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Jewish Agency for Israel

The Jewish Agency for Israel (Hebrew: הסוכנות היהודית לארץ ישראל, romanizedHaSochnut HaYehudit L'Eretz Yisra'el), formerly known as the Jewish Agency for Palestine,[5] is the largest Jewish non-profit organization in the world. It was established in 1929 as the operative branch of the World Zionist Organization (WZO).[6]

Jewish Agency for Israel
הסוכנות היהודית לארץ ישראל
Founded1929; 94 years ago (1929)
23-7254561
Legal status501(c)(3)
PurposeTo ensure that every Jewish person feels an unbreakable bond to one another and to Israel no matter where they are in the world, so that they can continue to play their critical role in the ongoing Jewish story, by: 1. Connecting young Jews to Israel and their Jewish identity 2. Connecting young Israelis to the Jewish people and their Jewish identity 3. Aliyah and absorption 4. Supporting vulnerable populations in Israel.[1]
HeadquartersJerusalem
Coordinates31°46′37″N 35°12′58″E / 31.777°N 35.216°E / 31.777; 35.216
Chairman of the Executive
Doron Almog
Chairman of the Board of Governors
Mark Wilf
Director-General
Amira Ahronoviz[2]
Deputy Chair of the Executive
Yaron Shavit[3]
Revenue (2016)
$381,438,000[4]
Expenses (2016)$333,228,000[4]
Endowment$1,345,000 (2016)[4]
Employees (2016)
1,140[4]
Volunteers (2016)
25,000[4]
Websitewww.jewishagency.org
Jewish Agency headquarters, Jerusalem

As an organization, it encourages immigration of Jews in diaspora to the Land of Israel, and oversees their integration with the State of Israel.[7] Since 1948, the Jewish Agency claims to have brought 3 million immigrants to Israel,[8] where it offers them transitional housing in "absorption centers" throughout the country.[9] David Ben-Gurion served as its chairman of the executive committee from 1935, and in this capacity on 14 May 1948, he proclaimed Israel's independence,[10] following which he served as the first Israeli prime minister. In the years preceding the founding of Israel, the Jewish Agency oversaw the establishment of about 1,000 towns and villages in the British Mandate of Palestine. The organization serves as the main link between Israel and Jewish communities around the world.[11][12]

By law, the Jewish Agency is a parastatal organization, but does not receive core funding from the Israeli government.[13] The Jewish Agency is funded by the Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA), Keren Hayesod, major Jewish communities and federations, and foundations and donors from Israel and around the world.[14][15] In 2008, the Jewish Agency won the Israel Prize for its historical contribution to Israel and to the Jewish community worldwide.[16]

History edit

Name edit

Established as the Palestine Office (of the Zionist Organization) in 1908, the organization became the Zionist Commission, later Palestine Zionist Executive, which was designated in 1929 as the "Jewish agency" provided for in the League of Nations' Palestine Mandate[17] and was thus again renamed as The Jewish Agency for Palestine. After the establishment of the State it received its current name, The Jewish Agency for Israel.

1908–1928: Beginnings as an arm of the World Zionist Organization edit

The Jewish Agency began as the Palestine Office (Hebrew: המשרד הארץ-ישראלי, HaMisrad HaEretz Yisraeli; lit.'Office for the Land of Israel'), founded in Jaffa in 1908, as the operational branch of the Zionist Organization (ZO) in Ottoman-controlled Palestine under the leadership of Arthur Ruppin.[18] The main tasks of the Palestine Office were to represent the Jews of Palestine in dealings with the Turkish sultan and other foreign dignitaries, to aid Jewish immigration, and to buy land for Jews to settle in.[19][better source needed]

 
Jewish immigrants of the Second Aliyah, 1912

The Palestine Office was established under the inspiration of Theodor Herzl's vision for a solution to "the Jewish question": the issue of anti-Semitism and the place of Jews in the world. In his pamphlet "The Jewish State," Herzl envisioned the Jewish people settled as an independent nation on its own land, taking its place among the other nation-states of the world. The Palestine Office, which eventually became the Jewish Agency, was based upon Herzl's organizational ideas for how to bring a Jewish state into being.[20]

The influx of Jews to Palestine on the Second Aliyah (1904–1914) made the purchase of land particularly urgent. With the aid of the Jewish National Fund (JNF), the Palestine Office bought land for newcomers in two locations: Chavat Kinneret (near the Sea of Galilee), and Kibbutz Ruhama (near Sderot of today). Kibbutz Ruhama was specifically designated for Russian Jews from the Second Aliyah. Over the following decades, the Palestine Office established hundreds more moshavim and kibbutzim throughout Palestine.[21] The Palestine Office continued to purchase land together with JNF (In Hebrew: Keren Kayemet L'Yisrael, KKL).

With the outbreak of World War I, the anticipated disintegration of the Ottoman Empire raised hopes among Zionists for increased Jewish immigration and eventual sovereignty in Palestine.[22][better source needed] In 1918, Great Britain conquered the region and it fell under British military rule.[23][better source needed]

 
Chaim Weizmann, founder and director of the Zionist Commission (a precursor of the Jewish Agency), leader of the Zionist Organization, and first President of the State of Israel

Following the promulgation of the pro-Zionist Balfour Declaration, Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the British Zionist Federation[24] formed the Zionist Commission in March 1918 to go to Palestine and make recommendations to the British government. The Commission reached Palestine on 14 April 1918 and proceeded to study conditions and to report to the British government,[25] and was active in promoting Zionist objectives in Palestine. Weizmann was instrumental in restructuring the ZO's Palestine office into departments for agriculture, settlement, education, land, finance, immigration, and statistics. The Palestine Office was merged into the Zionist Commission, headed by Chaim Weizmann.[26]

 
The front page of the Mandate for Palestine and Transjordan memorandum, presented to UK Parliament in December 1922, prior to it coming into force in 1923. The British control of the region lasted until 1948.

On 25 April 1920, the Principal Allied Powers agreed at the San Remo conference to allocate the Ottoman territories to the victorious powers and assigned Palestine, Transjordan and Iraq as Mandates to Britain, with the Balfour Declaration being incorporated into the Palestine Mandate. The League of Nations formally approved these mandates in 1922.[27] Article 4 of the Mandate provided for "the recognition of an appropriate Jewish agency as a public body for the purpose of advising and co-operating with the Administration of Palestine in such economic, social and other matters as may affect the establishment of the Jewish National Home and the interests of the Jewish population of Palestine."[17][28] The ZO leaders had contributed to the drafting of the Mandate.[29] In November 1921, the Zionist Commission became the Palestine Zionist Executive and was designated as the Jewish agency for Palestine for the purpose of Article 4 of the Palestine Mandate.[30][31]

In 1921 Ze'ev Jabotinsky was elected to the executive but he resigned in 1923, accusing Weizmann of not being vigorous enough with the Mandatory Government.[22][better source needed] Other issues between the Revisionists and the agency were the distribution of entry permits, Weizmann's support for the Zionist Labour Movement, and the proposal to expand the agency. The Revisionists broke completely with agency in 1935, but rejoined ZO in 1947.[22][better source needed] In 1951 the ZO/JA included all Zionist organizations except Herut.[32]

The Palestine Zionist Executive was charged with facilitating Jewish immigration to Palestine, land purchase, and planning the general policies of the Zionist leadership. It ran schools and hospitals, and formed a defence force, the Haganah.[19] Chaim Weizmann was the leader of both the World Zionist Organization and the Palestine Zionist Executive until 1929. The arrangement enabled the ZO to issue entry permits to new immigrants.[33][better source needed]

Jewish Agency for Palestine 1929–1948 edit

 
Palestine immigrant certificate issued in Warsaw (16-9-1935) by the Jewish Agency.

Non-Zionists representation edit

In 1929, the Palestine Zionist Executive was renamed, restructured and officially inaugurated as The Jewish Agency for Palestine by the 16th Zionist Congress, held in Zurich, Switzerland.[34] The new body was larger and included a number of Jewish non-Zionist individuals and organizations, who were interested in Jewish settlement in Palestine. They were philanthropic rather than political, and many opposed talk of a Jewish State.[35] With this broader Jewish representation,[36] the Jewish Agency for Palestine was recognized by the British in 1930, in lieu of the Zionist Organization, as the appropriate Jewish agency under the terms of the Mandate.[37] The 16th Zionist Congress determined that in the event of the future dissolution of the agency, the World Zionist Organization would replace it as representative of the Jews for the purpose of the Mandate.[38]

There was strong opposition within the ZO when the idea of enlargement of the Board of Governors of the Jewish Agency was first raised in 1924 to include non-Zionist Jews, and the idea was accepted by the Zionist Congress only in 1927.[39]

Even though non-Zionists took part in the agency, it was still closely tied to the Zionist Organization. The president of the ZO served as the chair of the Executive Council and the Assembly of the Jewish Agency, and half of the members of the agency's governing bodies were chosen by the ZO, ensuring a unified policy and close cooperation between the two organizations.[40][38] The change was Chaim Weizmann's initiative and was established on the principle of parity between Zionist and non-Zionist Jews working together in the building of a Jewish national home.[41]

Those participating included Sholem Asch, H.N. Bialik, Leon Blum, Albert Einstein, Immanuel Löw, Lord Melchett and Herbert Samuel.[42] American non-Zionists received 44 of the 112 seats allotted to non-Zionists.[43] The British Board of Deputies joined as a constituent body.[44]

 
David Ben-Gurion was Chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency from 1935 to 1948. Upon the founding of the State of Israel, he left his position to become the first Prime Minister of the state.

Weizmann was criticized for being too pro-British. When the 1930 White Paper was published recommending restricting Jewish immigration, his position became untenable and he resigned from the ZO and the Jewish Agency. He protested that the British had betrayed their commitment expressed in the Balfour Declaration and that he could no longer work with them.[45][better source needed] Nahum Sokolow, who had been elected to succeed Weizmann, remained in his position. Arthur Ruppin succeeded Sokolow as chairman of the Jewish Agency in 1933 and David Ben-Gurion and Moshe Shertok joined the executive. In 1935, Ben-Gurion was elected chairman of the agency to succeed Ruppin.[46]

In 1937 The Peel Commission published its report into the disturbances of the year before. For the first time, partition and the setting up of a Jewish State was recommended. The 1937 Zionist Congress rejected the commission's conclusions, a majority insisting that the Balfour Declaration referred to all of Palestine and Transjordan, but the executive was authorized to continue exploring what the "precise terms" were.[47] This decision revealed differences within the Jewish Agency, with the non-Zionists disagreeing with the decision and some calling for a conference of Jews and Arabs.[48]

In 1947 the last non-Zionist member of the Jewish Agency, Werner Senator, resigned[41] and while the 50 percent participation of non-Zionists in the Agency before had not worked in practice, the Jewish Agency and the World Zionist Organization now became de facto identical.[49]

Organization edit

From 1929 to 1948, the Jewish Agency was organized into four departments: the Government Department (performing foreign relations on behalf of the Jewish community of Palestine); the Security Department; the Aliyah Department, and the Education Department. The Jewish Agency Executive included David Ben-Gurion as chairman, and Rabbi Yehuda Leib Maimon and Yitzhak Gruenbaum, among others. The Jewish Agency was (and is still) housed in a fortress-like building in the Rehavia neighborhood of Jerusalem.[50] The land for the Rehavia neighborhood had been purchased in 1922 by the Palestine Land Development Corporation,[51] and construction of the Jewish Agency headquarters was paid for by the ZO. The three-winged structure with a large open courtyard was designed by Yochanan Rattner.[51] Along with the Jewish Agency it also houses the headquarters of the JNF and Keren Hayesod-United Israel Appeal.

Bombing edit

On March 11, 1948, a bomb planted in the courtyard of the building by Arab militants killed 13 and wounded many others.[52] The Keren Hayesod wing was completely destroyed.[53] Leib Yaffe, director-general of Keren Hayesod, was among those killed in the bombing.[54]

 
Offices of the Jewish Agency in Jerusalem following car bomb 11 March 1948

The building continues to serve as the headquarters of the Jewish Agency as of 2019. Another building "Kiriyat Moria" is located in southern-east Jerusalem, Armon Hanatziv, Ha-Askan 3. The organization also has satellite sites worldwide.

