Showing posts with label French Jews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label French Jews. Show all posts

Monday, June 15, 2015

Terror Attacks Unites Israel and French Christians

Corinne Lafitte - worship leader

Terror Attacks Unites Israel and French Christians



JERUSALEM, Israel -- France is the least evangelized country in Europe, and some Christians believe the recent terror attacks there could lead to a change.

Part of that is because of a growing connection between Israel and French Christians.

French worship leader Corinne Lafitte recently helped bring nearly 500 Evangelicals, Protestants, and Catholics together to bless the Jewish people.

"To tell them we love them. We are with them. We'll do everything to sustain them and to help them, whatever is the situation in France," Lafitte told conference participants from the podium.

While pro-Israel Christians have been holding conferences in Israel for decades, this was the first time French Christians gathered as a group in Jerusalem to support the Jewish state.

Pastor Carlos Payan believes coming to Jerusalem will be particularly good for this group of Christians.

"We live in time that we have not prepared, but God has prepared that time for us," Payan told CBN News. "We'll receive also healing by coming here to Jerusalem."

A major event happened earlier this year when Islamic fundamentalists carried out terror attacks in France, one in a kosher supermarket in Paris where they gunned down four French Jews.

Payan said Jewish-Christian relations improved after that tragic incident.

"French Jews know that many Christians, not only Evangelicals, but Catholics and Protestants are friends with Israel," he said.

Lafitte explained that Jews in France are going through a particularly hard time.

"Well the situation is really terrible," she told CBN News. "We live in a little Jewish quarter and we see people spitting on Jews -- things like that -- happening."

Last year, some 7,000 French Jews immigrated to Israel, the most from any nation, and this year more are expected.



While the Israel event was planned long before the terror attacks, French-Israeli Pastor Tony Sperandeo said it's a wake-up call for the Church.

"The Church is the light. They should not expect the government to do anything," Sperandeo told CBN News.

"They should stand and believe and trust the word of God and stand with the principle that they know, to love Israel, as the scripture says: I will bless Israel. I will bless those who bless Israel, I [will] curse those who curse Israel," he said.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Gathering Israel from the nations - update on journey to France (Richard and Carolyn Hyde from Heart of G-d Ministries)

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Thus says the L-rd G-d, "When I gather the house of Israel from the peoples among whom they are scattered, and will manifest My holiness in them in the sight of the nations, then they will live in their Land which I gave to my servant Jacob.  Ezekiel 28:25
Dear Friends and Prayer Partners, 
 
France 6
In our last update we spoke of the dream Carolyn had about us going to France to encourage the French Jews to come home. This dream was in November, two months before the atrocities took place at Charlie Hebdo and the kosher supermarket in Paris. The occupant of the White House characterized the attack as vicious zealots randomly killing some folks in a grocery store but we all know it was Islamic Jihadists targeting Jews, for the simple fact that they are Jews.  

G-d knew in November, before the tragedy in January, what the state of mind of the Jewish people would be afterwards.  He knew they would be desperate to hear that there is a safe place to come, a place where Jews can worship freely, where they don't have to worry about being attacked as they're walking down the street wearing a kippa.   
Click here for a video depicting what a journalist experienced in Paris. 

We spoke to so many Jewish people about making Aliyah that we lost count of the number.  On the streets, one by one, we spoke to Jews in Paris and Strasbourg.  
France 3
How did we speak to them since we didn't speak French, you may ask?  Most of the Jews in the big cities speak Hebrew!  How did we know where the Jews were?  We looked for places where French military troops were guarding and we would be sure to find a synagogue, a Jewish school or a day center!  


Here are some of the responses we received as we were on the street:

Everyone thinks about Aliyah now!
It's very clear that we can't stay here much longer.
We already made Aliyah but it was hard to find work so we returned to France.
Yes, but my family wants me to stay here.
It's very dangerous here.  Yes, we're leaving.
I'm already Israeli but my kids are French and they want to stay here.
Every day my muslim neighbors call me a dirty Jew but it's the same in Israel!
A shop owner allowed us to leave the flyers in her store window and as we were leaving, a young man walked in from the street and went directly to get a flyer!
Yes, my whole family is now plannning on making Aliyah.
We wandered into a cafe in the Jewish Quarter that hosts musicians.  They gave me permission to play their piano and after I finished, the owners asked me to return for a gig!  We left flyers there and in many other Jewish cafes, bookstores, delis, bakeries and even in the laundromat!

