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Opinion

Youth Aliyah is still needed today

February 15, 2014 12:42
3 min read

On Monday January 30, 1933, a cold winter’s day in Berlin, the same day that Adolf Hitler took power, Youth Aliyah was founded by a unrelenting woman in her early 40s, Recha Freier, who recognised the need to act in order to save young German Jews from the abuse and hatred of Nazi Germany.

In the six years leading up to World War II, over 5,000 Jewish children were rescued from the horrors of the Holocaust and brought to Israel or to Britain on the Kindertransport.

At the end of the war more than 15,000 surviving children were brought over to Palestine. Amid the olive groves and the orange trees planted by the Youth Aliyah pioneers, these once-abandoned children were given a home and vocational training in one of the organisation’s youth villages. In the years that followed, the charity would go on to help countless young people in distress around the globe find new hope and new opportunity in the land of Israel.

Yet although our history reads like a work of fiction, almost too remarkable to be real life, we have been using the opportunity of our 80th anniversary to highlight the way that our work has evolved into a fundamental strand of Israel’s social services.

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