Pre-state immigration and settlement 1934–1948 edit

Throughout the years 1934–1948, in a phenomenon known as the Ha'apala (ascension), the Jewish Agency facilitated clandestine immigration beyond the British quotas. In 1938 it established HaMosad LeAliyah Bet ('המוסד לעלייה ב, lit. Institution for Immigration B), which took charge of the effort. Overall, in these years, the agency, in partnership with other organizations, helped over 150,000 people in their attempt to enter Palestine, organizing a total of 141 voyages on 116 ships.[55] The potential immigrants were Jews fleeing Nazi atrocities in Europe and, after the war, refugees from DP camps who sought a home in Palestine. Most of the Ma'apilim ships (of the Ha'apala movement) were intercepted by the British, but a few thousand Jews did manage to slip past the authorities. The operation as a whole also helped to unify the long-standing Jewish community in Palestine as well as the newcomer Jewish refugees from Europe.[56]

 
Recha Freier, founder of Youth Aliyah, circa 1964. Youth Aliyah saved more than 5,000 young European Jews by bringing them to Palestine in the years preceding the Holocaust.

In these years The agency made use of the "tower and stockade" (Hebrew: חומה ומגדל) method to establish dozens of new Jewish settlements literally overnight, without obtaining permission from the Mandate authorities. These settlements were built on land purchased by the JNF and relied on an Ottoman law stating that any building with a full roof could not be torn down.[57]

In 1933 the Jewish Agency negotiated a Ha'avara (Transfer) Agreement with Nazi Germany under which approximately 50,000 German Jews were allowed to immigrate to Palestine and retain some of their assets as German export goods.[58][better source needed]

In 1943, the Jewish Agency's Henrietta Szold joined Recha Freier in developing the Youth Aliyah program, which between 1933 and 1948 rescued more 5,000 young Jews from Europe, brought them to Palestine, and educated them in special boarding schools.[59][60] According to Professor Dvora Hacohen, between 1933 and 2011 the Youth Aliyah movement helped over 300,000 young people make Aliyah.[60]

When World War II broke out, the Jewish Agency established a committee to aid European Jewry by finding them entry permits to Palestine, sending them food, and maintaining contact. The agency also helped recruit 40,000 members of the Palestinian Jewish community (a full 8 percent of the Jewish population of Palestine) to be trained by the British military and aid in the Allies' struggle against the Nazis; most served in the Middle East and Africa, but some served behind enemy lines in Europe, among them a group of 32 parachutists that included Hannah Szenes. In total, 800 were killed in their efforts.[61][62]

 
Survivors of the Buchenwald concentration camp arriving in Palestine in 1945. Since their immigration was illegal, they were arrested by the British.

When World War II ended the Agency continued to aid illegal immigration to Palestine through HaMossad LeAliyah Bet in an effort known as the Bricha. Between 1945 and 1948 the Jewish Agency sent 66 ships of refugees to Palestine.[63] Most were intercepted by British authorities, who placed the illegal immigrants, who had just survived the Holocaust, in detention camps in Palestine and later in Cyprus. Only with the establishment of the State of Israel were the detainees allowed to enter the country.[64]

Resistance and formation of Israel's first government edit

 
David Ben-Gurion, Chairman of the Jewish Agency, declaring the establishment of the State of Israel, in Tel Aviv, May 14, 1948. Ben-Gurion became Israel's first Prime Minister.

Frustrated with Great Britain's continued anti-Zionist stance, the Jewish Agency helped put together an agreement signed by the Hagannah, the Irgun, and the Lehi to form a United Resistance Movement against the British.[65][better source needed] In 1946 British troops raided Jewish Agency headquarters as part of Operation Agatha, a broad effort to quash Jewish resistance in Palestine. Important figures in The Agency including Moshe Sharett, head of the agency's political department, and Dov Yosef, member of the agency's executive committee, were arrested and imprisoned in Latrun.[66]

The United Nations recommended the partition of Palestine on 29 November 1947. Meanwhile, the Jewish Agency collaborated with the Jewish National Council to set up a People's Council (Mo'ezet Ha'am) and National Administration (Minhelet Ha'am).[67] After the declaration of independence on 14 May 1948, these two bodies formed the provisional government of the State of Israel.[68]

The Jewish Agency for Israel edit

Post-State immigration, settlement, and infrastructure edit

Following the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, the Jewish Agency for Israel shifted its focus to facilitating economic development and absorbing immigrants. Organizationally, it changed its structure: The Aliyah Department remained, as well as the Education Department (which promoted Jewish and Zionist education in the diaspora), but the Security and Government Departments were replaced by the Department of Agriculture and Settlement, and by the Israel Department (supporting activities that help vulnerable populations within Israel).

The agency's budget in 1948 was IL 32 million; its funding came from Keren Hayesod, the JNF, fund-raising drives, and loans.[69]

In 1949, the Jewish Agency brought 239,000 Holocaust survivors, from DP camps in Europe and detention camps in Cyprus, to Israel.[70] In the years following Israel's founding, Jews in many Arab countries suffered from violence and persecution, and fled or were driven from their homes.[71][better source needed] The agency helped to airlift 49,000 Yemenite Jews to Israel on Operation Magic Carpet, and over the next few years brought hundreds of thousands of Jewish refugees to Israel from Northern Africa, Turkey, Iraq, and Iran.

 
Yemenite Jews arriving in Israel through Operation Magic Carpet.

Between 1948 and 1952, about 700,000 immigrants arrived in the new state.[71] The Jewish Agency helped these immigrants acclimate to Israel and begin to build new lives. It established schools to teach them Hebrew, beginning with Ulpan Etzion in 1949.[72] (The first student to register for Ulpan Etzion was Ephraim Kishon.[73]) It also provided them with food, housing, and vocational training. For a time the construction of new housing could not keep up with demand, and many of the new immigrants were placed in temporary ma'abarot, or transit camps.[74]

In 1952 the "Zionist Organization-Jewish Agency for Israel Status Law" was passed by the Knesset formalizing the roles of each group.[75][better source needed] It was agreed that the WZO and the Jewish Agency would continue to supervise Aliyah, absorption, and settlement, while the state would handle all other matters previously dealt with by The agency including security, education, and employment.[76] Article 4 of the Status Law stipulated that the World Zionist Organization (clarified in Article 3 as "also the Jewish Agency") is an "authorized agency" of the State, establishing its ongoing parastatal rather than purely nongovernmental status.[77]

In the early years of the state the Jewish Agency aided in the establishment of a variety of different institutions that developed the country's economic and cultural infrastructure. These included El Al, the national airline; Binyanei HaUma, the national theater and cultural center; and museums, agricultural, and land development companies.[78]

In the years after 1948, the Agency's Department of Agricultural Settlement established an additional 480 new towns and villages throughout Israel. It provided them with equipment, livestock, irrigation infrastructure, and expert guidance. By the late 1960s these towns produced 70% of Israel's total agricultural output.[78]

The agency also focused its energies on Jews outside of Israel. The Department for Education and Culture in the Diaspora and the Department of Torah Education and Culture in the Diaspora were created to help replace the loss of centers of Jewish learning destroyed by the Holocaust. They trained Hebrew teachers; sent Israelis abroad to supplement Diaspora schools, camps, and youth organizations; and trained cantors, shochatim (ritual slaughterers) and mohelim (ritual circumcisers) in Diaspora communities.[79]

Immigration and absorption, 1967–1990s edit

Jewish pride and euphoria following Israel's dramatic victory in the Six Day War of 1967 prompted a new wave of immigration.[80] In order to aid in the absorption of this influx of immigrants, the Israeli government's Ministry for Absorption was created in June 1968, taking over some aspects of absorption from The Agency and the ZO.[81]

 
Ethiopian Jews arriving in Israel from Addis Ababa, through Operation Solomon, 1991

In the 1980s, the Jewish Agency began to bring the Ethiopian Jewish Community to Israel. On Operation Moses and Operation Joshua more than 8,000 immigrants were airlifted out of Ethiopia.[82] In 1991 about 14,400 Ethiopian Jews were flown to Israel in the space of 36 hours on Operation Solomon.[83] Since then, a steady trickle of immigrants have been brought to Israel from Ethiopia by the Jewish Agency. The agency has taken charge of housing them in absorption centers, teaching them Hebrew, helping them find employment and in general easing their integration into Israeli society. In 2013 most of the "olim," or new immigrants, in absorption centers are from Ethiopia.[84]

With the collapse of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, Russian and Eastern European Jews began to stream to Israel in the tens of thousands. In 1990, about 185,000 immigrants arrived from the FSU; in the following year, nearly 150,000 came; and for the rest of the decade a steady average of 60,000 immigrants from the region made their way to Israel every year.[85] Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, nearly a million Jews and their family members from the former Soviet Union have made Aliyah, presenting tremendous absorption challenges.[86] The Jewish Agency has helped them to integrate through a variety of programs including Hebrew language instruction, placement in absorption centers, and job training.

Program expansion, 1990s–today edit

In 1994, the Jewish Agency, together with the United Jewish Communities and Keren Hayesod-United Israel Appeal, established Partnership 2000. Now known as Partnership2Gether or P2G, the program connects 45 Israeli communities with over 500 Jewish communities around the globe in a "sister city"-style network. Diaspora participants travel to Israel and vice versa, and are hosted by their partner communities; schools are connected through the Global Twinning Network; global Jewish communities support loan funds helping entrepreneurs and small business owners in their partner cities; and young Jewish adults in Israel on long-term programs meet with their Israeli peers for dialogue and workshops.[87]

The Jewish Agency provides Jewish communities outside Israel a continuum of programming to "bring Israel" to local worldwide Jewish communities. They do this in part through "shlichim," or emissaries. Shlichim are Israeli educators or cultural ambassadors, who spend an extended period of time (2 months to 5 years) abroad to "bring Israel" to the community. Shlichim are also posted at college campuses in organizations like Hillel or active in youth organizations.[88]

 
Participants on a Taglit-Birthright trip to Israel, 2012

Other Jewish Agency-sponsored programs that are instrumental in inspiring Jewish youth with a connection to Israel are "Israel Experiences" (educational visits to Israel) such as Taglit-Birthright Israel, a 10-day visit to Israel provided free-of-charge to young Jewish adults. The Jewish Agency is an important organizational partner in the Taglit-Birthright initiative.[89]

In 2004, the Jewish Agency and the Government of Israel together created (and continue to co-sponsor as of 2016) Masa Israel Journey, which provides stipends to young Jews between the ages of 18 and 30 who would like to study, volunteer, or perform internships in Israel for a period of 5–12 months.[90]

During this period, the Jewish Agency's Israel Department focused (and continues to focus) on strengthening Israel's periphery, namely the Galilee region in the north and the Negev in the South. The emergence of the high-tech industry in Israel created a significant socio-economic disparity between the center of country and the outer regions. Thus, the Jewish Agency sought (and continues to seek) to "lessen cultural and economic gaps."

For example, its Youth Futures program, founded in 2006, includes a holistic approach to dealing with at-risk youth in Israel: each child, referred to the program by a teacher or social worker, is connected to a "Mentor" who is responsible for connecting the child to resources and community services.[91] The Jewish Agency is also a significant partner in the Net@ program offered by Cisco Systems. Program participants are Israeli high school students in socio-economically disadvantaged areas, who study the Cisco computer curriculum and earn certification as computer technicians; they also engage in volunteering and study democratic values.[92]

In July 2022, during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Russian Ministry of Justice took steps to stop the Jewish Agency for Israel from operating in Russia, claiming that the agency had broken Russian law regarding collecting, storing and transferring data. After the invasion started, there was a sharp increase in emigration from Russia to Israel.[93]

Governance edit

The Jewish Agency Executive is charged with administering the operations of the Jewish Agency, subject to the control of the board of governors.[94] It has 26 members, of which 24 are chosen by the board of governors. The executive is composed in the following manner: 12 members designated by WZO and 12 members designated jointly by JFNA/UIA and Keren Hayesod. In addition, the World chairperson of Keren Hayesod and the chairperson of the JFNA Executive are ex-officio members in the executive. Doron Almog is the current chair.[95] Yaakov Hagoel was serving as acting chairman since Isaac Herzog vacated the position upon becoming Israel's 11th president.[96]

Over the years the executive board has included many prominent members of Israeli society. Some of the famous Israelis who have served on the board include: M. D. Eder – 1922; Frederick Kisch – 1922–31; Haim Arlosoroff – 1931–33; Moshe Shertok – 1933–48;[97] Arthur Ruppin – 1933–35; David Ben-Gurion (Chairman of the Executive) – 1935–48.

