ethiopian jews immigration to israel

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Following the declaration in 1977 by Israeli government officials that the Law of Return applied to Beta Israel, a flow of Ethiopian Jews have immigrated to Israel with values and traditions that has influenced the emerging society in their host country. Ethiopian Jews tend to possess more differences with Israeli Jewish culture in comparison to other immigrant groups and it is this that makes their adaptation to society a multifaceted process. The emergence of Zionism promised freedom, redemption, revolution, liberation and normalization ; concepts that appealed to Beta Israel who had been persecuted in Ethiopia. Simultaneously however, Israel was facing worldwide immigrants including those from the former Soviet Union, and it is the immigration of Russian immigrants that will provide a stark contrast in the differences of their assimilation. Israel, being a country of wide immigrant absorption, adopted the ‘melting pot’ idea in the hopes to create a unified Israel; this has proved unsuccessful following the problems that emerged from its use that was highlighted in the immigration of Ethiopian Jews. Immigrants perceived this ‘melting pot’ ideology as an instrument that was assisting to subject them to discrimination, which arguably led to a form of ethnocentrism taking place in Israel. Ethnocentrism is the belief that one’s culture is to be preferred over all others and provides a frame of reference in which to evaluate other beliefs, often leading to stereotyping and misplaced judgment . In recent years there has been an increase in the approval of cultural pluralism, however, this research paper will discuss the many factors that led to the immigration of Ethiopian Jews to Israel as well as the factors that rendered this absor...

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...ian identity has seen more beneficial results than the ‘melting pot’ method.

The adaptation of Ethiopian Jews to Israeli society is a unique and complex process due to culture differences, language barriers, technology gaps as well as educational and employment variances. As a result of such differences, Ethiopian Jews and Israeli Jews have had to adjust to a new social dynamic in which multiple cultures should be accepted and promoted. A transition from rural Africa to a modern Westernized society such as Israel is a difficult progression and cannot be overlooked by using the ‘melting pot’ ideology as this will give rise to ethnic repression. All these factors indicate that the divide between the Israeli Jews and Ethiopian Jews is not racism but more a cultural gap between a traditional community and a modern technologically advanced, highly competitive nation.

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