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This year in Jerusalem

Fifty-two immigrants from the UK landed in Tel Aviv this week. Anshel Pfeffer was on the plane

July 16, 2009 10:28
The Berenblut family at Ben Gurion Airport this week. They believe Israel will offer them a better, safer lifestyle than they had in London

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

5 min read

The 52 new Israeli immigrants who arrived at Ben Gurion Airport on Monday night began their journey to Zion in typical fashion, with an 80-minute delay on the runway at Heathrow. They took it in their stride, some even clapping when the plane finally landed in Tel Aviv though, on the whole, they were remarkably sober and quiet throughout the flight and immigration process.

There was a bit of singing and dancing as they waited for the bus to take them to the Immigration Ministry offices in the old terminal building, but that was mainly the French families. Minutes before receiving their new citizenship, the English clung to their customs, even letting the French go through first into the cramped booths to get their aliyah certificates. English? Well, not entirely — there were a fair number of Scottish accents among the contingent organised by the aliyah organisation Nefesh b’Nefesh. Someone even unfurled a saltire before boarding the bus, a last nostalgic gesture of national pride.

These 52 olim, the first major group to arrive this summer, are part of an all-time record year for aliyah from Britain, with over 800 expected by December. So who are the 2009 British olim? As always, there is a large number of young couples, usually religious, taking the plunge with their children, and of course the older couples who, after a long career, leave their empty nest to fulfil a long-cherished dream to live out their retirement in Israel.

But according to Danny Oberman, Nefesh b’Nefesh’s vice-president of Israel operations, “the trends in aliyah, both from Britain and North America, are increasingly moving towards more secular olim and a lot more singles”.

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