For thousands of Jews, Israel still doesn't feel safe after the Oct. 7
attacks. So they're leaving
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[December 20, 2024]
By LAURIE KELLMAN
LONDON (AP) — Leaving Israel is easier, Shira Z. Carmel thinks, by
saying it's just for now. But she knows better.
For the Israeli-born singer and an increasing number of relatively
well-off Israelis, the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack shattered any sense of
safety and along with it, Israel's founding promise: to be the world's
safe haven for Jews. That day, thousands of Hamas militants blew past
the country's border defenses, killed 1,200 Israelis and dragged 250
more into Gaza in a siege that caught the Israeli army by surprise and
stunned a nation that prides itself on military prowess. This time,
during what became known as Israel's 9/11, the army didn't come for
hours.
Ten days later, a pregnant Carmel, her husband and their toddler boarded
a flight to Australia, which was looking for people in her husband's
profession. And they spun the explanation to friends and family as
something other than permanent — “relocation" is the easier-to-swallow
term — acutely aware of the familial strain and the shame that have
shadowed Israelis who leave for good.
“We told them we're going to get out of the line of fire for awhile,”
Carmel said more than a year later from her family's new home in
Melbourne. “It wasn't a hard decision. But it was very hard to talk to
them about it. It was even hard to admit it to ourselves."
Thousands of Israelis have left the country since Oct. 7, 2023,
according to government statistics and immigration tallies released by
destination countries such as Canada and Germany. There's concern about
whether it will drive a “brain drain” in sectors like medicine and tech.
Migration experts say it's possible people leaving Israel will surpass
the number of immigrants to Israel in 2024, according to Sergio
DellaPergola, a statistician and professor emeritus of Hebrew University
in Jerusalem.
Thousands of Israelis have opted to pay the financial, emotional and
social costs of moving out since the Oct. 7 attack, according to
government statistics and families who spoke to The Associated Press in
recent months after emigrating to Canada, Spain and Australia.
Israel's population continues to grow toward 10 million people. But it's
possible that 2024 ends with more Israelis leaving the country than
coming in. That's even as Israel and Hezbollah reached a fragile
ceasefire along the border with Lebanon and Israel and Hamas inch toward
a pause in Gaza.
Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics estimated in September that 40,600
Israelis departed long-term over the first seven months of 2024, a 59%
increase over the same period a year earlier, when 25,500 people left.
Monthly, 2,200 more people departed this year than in 2023, CBS
reported.
The Israeli Ministry of Immigration and Absorption, which does not deal
with people leaving, said more than 33,000 people have moved to Israel
since the start of the war, about on par with previous years. The
interior minister refused to comment for this story, a spokesperson
said.
Other clues, too, point to a notable departure of Israelis since the
Oct. 7 attacks. Gil Fire, deputy director of Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical
Center, said that some of its star specialists with fellowship postings
of a few years in other countries began to waver about returning.
“Before the war, they always came back and it was not really considered
an option to stay. And during the war we started to see a change,” he
said. “They said to us, ‘We will stay another year, maybe two years,
maybe more.’”
Fire says it’s “an issue of concern” enough for him to plan in-person
visits with these doctors to try to draw them back to Israel.
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Michal Harel and her husband Avital Epstein show the website they
set up to help Israelis navigate a move to Canada in Oakville,
Ontario, Canada, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Rob Gillies)
Michal Harel, who moved with her husband to Toronto in 2019, said
that almost immediately after the attacks the phone began ringing —
with other Israelis seeking advice about moving to Canada. On Nov.
23, 2023, the couple set up a website to help Israelis navigate
moving, which can cost at least 100,000 Israeli shekels, or about
$28,000, Harel and other Israeli relocation experts said.
Not everyone in Israel can just pack up and move overseas. Many of
those who have made the move have foreign passports, jobs at
multinational corporations or can work remotely. People in Gaza,
where local health officials say more than 45,000 people have been
killed, have even less choice. Harel reported that the site has
received views from 100,000 unique visitors and 5,000 direct
contacts in 2024 alone.
Aliya — the Hebrew term for immigration, literally the “ascent” of
Jews into Israel — has always been part of the country's plan. But
“yerida” — the term used for leaving the country, literally the
“descent” of Jews from Israel to the diaspora, emphatically has not.
A sacred trust and a social contract took root in Israeli society.
The terms go — or went — like this: Israeli citizens would serve in
the military and pay high taxes. In exchange, the army would keep
them safe. Meanwhile, it’s every Jew’s obligation to stay, work and
fight for Israel’s survival.
“Emigration was a threat, especially in the early years (when) there
were problems of nation-building,” said Ori Yehudai, a professor of
Israel studies at Ohio State University and the author of “Leaving
Zion,” a history of Israeli emigration. “People still feel they have
to justify their decision to move.”
Shira Carmel says she has no doubt about her decision. She'd long
objected to Netanyahu's government's efforts to overhaul the legal
system, and was one of the first women to don the blood-red
"Handmaid's Tale" robes that became a fixture of the the
anti-government protests of 2023. She was terrified as a new mom,
and a pregnant one, during the Hamas attack. This was not the life
she wanted.
Meanwhile, Australia beckoned. Carmel's brother had lived there for
two decades. The couple had the equivalent of a green card due to
Carmel's husband's profession. Basic logic, she says, pointed toward
moving. They were able to catch a free flight out on seven hours'
notice.
And yet.
Carmel recalls the frenzied hours before the flight out in which she
said to her husband in the privacy of their bedroom: “My God, are we
really doing this?”
They decided not to decide. They packed lightly. But weeks in
Australia became months, and the couple decided to have the baby
there. They told their families back in Israel that they were
staying “for now.”
“We don't define it as ‘forever,’" Carmel said on Tuesday. “But we
are for sure staying for the foreseeable future.”
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