 
Natan Sharansky, former Chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel, in 2016

Past Chairmen of the Executive

Source:[98]

The board of governors, which meets not less than three times a year, is the central policy-making body of the Jewish Agency. The 120 governors play a crucial role in the governance of the agency in overseeing budgets and operations and in recommending policy to the agency. Members of the board are elected to serve for a two-year term in the following manner: 60 of the members (50 percent) are designated by WZO; 36 of the members (30 percent) are designated by JFNA/UIA; 24 members (20 percent) are designated by Keren Hayesod. The board of governors determines policy of the Jewish Agency for Israel and manages, supervises, controls, and directs its operations and activities. The current chairperson of the board of governors, as of July 2014, is Mr. Charles (Chuck) Horowitz Ratner.[94][104] The Assembly, which meets at least once every two years, is the supreme governing body of the Jewish Agency. It has 518 delegates who are elected in the following manner: 259 of the members (50 percent) are designated by the WZO; 155 of the members (30 percent) are designated by the Jewish Federations of North America/United Israel Appeal (JFNA/UIA); and 104 of the members (20 percent) are designated by Keren Hayesod. The Assembly is responsible for determining basic policies and goals of the Jewish Agency; receiving and reviewing reports from the board of governors; making recommendations on major issues; and adopting resolutions on the above.[94]

The director general is responsible, under the direction of the chairperson of the executive, for the implementation of policies established by the assembly, the board of governors and the executive. In addition, he/she is responsible for all operations and administration of the Jewish Agency, including implementation of long-term strategic goals. The current director general is Amira Ahronoviz, the first woman to hold the position.[105]

Funding and budget edit

The Jewish Agency is funded by the Jewish Federations of North America, Keren Hayesod, major Jewish communities and federations, and foundations and donors from Israel and around the world.[106]

Due to the volatile U.S. dollar, the global economic crisis and the Madoff scandal, the Jewish Agency for Israel was forced to make significant cuts to its budget. The board of governors voted to cut $45 million in November 2008 and an additional $26 million at the February 2009 meeting.[107]

The organization's total operating budget in 2013 was US$355,833,000, and its projected operating budget for 2014 was US$369,206,000.[106] Its operating budget for 2019 is US$379,807,000.[15]

Jewish Agency International Development, the organization's main fundraising arm in North America, is a registered 501(c)(3).[108]

Current programs edit

As of 2019, the Jewish Agency sponsors dozens of programs that connect Jews to Israel and to each other. The agency organizes the programs into four different categories: 1. Connecting young Jews to Israel and their Jewish identity (Jewish and Zionist education in the Jewish diaspora); 2. Connecting young Israelis to the Jewish people and their Jewish identity; 3. Aliyah and absorption; 4. Supporting vulnerable populations in Israel.[109][15]

Some programs:

Connecting young Jews to Israel and their Jewish identity edit

Israel experiences edit

The Israel Experience programs bring young Jews from around the globe to Israel to get to know the country and deepen their Jewish identities.[110]

  • Taglit-Birthright Israel provides ten-day educational trips to Israel, Jerusalem and the Golan Heights for Jews ages 18 to 26 from around the world, completely free of charge.[111][112] The Jewish Agency is the largest organizational partner in the initiative and is directly involved in bringing thousands of participants on Taglit-Birthright each year, with a special focus on facilitating Taglit-Birthright experiences for participants from the United States and from the former Soviet Union (FSU).[113][89][114]
  • Masa Israel Journey is a public-service organization founded in 2004 by the Government of Israel's Office of the Prime Minister, together with the Jewish Agency.[115] It includes programs in Israel for Jews aged 18–30, including study programs, service programs, and career development. Programs last from 2–12 months.[116] In 2018 it provided scholarships to nearly 9,800 participants.[15] Masa also performs outreach and operates alumni activities.[117]
  • Israel Tech Challenge is a partnership of the Jewish Agency with the National Cyber Bureau and other partners and donors. It offers trips to Israel of varying lengths for students and young professionals (aged 18–30) with knowledge in the field of computer science and programming. The programs offer visits with Israeli hi-tech professionals and academics, along with experience or training in coding, cyber security and/or data science.[118][119]
  • Machon Le Madrichim trains Jewish counselors from Zionist youth movements around the world in Israel, to give them tools for running educational Zionist programs in their home communities when they return. It was founded in 1946 by the World Zionist Organization. As of 2018, it had 17,000 alumni from around the world. Today the Machon trains several hundred young leaders each year.[15]
  • Na'ale allows Jewish teenagers from the diaspora to study in Israel and earn a high school diploma. Students start the program in ninth or tenth grade and graduate after the twelfth grade with a full Israeli matriculation certificate (bagrut). During the first year, students follow an intensive Hebrew-language program so that they become able to speak, read and write in Hebrew. The program is fully subsidized by the Israeli government. The Na'ale scholarship includes: fully subsidized tuition, free ticket to Israel, room and board, health insurance, trips, and extra curricular activities. Na'ale offers a variety of schools all over Israel from which candidates may choose, including secular, national religious, ultra-orthodox, kibbutz, and urban boarding schools.[120] The Jewish Agency is involved in recruitment in the former Soviet Union.[15]
  • "Students before Parents" ("סטודנטים לפני הורים", abbreviated as סל"ה, SELA, Selah), a program for young immigrants from the countries of the former Soviet Union aimed at the preparation to the education in Israel, bringing young Jews to Israel in hopes that their families follow them.[121] The program includes learning Hebrew, English, mathematics, and Jewish history and tradition.

Jewish and Zionist education outside Israel edit

In its mission to strengthen the ties between Israel and worldwide Jewry and to promote Jewish culture and identity, the Jewish Agency sends out shlichim, or emissaries, to Jewish communities across the globe; partners with Israel and Diaspora communities, and operates and/or funds Jewish educational programs. It also supports Jewish inclusion and diversity programs.[122]

  • Jewish Agency Israel Fellows are Israeli young adults who have completed army service and university study. These "Campus Shlichim" travel for two years university campuses with the goal of empowering student leadership and promoting positive engagement with Israel. According to the Jewish Agency, the aims of an Israel Fellow are to "create an ongoing Israel presence for Jewish students and the broader community . . . . partner with student organizations, campus study abroad offices, Jewish and Israel studies departments, local Jewish federations, Israeli consulates, and Jewish Community Centers ... [and] follow through with Taglit-Birthright trip alumni via one-on-one meetings and special programs and events to keep them active and encourage them to continue their Jewish journeys while in college."[123]
  • Shlichim (Jewish Agency "emissaries") are active in communal organizations, Jewish schools, community centers, synagogues and youth movements. There are also summer Shlichim who serve in Jewish summer camps. They serve as a central resource for Israel education in the local community.[124] In the 2017–18 program year, the Jewish Agency sent 1,388 short-term emissaries to summer camps and other programs, and around 400 long-term emissaries to countries around the world (not including the Israel Fellows).[15]
  • Programs for Russian-speaking Jewry: The organization has developed special outreach to Russian Jewry, because they have largely been separated from Jewish communities even after the fall of the Soviet Union. Only an estimated 20 percent of the 800,000 Jews across former Soviet states are engaged in Jewish life. And Russian Jews who have emigrated to other countries have often been separated from Jewish community life. The agency runs programs for them (in the former Soviet Union, Germany, Austria and Israel) that fall are organized into four areas: (1) Camping, youth education, and counselor training (2) leadership training (3) visits to Israel (4) Focus on facilitation of Aliyah from the former Soviet Union and Germany.
  • FSU Summer and Winter Camps introduce young Russian-speaking Jews in the former Soviet Union to their Jewish heritage. Staffed by trained local counselors and Russian-speaking Israeli counselors, participants are introduced to Jewish history, Jewish customs and practices, and Israel. The agency organizes counselors to follow up with attendees in year-round Jewish educational activities.[125] In 2018, some 8,200 participants in the former Soviet Union attended sleepaway camps and 1,487 went to day camps.[126][15]
  • Partnership2Gether and the Global School Twinning Network: see below.
  • The Emergency Assistance Fund provides for physical security improvements, such as video surveillance & CCTV, alarms, locks, gates, and reinforced walls/doors/windows, at synagogues, Jewish community centers, schools, and camps so that Jewish communal life can continue in greater safety. Jewish institutions outside Israel and North America are eligible for assistance. The 2018 allocations totaled around $1.4 million: $781,000 to institutions in Europe, $423,000 to facilities in Latin America, $82,000 to those in the former Soviet Union, and $109,000 to the Middle East. As of the end of 2018, the fund has allocated over $11.5 million to hundreds of institutions in dozens of countries.[15]

Aliyah edit

The Jewish Agency still brings thousands of Jews to move to Israel each year. In 2014, The agency helped a total of nearly 26,500 olim (immigrants) make Aliyah, the highest number in 13 years.[127] They noted significant growth in immigration from Ukraine and France.[127] The agency continues to support these olim as they integrate into Israeli society.

  • Aliyah of Rescue is the Jewish Agency's Aliyah infrastructure that brings Jews suffering persecution or economic distress to Israel.[128] The services include covert operations to help Jews move out of Middle Eastern and North African countries with which Israel does not have diplomatic relations.[129]
  • Pre-Aliyah Services are provided by the Jewish Agency to prospective immigrants around the world. Agency shlichim, or emissaries, give guidance on issues such as education, housing, health and employment opportunities in Israel. For those who do not have an emissary nearby, The agency provides assistance online and on the phone through its Global Service Center.[130] Additionally, The agency is responsible for verifying that each potential immigrant is eligible for Aliyah under Israel's Law of Return and, once eligibility is proven, for facilitating the receipt of the Aliyah visa via the local Israeli embassy or consulate.[131]
  • Absorption Centers around the country offer temporary housing for new immigrants and provide space for Hebrew instruction, preparation for life and employment in Israel, events, activities and cultural presentations. 17 of The agency's 22 Absorption Centers cater specifically to Ethiopian olim and provide services tailored to the needs of the Ethiopian community. The other five house immigrants from around the world, primarily the FSU, South America, and the Middle East.[130][132]
  • Ulpan: Intensive Hebrew language programs for new immigrants include five hours of immersive language instruction, five days a week, for five months. The programs are offered free of charge to all new immigrants. Ulpan instructors are certified by the Ministry of Education.[133]
  • Centers for Young Adults provide ulpan classes, accommodations and a range of services to ease absorption for olim ages 18–35. These centers include the Ulpan Etzion network for college graduates and young professionals; Beit Brodetzky in Tel Aviv and Ulpan Kinneret in Tiberias, for high school graduates looking for job or army preparation; and Kibbutz Ulpan, combining Hebrew instruction with volunteer work on ten different kibbutzim.[134][135] It also includes Selah, a program for high school graduates from the Former Soviet Union, and TAKA, which combines ulpan studies with pre-academic preparatory courses for immigrants headed to Israeli colleges who wish to polish their skills.[135][136][137][138]
  • Wings encompasses an array of services including practical guidance and personal mentorship for young immigrants who join the IDF as lone soldiers, far from their families.[135][139]

Supporting vulnerable populations in Israel edit

The Jewish Agency also helps vulnerable populations in Israel and around the world.

