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ETHIOPIAN JEWS ARE TREATED LIKE 2nd CLASS CITIZENS IN ISRAEL

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TEL AVIV - The ancient hymns brought tears to the eyes of Solomon Ayeli, as well as memories of his native Ethiopia which he left two decades ago for Israel a country he loves but where he often feels rejected.
  • "There should be no differences between black Jews and white Jews," said Ayeli, 29, who was among 15,000 people who this week celebrated the Ethiopian-Jewish Sigd prostration festival in Jerusalem.
  • "We want to be fully fledged Israelis," he said, as priests intoned prayers in Ethiopia's ancient scriptural language Geez. "We want to fully belong to Israeli society which often rejects us."
  • In spite of everything, Ayeli, like many members of the Ethiopian Jewish community are known as Beta Israel says his journey to the Holy Land (Palestine and Israel) was the fulfilment of a dream. "Living here is an exceptional opportunity." But the cost was high.
  • "I lost 10 family members in the desert, on the way to Israel," says Ayeli who had to walk for days through Sudan on his way to Israel when he was 10-years-old.
  • The Beta Israel were only recognised as Jews by Israel's two chief rabbis in 1975.
  • The recognition was crucial, as Aliyah the Israeli law of return allows any Jew to settle in Israel and get citizenship.
  • Israel airlifted in 35,000 Ethiopian Jews under Operation Moses in 1984, at the height of a killer famine in the Horn of Africa, and during the 1991 Operation Solomon.
  • Today, there are more than 120,000 Ethiopian Jews in Israel, 80,000 of whom were born in Africa.
  • Many feel they are still treated like second-class citizens.
  • A recent study showed that 53 percent of employers preferred not to hire Ethiopians, who nevertheless still fared better than Arabs with an 83 percent rejection rate.
  • Israel has often come under international criticism for ‘racism’ and mistreatment of its non-Jewish Arab minority, who are the original inhabitants of the land and today make up one fifth of its total population.
  • The study also found that 70 percent of employers tended not to promote Ethiopians.
  • Israel's Association for Civil Rights says employment rates within the Ethiopian community were 10 percent lower than for the rest of the population last year.
  • Official figures show that 2008 high school completion was only 36 percent among students of Ethiopian origin as compared with 55 percent for other Israelis.
  • In September, ultra-Orthodox schools in Petah Tikva, near Tel Aviv, caused a public uproar when they initially refused to accept children of Ethiopian descent, although they eventually accepted some of the applicants.
Source:Middle East Online
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