France 5Praise the L-rd that He fulfilled every aspect of the dream He gave last November.  We also shared in many churches in France and French-speaking areas of Switzerland and Germany, thus raising up many wonderful believers who are called to be fishermen according to Jeremiah 16:16.  

France 7We had a special encounter with Philippe Karsenty, deputy mayor of Neuilly (and the founder of Media Ratings in Paris.  He speaks often in America and we highly recommend that you invite him to come and share.  Click here for an interview with this hero for truth in the media! 
Masin soup kitchen
Leon and Nina Masin
"We really enjoyed the Russian booklets that we received a year ago.  Beautiful and simple!  Do you have more?  Through our newly opened humanitarian aid center, we are in contact with many new immigrants and there is a constant need for quality material to hand out.  I particularly like your booklet and would like to ask for another 500 copies."  
Plans for spring and summer
We feel called to return to France and neighboring countries this summer and perhaps America, so thank you for prayerfully considering an invitation to your congregation to help us raise up more fishermen who will help our people come home to Israel.  
Living Stones visit from Canada
Ariel, Shayla and family
Living Stones Experience
Come for worship, Israeli dancing, sharing & dinner in our Galilee home!
Our new worship CD
Recently remastered by Eli Ben Moshe at Future Vision Studios
Ariel and Shayla Hyde are speaking in the US next month!  If you'd like to invite them to your church, write to:  arielandshayla@gmail.com
Thank you for standing with us as we reach the lost with the love of our Messiah Yeshua!
Blessings in Yeshua's love,
Richard & Carolyn Hyde
PO Box 112, Poriya Kfar Avoda  15220  Israel
PO Box 461546, San Antonio, TX  78246  USA

 Deep Calls cover with text The Latter Rain CD cover Fine Linen cover He Will Appear cover
"Last night I was listening to 'HaAretz' before going to sleep and its lilting tune remained in my head until morning when I played it for my daughter who agreed that it's a beautiful song.  I just wanted you to know and be encouraged that your music continues to inspire and give glory to the L-rd!"
     
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We write L-rd and G-d in this way because it's a Jewish custom that Carolyn grew up with and it's done only out of reverence and honor for the name of the L-rd.  Thanks for understanding. 
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Thursday, February 12, 2015

Israeli Minister Seeks Funds for New Immigrants

Israeli Minister Seeks Funds for New Immigrants

AP file photo
JERUSALEM, Israel -- With increasing numbers of Ukrainian, French and other European Jews immigrating to Israel, the government is considering a variety of programs to help them with the process.
 
Israeli Immigration and Absorption Minister Sofa Landver is asking for an additional 600 million shekels over the next two years to prepare Jewish families for successful absorption into Israeli life, The Jerusalem Post reported Wednesday.
 
Aliyah (immigration to Israel under the Law of Return) is a complex process, which includes, among other things, learning to read, write and speak Hebrew, not just in the synagogue, but as an integral part of daily life. 
 
Landver wants to work with the Education Ministry to help potential immigrants hone their Hebrew skills abroad as they plan their aliyah. While many Jews have a basic knowledge of Hebrew, learning to communicate on all levels is a whole different challenge.
 
In addition to studying Hebrew, the government wants to facilitate reestablishing businesses and help people use the education, skills and work experience they bring with them to build new lives in the Jewish state.  
 
New immigrants have always needed lots of support for successful absorption into Israeli life, and Landver and others are exploring new ways to help them in the process.
 
The French aliyah led in 2014, with nearly 7,000 French Jews making a new start in Israel. Close to 6,000 Ukrainian Jews immigrated last year, a 190 percent increase from 2013.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

French 'Aliyah' Leads the World

French 'Aliyah' Leads the World

JERUSALEM, Israel -- Rising anti-Semitism in France is spurring many of the country's Jewish residents to immigrate to Israel.
 
Today, French Jews are leading the rest of the world in aliyah -- immigration to Israel under the Law of Return -- the Jewish Agency in France reports.
 
"France is today the leading country for Jewish emigration to Israel," Ariel Kandel, head of the Jewish Agency's French office, said. "We will get close to 6,000 departures from France in 2014."
 
By August 31, Israel's Ministry of Immigration Absorption showed 4,566 French Jews have immigrated to Israel since the beginning of the year.
 