  • Youth Futures is a community-based initiative for mentoring at-risk pre-teens and adolescents. Each Youth Futures "mentor" works with 16 at-risk children over the course of three years, teaching skills for academic improvement and social integration. In 2014–15, approximately 350 trained Youth Futures staff members worked with 5,000 children and teens, plus 7,000 of their family members, in 200 schools in 35 communities in Israel. In addition to secular and traditional Jews, Youth Futures serves Arab, Bedouin, Druze, and Ultra-Orthodox communities.[140][141]
  • Youth Villages provide safe, cost-effective boarding school settings for 850 young people ages 12 to 18 who have severe emotional, behavioral and family problems. The four Jewish Agency youth villages provide intensive, holistic services and help the youths succeed in and complete high school, and enter the Israeli army with their peers.[142][143][141]
  • Project TEN brings together young Israelis and their Jewish peers from across the globe to work on sustainable projects in developing regions.[144] Participants spend three months working in onsite service projects in vulnerable communities. Project TEN is a service-learning program designed to build participants' Jewish identities while they serve others.[145] In 2022, Project TEN runs volunteer centers in Winneba, Ghana; Oaxaca, Mexico; Gondar, Ethiopia; Kibbutz Harduf, Israel; and Mitzpe Ramon.[146][147] In 2015 the program involved 200 volunteers around the world.[148]
  • Young Activism includes programs that train and support young-adult Israeli volunteers, who go on to create their own social entrepreneurship projects, thus widening the circles of influence.[149] The Young Activism programs include (a) support for Young Communities, groups of idealistic young Israelis who commit to settling long-term in Israel's high-need areas and creating programs that increase local quality of life. (b) Choosing Tomorrow, which encourages university students in Israel's outlying areas to create young communities and settle long-term in the region (c) Ketzev, which provides extra training and mentoring to some of the young communities to help them build self-sustaining "social entrepreneurship" businesses, that provide cultural or educational benefits to customers. (d) Click, which provides microgrants to individual volunteers or very small groups, to help them launch small-scale local projects. (e) The Young Adults' Hub in Arad, where dozens of Israelis and Diaspora Jews receive subsidized housing in exchange for their volunteer activities for the city.[150][151][152][153][154]
  • Net@ gives high-performing teenagers an opportunity to rise above their families' socio-economic backgrounds by training them for four years in marketable computer skills, leading to certification as computer and network technicians through Cisco Systems. The program is in addition to the participants' high school course load and also increases their English comprehension skills.[92] In 2014, around 1,100 teens participated in the program, and another 400 children participated in Net@ Junior.[155][156]
  • Loan funds assist entrepreneurs and business owners in Israel to open or expand their businesses, through loans with highly attractive conditions as well as comprehensive business guidance. The Jewish Agency acts as a partial guarantor for the loans, to support those businesses that otherwise would have a difficult time qualifying for loans or presenting the necessary collateral for them.[157] The various funds have different eligibility criteria, with some focusing on stimulating the economy in specific regions of Israel, and others focusing on specific populations of business owners, such as Israeli Arabs, Ethiopian-Israelis, immigrants, etc.[158]
  • The Fund for Victims of Terror provides two forms of financial assistance to those who have been wounded, or had family members killed, in a terrorist attack or war against Israel. It provides immediate assistance in the 24–48 hours after the attack, and it provides subsidies for long-term rehabilitation needs.[159] In 2014, the fund provided emergency grants to 120 families impacted by Operation Protective Edge, and more than 1 million shekels (around $250,000 according to the exchange rate at the time) to 80 families with long-term effects from Operation Pillar of Defense.[citation needed]
  • Amigour[160] is a Jewish Agency subsidiary that provides housing for Israel's elderly. In 2014 it operated 57 facilities that housed 7,500 seniors, mainly Holocaust survivors. Additionally, it operates 13,000 public housing apartments that provide government-subsidized housing to 40,000 single-parent families, elderly, and new immigrants.[141][161]

Services for Israeli Arabs and minorities edit

As part of its efforts to strengthen Israeli society[162] and to support vulnerable populations in Israel, the Jewish Agency has, for many years, supported or operated programs that encourage co-existence between Israeli Jews and Israeli Arabs, and programs designed specifically to serve Israel's non-Jewish citizens, and they continue to create new ones.[163] Some of the programs:

 
The Arab city of Umm al-Fahm in northern Israel
  • Youth Futures, the mentorship program for middle-school students,[164] is active in 36 locations around Israel. Some localities served by Youth Futures are Jewish, while others are mixed and, in recent years, the Jewish Agency has begun to serve children and families living in completely non-Jewish locales: East Jerusalem (100% Arab participants), Tel Aviv-Yafo (32% of participants are Arab), Acco and Matte Asher (34%), Lod (57% Arab/Bedouin), Horfeish (100% Druze), and El Kassum (100% Bedouin).[163]
  • Choosing Tomorrow, one of The agency's "Young Activism" social entrepreneurship training programs, includes three groups of Arab university and college students (total 40 students) who are being trained to create their own social-welfare programs that will specifically benefit their local (Arab) communities. These groups are in Be'er Sheva, the Jezre'el Valley, and a group at the Alkassemy Arab College. Additionally, Choosing Tomorrow groups in the Negev work to improve medical services to the Bedouin population, by teaching Arabic to local doctors and helping them understand and connect with Bedouin culture.[163][165][166]
  • Neve Midbar is a boarding school that develops leadership among teenage Bedouin boys.
  • Net@ is a program supported by the Jewish Agency.[167] In its chapters in Ramle, Nazareth, Acre, Jerusalem, and Tel Aviv-Yafo, Jewish and Arab teenagers study computers together, volunteer in community computer labs together, and serve as mentors together to junior-high school participants. In addition, Net@ has all-Arab chapters in Umm Al Fahm, Yirka, and Tira. 25% of all counselors in Net@ are Israeli Arab.[163]
 
Druze Israeli soldiers of the Herev Battalion, also known as the IDF Minorities Unit
  • Acharai Pre-Army Academy (Mechinah) includes a mixed Jewish-Druze group and a mixed Jewish-Christian group in which soon-to-be-enlisted young Israelis of both religions work together to volunteer, promote co-existence, and prepare for their IDF service.[163][168][169]
  • Atidim is a national Israeli program provides scholarships and educational activities to gifted students, funded in part by the Jewish Agency.[170] Most programs serve both Jewish and non-Jewish students, and there are some programs dedicated specifically to the Arab sector. All told, in 2014 Atidim programs included more than 2,340 non-Jewish participants, including Druze, Bedouin, Arabs and other non-Jewish Israelis. Additionally the alumni association includes hundreds of Arab, Druze, and Bedouin graduates.[163]
  • Jewish Agency scholarship funds benefit Arab recipients as well as Jewish ones.[163]
  • Jewish Agency loan funds often help Israeli-Arab small business owners to receive bank loans at favorable rates. The nine different funds act as guarantors. One of the funds specifically aims to assist small business owners who are Arab, ultra-Orthodox, female, Ethiopian, or immigrants.[171]

Strategic plans edit

2010 edit

At the February 2010 Board of Governors meeting, Natan Sharansky announced a shift in the priorities of the Jewish Agency from Aliyah to strengthening Jewish identity for young adults around the world.[172]

From 1948 until 2009, the Jewish Agency was organized into departments: the Aliyah and Absorption department, which was responsible for the immigration and integration of Jews coming to Israel; the Education department, which worked to deepen the connection of Jews worldwide to Israel; and the Israel department, which focused on improving the lives of socio-economically vulnerable Israelis.[173] (A fourth department, for Agriculture and Settlement, had been in operation starting in 1948, but had closed long before 2009.)

In order to increase efficiency, the Jewish Agency, under the leadership of its new chairman of the executive, Natan Sharansky, decided to restructure the organization.[174][175] Along with the organizational restructuring came a new focus. As the first decade of the 21st century came to a close, The agency noted that most of global Jewry was now located in democratic, stable societies that were relatively friendly to Jewish residents.[176][177] As "Aliyah of Rescue" became urgent for decreasing numbers of Jews, new challenges were arising for world Jewry, most notably, Agency leaders remarked, the need to engage young Jews in Jewish culture and to help Israeli Jews and those who live outside Israel to understand each other and feel connected to what they call the "global Jewish family."[176][178] While continuing "Aliyah of Rescue" operations, The agency decided to focus its primary energies on fostering a strong relationship between world Jewry and Israel, and on encouraging Aliyah based on a love for the country, what it calls "Aliyah of Choice."[179] Its main vehicle for doing so would be to bring Jews from around the world to Israel on short- and long-term tourist programs to allow them to get to know the country and to give Israelis the opportunity to get to know them and vice versa.[180] Parallel to these efforts, The agency decided to increase its investment in strengthening Jewish communities around the globe. Its goals would be to grow local Jewish leadership, to strengthen Jewish identity, and to deepen the connection of communities worldwide to Israel and to the Jewish people as a whole.[181]

2019 edit

At the October 2019 board of governors meeting, which marked the 90th anniversary of the organization, the board passed a decision to somewhat shift the Jewish Agency's areas of focus, in response to new critical challenges that had arisen for the Jewish people. Its "renewed mission" moving into its tenth decade focuses on three areas:[182]

  1. Continuing to promote Aliyah and ensure Jewish safety: continuing to facilitate both Aliyah of Rescue and Aliyah of Choice; working with other organizations and communities in a common struggle against anti-Semitism and delegitimization of Israel.
  2. Connecting Jews worldwide to one another and to Israel: bridging the diversity of identities, interests and religious streams in the Jewish world; developing global Jewish leadership
  3. Advocacy and impact on behalf of world Jewry in Israel: bringing the diversity of voices in the Jewish world to Israeli policy makers and Israeli society at large; helping the Israeli public understand the diversity of Jewish life while building a personal commitment to the Jewish People as a whole; developing a new paradigm for the involvement of world Jewry in Israeli society.

Awards and recognition edit

On May 8, 2008, at the Israeli government's 60th Independence Day celebration, the Jewish Agency for Israel was awarded the Israel Prize for lifetime achievement & special contribution to society and the State of Israel.[183][184]

 
Jewish Agency headquarters in Jerusalem

See also edit

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External links edit

  • Official Jewish Agency Website
  • The Jewish Agency for Israel
  • The Jewish Agency for Israel (@JewishAgency) | Twitter
  • הסוכנות היהודית לארץ ישראל
  • Taglit-Birthright Official Website
  • Onward Israel September 30, 2017, at the Wayback Machine Official Website
  • MyIsraelSummer January 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Official Website (Jewish Agency portal)
  • Project Ten Official Website (Program is a Jewish Agency initiative)
  • Partnership2Gether October 8, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Official Website
  • Connect Israel (Jewish Agency program)
  • Makom (creates Jewish Agency educational content)
  • Jewish People Policy Planning Institute Official Website
  • The Central Zionist Archives in Jerusalem. Collections of the Jewish Agency for Israel.
  • Masa Israel Journey Official Website
  • Israel Tech Challenge April 13, 2018, at the Wayback Machine Official Website
  • (a program of the Jewish Agency, Cisco, and Appleseeds Academy)
  • Amigour (Jewish Agency subsidiary)
  • Naale Elite Academy – High Schools in Israel

