, Luke completed a three-year teaching course at the Alexander Training Institute of Los Angeles. His personal Alexander Technique website is Alexander90210.com. Luke is the author of five books, including: » The Producers: Profiles in Frustration » Yesterday’s News Tomorrow: Inside American Jewish Journalism
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