France is home to the largest Muslim population in Europe, estimated at around 5 million. The IDF's 50-day operation against Hamas rocket fire sparked widespread anti-Israel rioting in July. The phenomenon, which is not new in France, has many French Jews deciding it's no longer a safe place to live and raise children.
 
On August 22, two teenage Muslim girls were indicted for conspiracy to commit terrorism, Arutz Sheva quoted a Newsweek report. 
 
According to the report, the teens, aged 15 and 17, from two different cities, communicated via social media. The girls were arrested after the Central Directorate of Homeland Intelligence, France's equivalent of Israel's Shin Bet, revealed a plot to carry out a suicide bombing at the Great Synagogue of Lyon. 
 
In 2012, a rabbi and three children were gunned down by Mohammed Merah at a Jewish day school in Toulouse. 
 
The French Jewish community, down from 600,000 to 500,000, is one of the largest in the world, next to the U.S.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

French anti-Semitism and French Aliyah Skyrocket on Parallel Tracks

French anti-Semitism and French Aliyah Skyrocket on Parallel Tracks


“In peace I will both lie down and sleep; for you alone, O Lord, make me dwell in safety.” (Psalm 4:8)
An aliyah information fair in central Paris on March 30. (Photo: Alain Azria)
An aliyah information fair in central Paris on March 30. (Photo: Alain Azria)
By Josh Hasten/JNS.org
Against the backdrop of studies revealing rising anti-Semitism both in France and across all of Europe, as well as one particularly brutal attack in Paris last month, French Jews are flocking to Israel.
On March 30, the Jewish Agency for Israel released figures showing that aliyah from France increased dramatically over the first two months of 2014. In January and February alone, 854 French olim (immigrants) arrived in Israel, compared to 274 over the same period last year, representing a 312-percent increase.
Shay Felber—the Jewish Agency’s deputy director-general for community services and resident expert on France, who made aliyah from France with his parents in the 1970s—cites three main reasons for the current trend. Two are anti-Semitism and the difficult economic situation in France. But from a more positive perspective, the high level of Jewish education and Zionistic identity prevalent in the French Jewish community is also leading to an upswing in immigration to Israel, Felber tells JNS.org.
Pictured is David (identified only by his first name), a 59-year-old Jewish teacher who was severely beaten in Paris last month. The attackers drew a swastika on David's chest. (Photo: David via The Algemeiner)
Pictured is David (identified only by his first name), a 59-year-old Jewish teacher who was severely beaten in Paris last month. The attackers drew a swastika on David’s chest. (Photo: David via The Algemeiner)
In Paris during March, a 59-year-old Jewish teacher was subjected to anti-Semitic slurs and then severely beaten by a group of young men identified as being “Maghreb.” The men proceeded to draw a swastika on the chest of their victim with a marker, and vowed they would return to finish the job. No arrests have been made yet for that attack.
Felber believes that the current rise in anti-Semitic incidents and attacks in France is a direct result of the situation on “the street,” with many of the episodes being perpetrated by local Arabs and Muslims. Yet Felber stresses that the anti-Jewish sentiment is not French government policy, but that the government “is trying very hard to combat” anti-Semitism.
One recent study that reveals the worrisome realities for French Jewry is the 2013 report on anti-Semitism in France compiled by SPCJ, the security unit of France’s Jewish communities. According to the report, 423 anti-Semitic acts were recorded in the country in 2013 alone. The research also indicates that last year, 40 percent of all racist violence perpetrated in France targeted Jews. The report amplifies the ramifications of that statistic by explaining the trend from a proportionality perspective.
“Since Jews represent less than one percent of the French population, what this shows is that less than one percent of French citizens were the target of 40 percent of racist attacks perpetrated in the country,” says the report.
The document also states, “Since the year 2000—and for 14 consecutive years—the number of anti-Semitic acts in France has been very high, about seven times higher than numbers recorded in the 1990s. During this period, six people were murdered because they were Jewish, including three young children.
The report concludes that anti-Semitism in France “cannot be considered anymore as a temporary situation associated with the situation in the Middle-East; it is a structural problem that has not been fought as such and has not been halted yet.”
While many French Jews are moving to Israel to escape their situation at home, Israeli tourists are known to travel frequently throughout Europe—often ignoring the situation on the ground in hopes of having an enjoyable vacation.
Gideon Behar, director of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Department for Combating Anti-Semitism, tells JNS.org that while he is “concerned about the rising anti-Semitism in Europe, and it is something we are following very closely,” his office has not issued any travel advisories or warnings for France or any other European Union countries leading up to the current robust Passover holiday travel season.
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Mark Feldman—CEO of Zion Tours, a leading Jerusalem-based travel company—concurs that there is “no direct guidance for traveling to France” at this time. He says his company sends many Israeli travelers on vacation to places like Morocco, and that to “avoid speaking Hebrew, don’t be overly loud, [and] walk in numbers are what we would advise clients traveling to many cities throughout the world [to do], and not just [in] France.”
Regarding aliyah—not only from France, but from Europe in general—being a result of rising anti-Semitism, Behar cites the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) November 2013 study. That study was based on a survey given to 5,847 Jews from EU member states, asking them about their own experiences and perceptions of discrimination, hate crime, and anti-Semitism.
Two-thirds of FRA respondents (66 percent) consider anti-Semitism to be a problem across the EU member states surveyed, while three-quarters of the respondents (76 percent) indicate that anti-Semitism has worsened over the past five years in the country where they live. Almost half (46 percent) of the respondents worry about becoming the victim of an anti-Semitic verbal insult or harassment in the next 12 months, while one-third (33 percent) fear a physical attack in the same period.
In the 12 months before the survey, 26 percent of all respondents reported experiencing an incident or multiple incidents involving verbal insult or harassment because they were Jewish, and 4 percent experienced physical violence or threats of violence. Seventy-five percent of respondents consider online anti-Semitism to be a problem in their country of residence, and almost three-quarters (73 percent) said that online anti-Semitism has increased over the last five years.
The Jewish Agency, meanwhile, recently unveiled a new government plan to encourage aliyah from France. Along with the Israeli Ministry of Aliyah and Immigrant Absorption, the initiative is boosting the number of Jewish Agency shlichim (emissaries) in France, increasing marketing efforts, developing new immigrant absorption programs, and establishing a special committee headed by the director-general of the Prime Minister’s Office to remove obstacles to French aliyah.
The proposal also sets clear benchmarks for increasing the number of olim, seeking to double their numbers in the coming years. The plan was developed in consultation and cooperation with French Jewish organizations, both in France and in Israel. Other partners include the World Zionist Organization, the Israeli Ministry of Jerusalem and Diaspora Affairs, and Keren Hayesod-United Israel Appeal, who are all are working together for the first time in order to strengthen French aliyah.
The Jewish Agency’s Felber says the plan is two-fold, “to promote aliyah in France through aliyah fairs, Hebrew-language courses, and sessions which assist in potential olim to find jobs in Israel, while the second part is kilitah (absorption) in Israel.” Felber says the Jewish Agency is in the process of constructing two new absorption centers, and at the same time is working with local municipalities in order to help French olim secure employment while also integrating into society.
Felber says he is confident that based on the large aliyah figures for French Jews—he estimates that there have been 100,000-120,000 total olim from France to date—these new immigrants will also succeed in building their new lives in the Jewish state.