jewish, agency, israel, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, conve. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Jewish Agency for Israel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Jewish Agency for Israel Hebrew הסוכנות היהודית לארץ ישראל romanized HaSochnut HaYehudit L Eretz Yisra el formerly known as the Jewish Agency for Palestine 5 is the largest Jewish non profit organization in the world It was established in 1929 as the operative branch of the World Zionist Organization WZO 6 Jewish Agency for Israelהסוכנות היהודית לארץ ישראל Founded1929 94 years ago 1929 Tax ID no 23 7254561Legal status501 c 3 PurposeTo ensure that every Jewish person feels an unbreakable bond to one another and to Israel no matter where they are in the world so that they can continue to play their critical role in the ongoing Jewish story by 1 Connecting young Jews to Israel and their Jewish identity 2 Connecting young Israelis to the Jewish people and their Jewish identity 3 Aliyah and absorption 4 Supporting vulnerable populations in Israel 1 HeadquartersJerusalemCoordinates31 46 37 N 35 12 58 E 31 777 N 35 216 E 31 777 35 216Chairman of the ExecutiveDoron AlmogChairman of the Board of GovernorsMark WilfDirector GeneralAmira Ahronoviz 2 Deputy Chair of the ExecutiveYaron Shavit 3 Revenue 2016 381 438 000 4 Expenses 2016 333 228 000 4 Endowment 1 345 000 2016 4 Employees 2016 1 140 4 Volunteers 2016 25 000 4 Websitewww wbr jewishagency wbr orgJewish Agency headquarters JerusalemAs an organization it encourages immigration of Jews in diaspora to the Land of Israel and oversees their integration with the State of Israel 7 Since 1948 the Jewish Agency claims to have brought 3 million immigrants to Israel 8 where it offers them transitional housing in absorption centers throughout the country 9 David Ben Gurion served as its chairman of the executive committee from 1935 and in this capacity on 14 May 1948 he proclaimed Israel s independence 10 following which he served as the first Israeli prime minister In the years preceding the founding of Israel the Jewish Agency oversaw the establishment of about 1 000 towns and villages in the British Mandate of Palestine The organization serves as the main link between Israel and Jewish communities around the world 11 12 By law the Jewish Agency is a parastatal organization but does not receive core funding from the Israeli government 13 The Jewish Agency is funded by the Jewish Federations of North America JFNA Keren Hayesod major Jewish communities and federations and foundations and donors from Israel and around the world 14 15 In 2008 the Jewish Agency won the Israel Prize for its historical contribution to Israel and to the Jewish community worldwide 16 Contents 1 History 1 1 Name 1 2 1908 1928 Beginnings as an arm of the World Zionist Organization 1 3 Jewish Agency for Palestine 1929 1948 1 3 1 Non Zionists representation 1 3 2 Organization 1 3 3 Bombing 1 3 4 Pre state immigration and settlement 1934 1948 1 3 5 Resistance and formation of Israel s first government 1 4 The Jewish Agency for Israel 1 4 1 Post State immigration settlement and infrastructure 1 4 2 Immigration and absorption 1967 1990s 1 4 3 Program expansion 1990s today 2 Governance 3 Funding and budget 4 Current programs 4 1 Connecting young Jews to Israel and their Jewish identity 4 1 1 Israel experiences 4 1 2 Jewish and Zionist education outside Israel 4 2 Aliyah 4 3 Supporting vulnerable populations in Israel 5 Services for Israeli Arabs and minorities 6 Strategic plans 6 1 2010 6 2 2019 7 Awards and recognition 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editName edit Established as the Palestine Office of the Zionist Organization in 1908 the organization became the Zionist Commission later Palestine Zionist Executive which was designated in 1929 as the Jewish agency provided for in the League of Nations Palestine Mandate 17 and was thus again renamed as The Jewish Agency for Palestine After the establishment of the State it received its current name The Jewish Agency for Israel 1908 1928 Beginnings as an arm of the World Zionist Organization edit The Jewish Agency began as the Palestine Office Hebrew המשרד הארץ ישראלי HaMisrad HaEretz Yisraeli lit Office for the Land of Israel founded in Jaffa in 1908 as the operational branch of the Zionist Organization ZO in Ottoman controlled Palestine under the leadership of Arthur Ruppin 18 The main tasks of the Palestine Office were to represent the Jews of Palestine in dealings with the Turkish sultan and other foreign dignitaries to aid Jewish immigration and to buy land for Jews to settle in 19 better source needed nbsp Jewish immigrants of the Second Aliyah 1912The Palestine Office was established under the inspiration of Theodor Herzl s vision for a solution to the Jewish question the issue of anti Semitism and the place of Jews in the world In his pamphlet The Jewish State Herzl envisioned the Jewish people settled as an independent nation on its own land taking its place among the other nation states of the world The Palestine Office which eventually became the Jewish Agency was based upon Herzl s organizational ideas for how to bring a Jewish state into being 20 The influx of Jews to Palestine on the Second Aliyah 1904 1914 made the purchase of land particularly urgent With the aid of the Jewish National Fund JNF the Palestine Office bought land for newcomers in two locations Chavat Kinneret near the Sea of Galilee and Kibbutz Ruhama near Sderot of today Kibbutz Ruhama was specifically designated for Russian Jews from the Second Aliyah Over the following decades the Palestine Office established hundreds more moshavimand kibbutzim throughout Palestine 21 The Palestine Office continued to purchase land together with JNF In Hebrew Keren Kayemet L Yisrael KKL With the outbreak of World War I the anticipated disintegration of the Ottoman Empire raised hopes among Zionists for increased Jewish immigration and eventual sovereignty in Palestine 22 better source needed In 1918 Great Britain conquered the region and it fell under British military rule 23 better source needed nbsp Chaim Weizmann founder and director of the Zionist Commission a precursor of the Jewish Agency leader of the Zionist Organization and first President of the State of IsraelFollowing the promulgation of the pro Zionist Balfour Declaration Dr Chaim Weizmann president of the British Zionist Federation 24 formed the Zionist Commission in March 1918 to go to Palestine and make recommendations to the British government The Commission reached Palestine on 14 April 1918 and proceeded to study conditions and to report to the British government 25 and was active in promoting Zionist objectives in Palestine Weizmann was instrumental in restructuring the ZO s Palestine office into departments for agriculture settlement education land finance immigration and statistics The Palestine Office was merged into the Zionist Commission headed by Chaim Weizmann 26 nbsp The front page of the Mandate for Palestine and Transjordan memorandum presented to UK Parliament in December 1922 prior to it coming into force in 1923 The British control of the region lasted until 1948 On 25 April 1920 the Principal Allied Powers agreed at the San Remo conference to allocate the Ottoman territories to the victorious powers and assigned Palestine Transjordan and Iraq as Mandates to Britain with the Balfour Declaration being incorporated into the Palestine Mandate The League of Nations formally approved these mandates in 1922 27 Article 4 of the Mandate provided for the recognition of an appropriate Jewish agency as a public body for the purpose of advising and co operating with the Administration of Palestine in such economic social and other matters as may affect the establishment of the Jewish National Home and the interests of the Jewish population of Palestine 17 28 The ZO leaders had contributed to the drafting of the Mandate 29 In November 1921 the Zionist Commission became the Palestine Zionist Executive and was designated as the Jewish agency for Palestine for the purpose of Article 4 of the Palestine Mandate 30 31 In 1921 Ze ev Jabotinsky was elected to the executive but he resigned in 1923 accusing Weizmann of not being vigorous enough with the Mandatory Government 22 better source needed Other issues between the Revisionists and the agency were the distribution of entry permits Weizmann s support for the Zionist Labour Movement and the proposal to expand the agency The Revisionists broke completely with agency in 1935 but rejoined ZO in 1947 22 better source needed In 1951 the ZO JA included all Zionist organizations except Herut 32 The Palestine Zionist Executive was charged with facilitating Jewish immigration to Palestine land purchase and planning the general policies of the Zionist leadership It ran schools and hospitals and formed a defence force the Haganah 19 Chaim Weizmann was the leader of both the World Zionist Organization and the Palestine Zionist Executive until 1929 The arrangement enabled the ZO to issue entry permits to new immigrants 33 better source needed Jewish Agency for Palestine 1929 1948 edit nbsp Palestine immigrant certificate issued in Warsaw 16 9 1935 by the Jewish Agency Non Zionists representation edit In 1929 the Palestine Zionist Executive was renamed restructured and officially inaugurated as The Jewish Agency for Palestine by the 16th Zionist Congress held in Zurich Switzerland 34 The new body was larger and included a number of Jewish non Zionist individuals and organizations who were interested in Jewish settlement in Palestine They were philanthropic rather than political and many opposed talk of a Jewish State 35 With this broader Jewish representation 36 the Jewish Agency for Palestine was recognized by the British in 1930 in lieu of the Zionist Organization as the appropriate Jewish agency under the terms of the Mandate 37 The 16th Zionist Congress determined that in the event of the future dissolution of the agency the World Zionist Organization would replace it as representative of the Jews for the purpose of the Mandate 38 There was strong opposition within the ZO when the idea of enlargement of the Board of Governors of the Jewish Agency was first raised in 1924 to include non Zionist Jews and the idea was accepted by the Zionist Congress only in 1927 39 Even though non Zionists took part in the agency it was still closely tied to the Zionist Organization The president of the ZO served as the chair of the Executive Council and the Assembly of the Jewish Agency and half of the members of the agency s governing bodies were chosen by the ZO ensuring a unified policy and close cooperation between the two organizations 40 38 The change was Chaim Weizmann s initiative and was established on the principle of parity between Zionist and non Zionist Jews working together in the building of a Jewish national home 41 Those participating included Sholem Asch H N Bialik Leon Blum Albert Einstein Immanuel Low Lord Melchett and Herbert Samuel 42 American non Zionists received 44 of the 112 seats allotted to non Zionists 43 The British Board of Deputies joined as a constituent body 44 nbsp David Ben Gurion was Chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency from 1935 to 1948 Upon the founding of the State of Israel he left his position to become the first Prime Minister of the state Weizmann was criticized for being too pro British When the 1930 White Paper was published recommending restricting Jewish immigration his position became untenable and he resigned from the ZO and the Jewish Agency He protested that the British had betrayed their commitment expressed in the Balfour Declaration and that he could no longer work with them 45 better source needed Nahum Sokolow who had been elected to succeed Weizmann remained in his position Arthur Ruppin succeeded Sokolow as chairman of the Jewish Agency in 1933 and David Ben Gurion and Moshe Shertok joined the executive In 1935 Ben Gurion was elected chairman of the agency to succeed Ruppin 46 In 1937 The Peel Commission published its report into the disturbances of the year before For the first time partition and the setting up of a Jewish State was recommended The 1937 Zionist Congress rejected the commission s conclusions a majority insisting that the Balfour Declaration referred to all of Palestine and Transjordan but the executive was authorized to continue exploring what the precise terms were 47 This decision revealed differences within the Jewish Agency with the non Zionists disagreeing with the decision and some calling for a conference of Jews and Arabs 48 In 1947 the last non Zionist member of the Jewish Agency Werner Senator resigned 41 and while the 50 percent participation of non Zionists in the Agency before had not worked in practice the Jewish Agency and the World Zionist Organization now became de facto identical 49 Organization edit From 1929 to 1948 the Jewish Agency was organized into four departments the Government Department performing foreign relations on behalf of the Jewish community of Palestine the Security Department the Aliyah Department and the Education Department The Jewish Agency Executive included David Ben Gurion as chairman and Rabbi Yehuda Leib Maimon and Yitzhak Gruenbaum among others The Jewish Agency was and is still housed in a fortress like building in the Rehavia neighborhood of Jerusalem 50 The land for the Rehavia neighborhood had been purchased in 1922 by the Palestine Land Development Corporation 51 and construction of the Jewish Agency headquarters was paid for by the ZO The three winged structure with a large open courtyard was designed by Yochanan Rattner 51 Along with the Jewish Agency it also houses the headquarters of the JNF and Keren Hayesod United Israel Appeal Bombing edit On March 11 1948 a bomb planted in the courtyard of the building by Arab militants killed 13 and wounded many others 52 The Keren Hayesod wing was completely destroyed 53 Leib Yaffe director general of Keren Hayesod was among those killed in the bombing 54 nbsp Offices of the Jewish Agency in Jerusalem following car bomb 11 March 1948The building continues to serve as the headquarters of the Jewish Agency as of 2019 Another building Kiriyat Moria is located in southern east Jerusalem Armon Hanatziv Ha Askan 3 The organization also has satellite sites worldwide Pre state immigration and settlement 1934 1948 editThroughout the years 1934 1948 in a phenomenon known as the Ha apala ascension the Jewish Agency facilitated clandestine immigration beyond the British quotas In 1938 it established HaMosad LeAliyah Bet המוסד לעלייה ב lit Institution for Immigration B which took charge of the effort Overall in these years the agency in partnership with other organizations helped over 150 000 people in their attempt to enter Palestine organizing a total of 141 voyages on 116 ships 