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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

ByShoshanna Keats Jaskoll, Shoshanna Jaskoll

Opinion

Home should be a place to go to not run from

The current African migrant issue in Israel is complex - especially given Jews' long history of migration and immigration

January 26, 2018 11:44
African migrants protest in front of the UNHCR office demanding asylum and work rights from the Israeli government in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2014. (Photo AP)
3 min read

Jews have been refugees more than any other people in history. Exiled from their homeland of Israel twice, cast out from countries such as England, France, Spain, and Portugal, forced to flee persecution from Poland, Germany, Iraq, Russia, Morocco, Yemen, and Syria, and more, we have a long history of migration and immigration.

It is this familiarity with exile and flight from persecution — and the fact that the modern state of Israel was established as a safe home for Jews — that makes the current migrant issue in Israel so complex.

Over the past decade, tens of thousands of Africans have entered Israel illegally via the once-porous border with Egypt. A border fence has stopped the migration but, according to the African Refugee Development Centre, some 46,437 Africans in Israel consider themselves asylum seekers. Seventy-three per cent are from Eritrea and approximately 19 per cent are from Sudan.

The majority live in South Tel Aviv in long-neglected areas. Many work as janitors, cooks or labourers. For the Israelis who live in the same neighbourhood, the area’s large concentration of migrants has become a nightmare. Parks have become migrant hangouts, crime has risen, and residents feel unsafe.