Monday, September 3, 2012

French Anti-Semitic Attacks Up by 40 Percent

French Anti-Semitic Attacks Up by 40 Percent

JERUSALEM, Israel -- Anti-Semitic attacks against French Jews have risen by 40 percent in the five months since an Islamic terrorist murdered a rabbi and three children at a Jewish day school in Toulouse.
 
On March 19, Mohammed Merah gunned down 30-year-old Rabbi Yonatan Sandler and his sons Arieh, 6, and Gabriel, 3, and Miriam Monsonego, the 8-year-old daughter of Ozar Hatorah's principal.
 
In a meeting Tuesday with French Interior Minister Manuel Valls, Simon Weisenthal Center Dean Abraham Cooper said Jewish families in Toulouse, Marseille, and Lyon were experiencing a surge in anti-Semitic attacks, Reuters reported. Valls confirmed "an increase of 40 percent in anti-Semitic and anti-Jewish crimes" since the attack in March.
 
He called it a "shocking number" because "French authorities on both sides of the political aisle" immediately took the right steps in response to the murders.
 
The two men also discussed the "very pivotal role" social media and the Internet play in "incubating" Islamic terrorism.
 
Cooper said many French Jews are sending their children abroad to study and some are seriously considering aliyah, immigrating to Israel under the Law of Return.
 
France has the world's third largest Jewish population (about 500,000), behind Israel (close to 6 million), and the United States (about 6.5 million).