55 The potential immigrants were Jews fleeing Nazi atrocities in Europe and after the war refugees from DP camps who sought a home in Palestine Most of the Ma apilim ships of the Ha apala movement were intercepted by the British but a few thousand Jews did manage to slip past the authorities The operation as a whole also helped to unify the long standing Jewish community in Palestine as well as the newcomer Jewish refugees from Europe 56 nbsp Recha Freier founder of Youth Aliyah circa 1964 Youth Aliyah saved more than 5 000 young European Jews by bringing them to Palestine in the years preceding the Holocaust In these years The agency made use of the tower and stockade Hebrew חומה ומגדל method to establish dozens of new Jewish settlements literally overnight without obtaining permission from the Mandate authorities These settlements were built on land purchased by the JNF and relied on an Ottoman law stating that any building with a full roof could not be torn down 57 In 1933 the Jewish Agency negotiated a Ha avara Transfer Agreement with Nazi Germany under which approximately 50 000 German Jews were allowed to immigrate to Palestine and retain some of their assets as German export goods 58 better source needed In 1943 the Jewish Agency s Henrietta Szold joined Recha Freier in developing the Youth Aliyah program which between 1933 and 1948 rescued more 5 000 young Jews from Europe brought them to Palestine and educated them in special boarding schools 59 60 According to Professor Dvora Hacohen between 1933 and 2011 the Youth Aliyah movement helped over 300 000 young people make Aliyah 60 When World War II broke out the Jewish Agency established a committee to aid European Jewry by finding them entry permits to Palestine sending them food and maintaining contact The agency also helped recruit 40 000 members of the Palestinian Jewish community a full 8 percent of the Jewish population of Palestine to be trained by the British military and aid in the Allies struggle against the Nazis most served in the Middle East and Africa but some served behind enemy lines in Europe among them a group of 32 parachutists that included Hannah Szenes In total 800 were killed in their efforts 61 62 nbsp Survivors of the Buchenwald concentration camp arriving in Palestine in 1945 Since their immigration was illegal they were arrested by the British When World War II ended the Agency continued to aid illegal immigration to Palestine through HaMossad LeAliyah Bet in an effort known as the Bricha Between 1945 and 1948 the Jewish Agency sent 66 ships of refugees to Palestine 63 Most were intercepted by British authorities who placed the illegal immigrants who had just survived the Holocaust in detention camps in Palestine and later in Cyprus Only with the establishment of the State of Israel were the detainees allowed to enter the country 64 Resistance and formation of Israel s first government edit nbsp David Ben Gurion Chairman of the Jewish Agency declaring the establishment of the State of Israel in Tel Aviv May 14 1948 Ben Gurion became Israel s first Prime Minister Frustrated with Great Britain s continued anti Zionist stance the Jewish Agency helped put together an agreement signed by the Hagannah the Irgun and the Lehi to form a United Resistance Movement against the British 65 better source needed In 1946 British troops raided Jewish Agency headquarters as part of Operation Agatha a broad effort to quash Jewish resistance in Palestine Important figures in The Agency including Moshe Sharett head of the agency s political department and Dov Yosef member of the agency s executive committee were arrested and imprisoned in Latrun 66 The United Nations recommended the partition of Palestine on 29 November 1947 Meanwhile the Jewish Agency collaborated with the Jewish National Council to set up a People s Council Mo ezet Ha am and National Administration Minhelet Ha am 67 After the declaration of independence on 14 May 1948 these two bodies formed the provisional government of the State of Israel 68 The Jewish Agency for Israel edit Post State immigration settlement and infrastructure edit Following the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948 the Jewish Agency for Israel shifted its focus to facilitating economic development and absorbing immigrants Organizationally it changed its structure The Aliyah Department remained as well as the Education Department which promoted Jewish and Zionist education in the diaspora but the Security and Government Departments were replaced by the Department of Agriculture and Settlement and by the Israel Department supporting activities that help vulnerable populations within Israel The agency s budget in 1948 was IL 32 million its funding came from Keren Hayesod the JNF fund raising drives and loans 69 In 1949 the Jewish Agency brought 239 000 Holocaust survivors from DP camps in Europe and detention camps in Cyprus to Israel 70 In the years following Israel s founding Jews in many Arab countries suffered from violence and persecution and fled or were driven from their homes 71 better source needed The agency helped to airlift 49 000 Yemenite Jews to Israel on Operation Magic Carpet and over the next few years brought hundreds of thousands of Jewish refugees to Israel from Northern Africa Turkey Iraq and Iran nbsp Yemenite Jews arriving in Israel through Operation Magic Carpet Between 1948 and 1952 about 700 000 immigrants arrived in the new state 71 The Jewish Agency helped these immigrants acclimate to Israel and begin to build new lives It established schools to teach them Hebrew beginning with Ulpan Etzion in 1949 72 The first student to register for Ulpan Etzion was Ephraim Kishon 73 It also provided them with food housing and vocational training For a time the construction of new housing could not keep up with demand and many of the new immigrants were placed in temporary ma abarot or transit camps 74 In 1952 the Zionist Organization Jewish Agency for Israel Status Law was passed by the Knesset formalizing the roles of each group 75 better source needed It was agreed that the WZO and the Jewish Agency would continue to supervise Aliyah absorption and settlement while the state would handle all other matters previously dealt with by The agency including security education and employment 76 Article 4 of the Status Law stipulated that the World Zionist Organization clarified in Article 3 as also the Jewish Agency is an authorized agency of the State establishing its ongoing parastatal rather than purely nongovernmental status 77 In the early years of the state the Jewish Agency aided in the establishment of a variety of different institutions that developed the country s economic and cultural infrastructure These included El Al the national airline Binyanei HaUma the national theater and cultural center and museums agricultural and land development companies 78 In the years after 1948 the Agency s Department of Agricultural Settlement established an additional 480 new towns and villages throughout Israel It provided them with equipment livestock irrigation infrastructure and expert guidance By the late 1960s these towns produced 70 of Israel s total agricultural output 78 The agency also focused its energies on Jews outside of Israel The Department for Education and Culture in the Diaspora and the Department of Torah Education and Culture in the Diaspora were created to help replace the loss of centers of Jewish learning destroyed by the Holocaust They trained Hebrew teachers sent Israelis abroad to supplement Diaspora schools camps and youth organizations and trained cantors shochatim ritual slaughterers and mohelim ritual circumcisers in Diaspora communities 79 Immigration and absorption 1967 1990s edit Jewish pride and euphoria following Israel s dramatic victory in the Six Day War of 1967 prompted a new wave of immigration 80 In order to aid in the absorption of this influx of immigrants the Israeli government s Ministry for Absorption was created in June 1968 taking over some aspects of absorption from The Agency and the ZO 81 nbsp Ethiopian Jews arriving in Israel from Addis Ababa through Operation Solomon 1991In the 1980s the Jewish Agency began to bring the Ethiopian Jewish Community to Israel On Operation Moses and Operation Joshua more than 8 000 immigrants were airlifted out of Ethiopia 82 In 1991 about 14 400 Ethiopian Jews were flown to Israel in the space of 36 hours on Operation Solomon 83 Since then a steady trickle of immigrants have been brought to Israel from Ethiopia by the Jewish Agency The agency has taken charge of housing them in absorption centers teaching them Hebrew helping them find employment and in general easing their integration into Israeli society In 2013 most of the olim or new immigrants in absorption centers are from Ethiopia 84 With the collapse of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s Russian and Eastern European Jews began to stream to Israel in the tens of thousands In 1990 about 185 000 immigrants arrived from the FSU in the following year nearly 150 000 came and for the rest of the decade a steady average of 60 000 immigrants from the region made their way to Israel every year 85 Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 nearly a million Jews and their family members from the former Soviet Union have made Aliyah presenting tremendous absorption challenges 86 The Jewish Agency has helped them to integrate through a variety of programs including Hebrew language instruction placement in absorption centers and job training Program expansion 1990s today edit In 1994 the Jewish Agency together with the United Jewish Communities and Keren Hayesod United Israel Appeal established Partnership 2000 Now known as Partnership2Gether or P2G the program connects 45 Israeli communities with over 500 Jewish communities around the globe in a sister city style network Diaspora participants travel to Israel and vice versa and are hosted by their partner communities schools are connected through the Global Twinning Network global Jewish communities support loan funds helping entrepreneurs and small business owners in their partner cities and young Jewish adults in Israel on long term programs meet with their Israeli peers for dialogue and workshops 87 The Jewish Agency provides Jewish communities outside Israel a continuum of programming to bring Israel to local worldwide Jewish communities They do this in part through shlichim or emissaries Shlichim are Israeli educators or cultural ambassadors who spend an extended period of time 2 months to 5 years abroad to bring Israel to the community Shlichim are also posted at college campuses in organizations like Hillel or active in youth organizations 88 nbsp Participants on a Taglit Birthright trip to Israel 2012Other Jewish Agency sponsored programs that are instrumental in inspiring Jewish youth with a connection to Israel are Israel Experiences educational visits to Israel such as Taglit Birthright Israel a 10 day visit to Israel provided free of charge to young Jewish adults The Jewish Agency is an important organizational partner in the Taglit Birthright initiative 89 In 2004 the Jewish Agency and the Government of Israel together created and continue to co sponsor as of 2016 Masa Israel Journey which provides stipends to young Jews between the ages of 18 and 30 who would like to study volunteer or perform internships in Israel for a period of 5 12 months 90 During this period the Jewish Agency s Israel Department focused and continues to focus on strengthening Israel s periphery namely the Galilee region in the north and the Negev in the South The emergence of the high tech industry in Israel created a significant socio economic disparity between the center of country and the outer regions Thus the Jewish Agency sought and continues to seek to lessen cultural and economic gaps For example its Youth Futures program founded in 2006 includes a holistic approach to dealing with at risk youth in Israel each child referred to the program by a teacher or social worker is connected to a Mentor who is responsible for connecting the child to resources and community services 91 The Jewish Agency is also a significant partner in the Net program offered by Cisco Systems Program participants are Israeli high school students in socio economically disadvantaged areas who study the Cisco computer curriculum and earn certification as computer technicians they also engage in volunteering and study democratic values 92 In July 2022 during the Russian invasion of Ukraine the Russian Ministry of Justice took steps to stop the Jewish Agency for Israel from operating in Russia claiming that the agency had broken Russian law regarding collecting storing and transferring data After the invasion started there was a sharp increase in emigration from Russia to Israel 93 Governance editThe Jewish Agency Executive is charged with administering the operations of the Jewish Agency subject to the control of the board of governors 94 It has 26 members of which 24 are chosen by the board of governors The executive is composed in the following manner 12 members designated by WZO and 12 members designated jointly by JFNA UIA and Keren Hayesod In addition the World chairperson of Keren Hayesod and the chairperson of the JFNA Executive are ex officio members in the executive Doron Almog is the current chair 95 Yaakov Hagoel was serving as acting chairman since Isaac Herzog vacated the position upon becoming Israel s 11th president 96 Over the years the executive board has included many prominent members of Israeli society Some of the famous Israelis who have served on the board include M D Eder 1922 Frederick Kisch 1922 31 Haim Arlosoroff 1931 33 Moshe Shertok 1933 48 97 Arthur Ruppin 1933 35 David Ben Gurion Chairman of the Executive 1935 48 nbsp Natan Sharansky former Chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel in 2016Past Chairmen of the ExecutiveSource 98 Frederick Hermann Kisch 1923 31 Haim Arlosoroff 1931 33 Arthur Ruppin 1933 35 David Ben Gurion 1935 48 Berl Locker 1948 56 nbsp Isaac Herzog former Chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel Zalman Shazar 1956 61 Moshe Sharett 1961 65 Louis Arie Pincus 1965 74 99 Pinhas Sapir 1974 75 100 Yosef Almogi 1976 78 101 Arieh Dulzin 1974 99 1978 87 Simha Dinitz 1987 94 Avraham Burg 1995 99 Sallai Meridor 1999 2005 Ze ev Bielski 2005 09 Natan Sharansky 2009 18 Isaac Herzog 2018 2021 102 Yaakov Hagoel acting chairman 2021 2022 103 Doron Almog 2022 present 95 The board of governors which meets not less than three times a year is the central policy making body of the Jewish Agency The 120 governors play a crucial role in the governance of the agency in overseeing budgets and operations and in recommending policy to the agency Members of the board are elected to serve for a two year term in the following manner 60 of the members 50 percent are designated by WZO 36 of the members 30 percent are designated by JFNA UIA 24 members 20 percent are designated by Keren Hayesod The board of governors determines policy of the Jewish Agency for Israel and manages supervises controls and directs its operations and activities The current chairperson of the board of governors as of July 2014 is Mr Charles Chuck Horowitz Ratner 94 104 The Assembly which meets at least once every two years is the supreme governing body of the Jewish Agency It has 518 delegates who are elected in the following manner 259 of the members 50 percent are designated by the WZO 155 of the members 30 percent are designated by the Jewish Federations of North America United Israel Appeal JFNA UIA and 104 of the members 20 percent are designated by Keren Hayesod The Assembly is responsible for determining basic policies and goals of the Jewish Agency receiving and reviewing reports from the board of governors making recommendations on major issues and adopting resolutions on the above 94 The director general is responsible under the direction of the chairperson of the executive for the implementation of policies established by the assembly the board of governors and the executive In addition he she is responsible for all operations and administration of the Jewish Agency including implementation of long term strategic goals The current director general is Amira Ahronoviz the first woman to hold the position 105 Funding and budget editThe Jewish Agency is funded by the Jewish Federations of North America Keren Hayesod major Jewish communities and federations and foundations and donors from Israel and around the world 106 Due to the volatile U S dollar the global economic crisis and the Madoff scandal the Jewish Agency for Israel was forced to make significant cuts to its budget The board of governors voted to cut 45 million in November 2008 and an additional 26 million at the February 2009 meeting 107 The organization s total operating budget in 2013 was US 355 833 000 and its projected operating budget for 2014 was US 369 206 000 106 Its operating budget for 2019 is US 379 807 000 15 Jewish Agency International Development the organization s main fundraising arm in North America is a registered 501 c 3 108 Current programs editThis section contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message As of 2019 the Jewish Agency sponsors dozens of programs that connect Jews to Israel and to each other The agency organizes the programs into four different categories 1 Connecting young Jews to Israel and their Jewish identity Jewish and Zionist education in the Jewish diaspora 2 Connecting young Israelis to the Jewish people and their Jewish identity 3 Aliyah and absorption 4 Supporting vulnerable populations in Israel 109 15 Some programs Connecting young Jews to Israel and their Jewish identity edit Israel experiences edit The Israel Experience programs bring young Jews from around the globe to Israel to get to know the country and deepen their Jewish identities 110 Taglit Birthright Israel provides ten day educational trips to Israel Jerusalem and the Golan Heights for Jews ages 18 to 26 from around the world completely free of charge 111 112 The Jewish Agency is the largest organizational partner in the initiative and is directly involved in bringing thousands of participants on Taglit Birthright each year with a special focus on facilitating Taglit Birthright experiences for participants from the United States and from the former Soviet Union FSU 113 89 114 Masa Israel Journey is a public service organization founded in 2004 by the Government of Israel s Office of the Prime Minister together with the Jewish Agency 115 It includes programs in Israel for Jews aged 18 30 including study programs service programs and career development Programs last from 2 12 months 116 In 2018 it provided scholarships to nearly 9 800 participants 15 Masa also performs outreach and operates alumni activities 117 Israel Tech Challenge is a partnership of the Jewish Agency with the National Cyber Bureau and other partners and donors It offers trips to Israel of varying lengths for students and young professionals aged 18 30 with knowledge in the field of computer science and programming The programs offer visits with Israeli hi tech professionals and academics along with experience or training in coding cyber security and or data science 118 119 Machon Le Madrichim trains Jewish counselors from Zionist youth movements around the world in Israel to give them tools for running educational Zionist programs in their home communities when they return It was founded in 1946 by the World Zionist Organization As of 2018 it had 17 000 alumni from around the world Today the Machon trains several hundred young leaders each year 15 Na ale allows Jewish teenagers from the diaspora to study in Israel and earn a high school diploma Students start the program in ninth or tenth grade and graduate after the twelfth grade with a full Israeli matriculation certificate bagrut During the first year students follow an intensive Hebrew language program so that they become able to speak read and write in Hebrew The program is fully subsidized by the Israeli government The Na ale scholarship includes fully subsidized tuition free ticket to Israel room and board health insurance trips and extra curricular activities Na ale offers a variety of schools all over Israel from which candidates may choose including secular national religious ultra orthodox kibbutz and urban boarding schools 120 The Jewish Agency is involved in recruitment in the former Soviet Union 15 Students before Parents סטודנטים לפני הורים abbreviated as סל ה SELA Selah a program for young immigrants from the countries of the former Soviet Union aimed at the preparation to the education in Israel bringing young Jews to Israel in hopes that their families follow them 121 The program includes learning Hebrew English mathematics and Jewish history and tradition Jewish and Zionist education outside Israel edit In its mission to strengthen the ties between Israel and worldwide Jewry and to promote Jewish culture and identity the Jewish Agency sends out shlichim or emissaries to Jewish communities across the globe partners with Israel and Diaspora communities and operates and or funds Jewish educational programs It also supports Jewish inclusion and diversity programs 122 Jewish Agency Israel Fellows are Israeli young adults who have completed army service and university study These Campus Shlichim travel for two years university campuses with the goal of empowering student leadership and promoting positive engagement with Israel According to the Jewish Agency the aims of an Israel Fellow are to create an ongoing Israel presence for Jewish students and the broader community partner with student organizations campus study abroad offices Jewish and Israel studies departments local Jewish federations Israeli consulates and Jewish Community Centers and follow through with Taglit Birthright trip alumni via one on one meetings and special programs and events to keep them active and encourage them to continue their Jewish journeys while in college 123 Shlichim Jewish Agency emissaries are active in communal organizations Jewish schools community centers synagogues and youth movements There are also summer Shlichim who serve in Jewish summer camps They serve as a central resource for Israel education in the local community 124 In the 2017 18 program year the Jewish Agency sent 1 388 short term emissaries to summer camps and other programs and around 400 long term emissaries to countries around the world not including the Israel Fellows 15 Programs for Russian speaking Jewry The organization has developed special outreach to Russian Jewry because they have largely been separated from Jewish communities even after the fall of the Soviet Union Only an estimated 20 percent of the 800 000 Jews across former Soviet states are engaged in Jewish life And Russian Jews who have emigrated to other countries have often been separated from Jewish community life The agency runs programs for them in the former Soviet Union Germany Austria and Israel that fall are organized into four areas 1 Camping youth education and counselor training 2 leadership training 3 visits to Israel 4 Focus on facilitation of Aliyah from the former Soviet Union and Germany FSU Summer and Winter Camps introduce young Russian speaking Jews in the former Soviet Union to their Jewish heritage Staffed by trained local counselors and Russian speaking Israeli counselors participants are introduced to Jewish history Jewish customs and practices and Israel The agency organizes counselors to follow up with attendees in year round Jewish educational activities 125 In 2018 some 8 200 participants in the former Soviet Union attended sleepaway camps and 1 487 went to day camps 126 15 Partnership2Gether and the Global School Twinning Network see below The Emergency Assistance Fund provides for physical security improvements such as video surveillance amp CCTV alarms locks gates and reinforced walls doors windows at synagogues Jewish community centers schools and camps so that Jewish communal life can continue in greater safety Jewish institutions outside Israel and North America are eligible for assistance The 2018 allocations totaled around 1 4 million 781 000 to institutions in Europe 423 000 to facilities in Latin America 82 000 to those in the former Soviet Union and 109 000 to the Middle East As of the end of 2018 the fund has allocated over 11 5 million to hundreds of institutions in dozens of countries 15 Aliyah edit The Jewish Agency still brings thousands of Jews to move to Israel each year In 2014 The agency helped a total of nearly 26 500 olim immigrants make Aliyah the highest number in 13 years 127 They noted significant growth in immigration from Ukraine and France 127 The agency continues to support these olim as they integrate into Israeli society Aliyah of Rescue is the Jewish Agency s Aliyah infrastructure that brings Jews suffering persecution or economic distress to Israel 128 The services include covert operations to help Jews move out of Middle Eastern and North African countries with which Israel does not have diplomatic relations 129 Pre Aliyah Services are provided by the Jewish Agency to prospective immigrants around the world Agency shlichim or emissaries give guidance on issues such as education housing health and employment opportunities in Israel For those who do not have an emissary nearby The agency provides assistance online and on the phone through its Global Service Center 130 Additionally The agency is responsible for verifying that each potential immigrant is eligible for Aliyah under Israel s Law of Return and once eligibility is proven for facilitating the receipt of the Aliyah visa via the local Israeli embassy or consulate 131 Absorption Centers around the country offer temporary housing for new immigrants and provide space for Hebrew instruction preparation for life and employment in Israel events activities and cultural presentations 17 of The agency s 22 Absorption Centers cater specifically to Ethiopian olim and provide services tailored to the needs of the Ethiopian community The other five house immigrants from around the world primarily the FSU South America and the Middle East 130 132 Ulpan Intensive Hebrew language programsfor new immigrants include five hours of immersive language instruction five days a week for five months The programs are offered free of charge to all new immigrants Ulpan instructors are certified by the Ministry of Education 133 Centers for Young Adultsprovide ulpan classes accommodations and a range of services to ease absorption for olimages 18 35 These centers include the Ulpan Etzion network for college graduates and young professionals Beit Brodetzky in Tel Aviv and Ulpan Kinneret in Tiberias for high school graduates looking for job or army preparation and Kibbutz Ulpan combining Hebrew instruction with volunteer work on ten different kibbutzim 134 135 It also includes Selah a program for high school graduates from the Former Soviet Union and TAKA which combines ulpanstudies with pre academic preparatory courses for immigrants headed to Israeli colleges who wish to polish their skills 135 136 137 138 Wings encompasses an array of services including practical guidance and personal mentorship for young immigrants who join the IDF as lone soldiers far from their families 135 139 Supporting vulnerable populations in Israel edit The Jewish Agency also helps vulnerable populations in Israel and around the world Youth Futures is a community based initiative for mentoring at risk pre teens and adolescents Each Youth Futures mentor works with 16 at risk children over the course of three years teaching skills for academic improvement and social integration In 2014 15 approximately 350 trained Youth Futures staff members worked with 5 000 children and teens plus 7 000 of their family members in 200 schools in 35 communities in Israel In addition to secular and traditional Jews Youth Futures serves Arab Bedouin Druze and Ultra Orthodox communities 140 141 Youth Villages provide safe cost effective boarding school settings for 850 young people ages 12 to 18 who have severe emotional behavioral and family problems The four Jewish Agency youth villages provide intensive holistic services and help the youths succeed in and complete high school and enter the Israeli army with their peers 142 143 141 Project TEN brings together young Israelis and their Jewish peers from across the globe to work on sustainable projects in developing regions 144 Participants spend three months working in onsite service projects in vulnerable communities Project TEN is a service learning program designed to build participants Jewish identities while they serve others 145 In 2022 Project TEN runs volunteer centers in Winneba Ghana Oaxaca Mexico Gondar Ethiopia Kibbutz Harduf Israel and Mitzpe Ramon 146 147 In 2015 the program involved 200 volunteers around the world 148 Young Activism includes programs that train and support young adult Israeli volunteers who go on to create their own social entrepreneurship projects thus widening the circles of influence 149 The Young Activism programs include a support for Young Communities groups of idealistic young Israelis who commit to settling long term in Israel s high need areas and creating programs that increase local quality of life b Choosing Tomorrow which encourages university students in Israel s outlying areas to create young communities and settle long term in the region c Ketzev which provides extra training and mentoring to some of the young communities to help them build self sustaining social entrepreneurship businesses that provide cultural or educational benefits to customers d Click which provides microgrants to individual volunteers or very small groups to help them launch small scale local projects e The Young Adults Hub in Arad where dozens of Israelis and Diaspora Jews receive subsidized housing in exchange for their volunteer activities for the city 150 151 152 153 154 Net gives high performing teenagers an opportunity to rise above their families socio economic backgrounds by training them for four years in marketable computer skills leading to certification as computer and network technicians through Cisco Systems The program is in addition to the participants high school course load and also increases their English comprehension skills 92 In 2014 around 1 100 teens participated in the program and another 400 children participated in Net Junior 155 156 Loan funds assist entrepreneurs and business owners in Israel to open or expand their businesses through loans with highly attractive conditions as well as comprehensive business guidance The Jewish Agency acts as a partial guarantor for the loans to support those businesses that otherwise would have a difficult time qualifying for loans or presenting the necessary collateral for them 157 The various funds have different eligibility criteria with some focusing on stimulating the economy in specific regions of Israel and others focusing on specific populations of business owners such as Israeli Arabs Ethiopian Israelis immigrants etc 158 The Fund for Victims of Terror provides two forms of financial assistance to those who have been wounded or had family members killed in a terrorist attack or war against Israel It provides immediate assistance in the 24 48 hours after the attack and it provides subsidies for long term rehabilitation needs 159 In 2014 the fund provided emergency grants to 120 families impacted by Operation Protective Edge and more than 1 million shekels around 250 000 according to the exchange rate at the time to 80 families with long term effects from Operation Pillar of Defense citation needed Amigour 160 is a Jewish Agency subsidiary that provides housing for Israel s elderly In 2014 it operated 57 facilities that housed 7 500 seniors mainly Holocaust survivors Additionally it operates 13 000 public housing apartments that provide government subsidized housing to 40 000 single parent families elderly and new immigrants 141 161 Services for Israeli Arabs and minorities editAs part of its efforts to strengthen Israeli society 162 and to support vulnerable populations in Israel the Jewish Agency has for many years supported or operated programs that encourage co existence between Israeli Jews and Israeli Arabs and programs designed specifically to serve Israel s non Jewish citizens and they continue to create new ones 163 Some of the programs nbsp The Arab city of Umm al Fahm in northern IsraelYouth Futures the mentorship program for middle school students 164 is active in 36 locations around Israel Some localities served by Youth Futures are Jewish while others are mixed and in recent years the Jewish Agency has begun to serve children and families living in completely non Jewish locales East Jerusalem 100 Arab participants Tel Aviv Yafo 32 of participants are Arab Acco and Matte Asher 34 Lod 57 Arab Bedouin Horfeish 100 Druze and El Kassum 100 Bedouin 163 Choosing Tomorrow one of The agency s Young Activism social entrepreneurship training programs includes three groups of Arab university and college students total 40 students who are being trained to create their own social welfare programs that will specifically benefit their local Arab communities These groups are in Be er Sheva the Jezre el Valley and a group at the Alkassemy Arab College Additionally Choosing Tomorrow groups in the Negev work to improve medical services to the Bedouin population by teaching Arabic to local doctors and helping them understand and connect with Bedouin culture 163 165 166 Neve Midbar is a boarding school that develops leadership among teenage Bedouin boys Net is a program supported by the Jewish Agency 167 In its chapters in Ramle Nazareth Acre Jerusalem and Tel Aviv Yafo Jewish and Arab teenagers study computers together volunteer in community computer labs together and serve as mentors together to junior high school participants In addition Net has all Arab chapters in Umm Al Fahm Yirka and Tira 25 of all counselors in Net are Israeli Arab 163 nbsp Druze Israeli soldiers of the Herev Battalion also known as the IDF Minorities UnitAcharai Pre Army Academy Mechinah includes a mixed Jewish Druze group and a mixed Jewish Christian group in which soon to be enlisted young Israelis of both religions work together to volunteer promote co existence and prepare for their IDF service 163 168 169 Atidim is a national Israeli program provides scholarships and educational activities to gifted students funded in part by the Jewish Agency 170 Most programs serve both Jewish and non Jewish students and there are some programs dedicated specifically to the Arab sector All told in 2014 Atidim programs included more than 2 340 non Jewish participants including Druze Bedouin Arabs and other non Jewish Israelis Additionally the alumni association includes hundreds of Arab Druze and Bedouin graduates 163 Jewish Agency scholarship funds benefit Arab recipients as well as Jewish ones 163 Jewish Agency loan funds often help Israeli Arab small business owners to receive bank loans at favorable rates The nine different funds act as guarantors One of the funds specifically aims to assist small business owners who are Arab ultra Orthodox female Ethiopian or immigrants 171 Strategic plans edit2010 edit At the February 2010 Board of Governors meeting Natan Sharansky announced a shift in the priorities of the Jewish Agency from Aliyah to strengthening Jewish identity for young adults around the world 172 From 1948 until 2009 the Jewish Agency was organized into departments the Aliyah and Absorption department which was responsible for the immigration and integration of Jews coming to Israel the Education department which worked to deepen the connection of Jews worldwide to Israel and the Israel department which focused on improving the lives of socio economically vulnerable Israelis 173 A fourth department for Agriculture and Settlement had been in operation starting in 1948 but had closed long before 2009 In order to increase efficiency the Jewish Agency under the leadership of its new chairman of the executive Natan Sharansky decided to restructure the organization 174 175 Along with the organizational restructuring came a new focus As the first decade of the 21st century came to a close The agency noted that most of global Jewry was now located in democratic stable societies that were relatively friendly to Jewish residents 176 177 As Aliyah of Rescue became urgent for decreasing numbers of Jews new challenges were arising for world Jewry most notably Agency leaders remarked the need to engage young Jews in Jewish culture and to help Israeli Jews and those who live outside Israel to understand each other and feel connected to what they call the global Jewish family 176 178 While continuing Aliyah of Rescue operations The agency decided to focus its primary energies on fostering a strong relationship between world Jewry and Israel and on encouraging Aliyah based on a love for the country what it calls Aliyah of Choice 179 Its main vehicle for doing so would be to bring Jews from around the world to Israel on short and long term tourist programs to allow them to get to know the country and to give Israelis the opportunity to get to know them and vice versa 180 Parallel to these efforts The agency decided to increase its investment in strengthening Jewish communities around the globe Its goals would be to grow local Jewish leadership to strengthen Jewish identity and to deepen the connection of communities worldwide to Israel and to the Jewish people as a whole 181 2019 edit At the October 2019 board of governors meeting which marked the 90th anniversary of the organization the board passed a decision to somewhat shift the Jewish Agency s areas of focus in response to new critical challenges that had arisen for the Jewish people Its renewed mission moving into its tenth decade focuses on three areas 182 Continuing to promote Aliyah and ensure Jewish safety continuing to facilitate both Aliyah of Rescue and Aliyah of Choice working with other organizations and communities in a common struggle against anti Semitism and delegitimization of Israel Connecting Jews worldwide to one another and to Israel bridging the diversity of identities interests and religious streams in the Jewish world developing global Jewish leadership Advocacy and impact on behalf of world Jewry in Israel bringing the diversity of voices in the Jewish world to Israeli policy makers and Israeli society at large helping the Israeli public understand the diversity of Jewish life while building a personal commitment to the Jewish People as a whole developing a new paradigm for the involvement of world Jewry in Israeli society Awards and recognition editOn May 8 2008 at the Israeli government s 60th Independence Day celebration the Jewish Agency for Israel was awarded the Israel Prize for lifetime achievement amp special contribution to society and the State of Israel 183 184 nbsp Jewish Agency headquarters in JerusalemSee also editList of Israel Prize recipients Nefesh B NefeshReferences edit Jewish Agency for Israel Mission Guidestar Jewish Agency Leadership The Jewish Agency for Israel Board of Governors Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved June 17 2018 a b c d e Form 990 Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax Jewish Agency for Israel Guidestar December 31 2017 Jewish Agency for Palestine Encyclopedia com encyclopedia com Retrieved May 6 2022 2018 Jewish Agency Performance Report The Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved October 23 2019 Jewish Agency Aliyah Jewish Agency Retrieved September 15 2014 Jewish Agency Aliyah Statistics The Jewish Agency for Israel Archived from the original on November 20 2014 Retrieved August 12 2013 Jewish Agency Aliyah 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original on November 3 2014 Retrieved March 28 2016 We are There 2014 15 Performance Report The Jewish Agency p 29 Retrieved March 28 2016 Young Activism Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 Ketzev Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 Young Communities Social Pioneers Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 Choosing Tomorrow Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 Click Supporting Social Initiatives Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 Hamitham Arad Young Adults Social Hub Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 We are There 2014 15 Performance Report Jewish Agency for Israel p 39 Retrieved March 28 2016 Net Program Appleseeds Academy Archived from the original on April 2 2016 Retrieved March 28 2016 Small Business Loan Funds The Jewish Agency Our Loan Funds Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 Fund for the Victims of Terror Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 Sheltered Housing for Israel s Elderly and Holocaust Survivors Amigour www amigour com Amigour Subsidized Housing in Israel Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved March 28 2016 About Us The Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 a b c d e f g The Jewish Agency for Israel Social Activism Unit Our Work With Minorities pamphlet distributed at Board of Governors meetings October 2015 Youth Futures Mentoring for At Risk Children Jewish Agency for Israel Archived from the original on October 24 2014 Retrieved April 11 2016 Choosing Tomorrow Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 Young Activism Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 Net Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 Mechinot Post High School Service Learning Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 Aharai B Ir Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 Atidim Enrichment Programs for Gifted Students Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 Small Business Loan Funds Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved April 11 2016 Blog Post on eJewish Philanthropy Ejewishphilanthropy com March 4 2010 Retrieved June 20 2010 Pfeffer Anshel March 20 2008 Jewish Agency mulls closing its historic immigration department Haaretz Retrieved October 1 2013 Lev David March 7 2011 Jewish Agency We re Aiming Higher With New Aliyah Plan Israel National News Retrieved October 1 2013 Ahren Raphael October 22 2010 Jewish Agency set to vote next week to radically restructure organization Haaretz Retrieved October 1 2013 a b Rettig Gur Haviv June 21 2010 Jewish Agency to change focus Jerusalem Post Retrieved October 1 2013 DellaPergola Sergio 2011 Jewish demographic Policies Population Trends and Options in Israel and in the Diaspora PDF Jewish People Policy Institute Retrieved August 12 2013 The Jewish Agency About Us Retrieved October 1 2013 Jewish Agency to change focus The Jerusalem Post Retrieved August 29 2013 Rettig Gur Haviv June 24 2010 Jewish Agency approves new mission The Jerusalem Post Retrieved August 12 2013 The New Jewish Agency Approach Peoplehood for Survival eJewish Philanthropy March 4 2010 Retrieved August 12 2013 Jewish Agency Narrative November 2019 Document provided by the Jewish Agency for Israel s Unit for Strategy amp Content Israel Prize Official Site in Hebrew Recipient s C V Israel Prize Official Site in Hebrew Judges Rationale for Grant to Recipient External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jewish Agency for Israel Official Jewish Agency Website The Jewish Agency for Israel The Jewish Agency for Israel JewishAgency Twitter הסוכנות היהודית לארץ ישראל Taglit Birthright Official Website Onward Israel Archived September 30 2017 at the Wayback Machine Official Website MyIsraelSummer Archived January 6 2014 at the Wayback Machine Official Website Jewish Agency portal Project Ten Official Website Program is a Jewish Agency initiative Partnership2Gether Archived October 8 2013 at the Wayback Machine Official Website Connect Israel Jewish Agency program Makom creates Jewish Agency educational content Jewish People Policy Planning Institute Official Website The Central Zionist Archives in Jerusalem Collections of the Jewish Agency for Israel Masa Israel Journey Official Website Israel Tech Challenge Archived April 13 2018 at the Wayback Machine Official Website Net a program of the Jewish Agency Cisco and Appleseeds Academy Amigour Jewish Agency subsidiary Naale Elite Academy High Schools in Israel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish Agency for Israel amp oldid 1184440356, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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