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Posts Tagged ‘Bete Israel’

To Replace Santos, NY GOP Taps Ethiopian Orthodox Jewish IDF Veteran Mazi Pilip

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on December 16, 2023

✡️ ጆርጅ ሳንቶስን ለመተካት የኒውዮርክ ግዛት ሪፐብሊካውያን ኢትዮጵያዊቷን /እስራኤላዊቷን መዓዚ መለስ ፒሊፕን ለአሜሪካ የተወካዮች ምክርቤት አባልነት ትወዳደር ዘንድ መረጧት።

ታቦተ ጽዮን እኛ በማንገነዘበው መልክ ሥራውን እየሠራ ነው። አሁን አይሑድ ኢትዮጵያዊቷ መዓዚ ለዚህ በመብቃቷ ጂሃዳውያኑ ሶማሌ እና ፍልስጤም አርበኞች እነ ኢልሃን ኦማር እና ራሽዳ ትላይብ እራሳቸውን ይሰቅላሉ!

የአሜሪካው ሪፐብሊካን ፓርቲ ከሀገሪቱ ኮንግረስ የተባረሩት ጆርጅ ሳንቶስን ለመተካት በሚካሔደው ምርጫ ቤተእስራኤላዊቷ ማዚ መለሳ ፒሊፕ እንዲወዳደሩ መረጠ። በኢትዮጵያ ተወልደው በአንድ ወቅት በእስራኤል ጦር ውስጥ ያገለገሉት ማዚ ከኒው ዮርክ ከተማ በስተምስራቅ የምትገኘው ናሳው ካውንቲ የምክር ቤት አባል ናቸው። ማዚ የአሜሪካን ኮንግረስ ለመቀላቀል በመጪው የካቲት ወር መጀመሪያ በሚካሔደው ምርጫ የዴሞክራቲክ ፓርቲ እጩ ሆነው የቀረቡትን ቶም ስዋዚ ማሸነፍ ይኖርባቸዋል።

የሰባት ልጆች እናት የሆኑት ማዚ መለሳ ምርጫውን ካሸነፉ በቅሌት ከኮንግረስ የተባረሩት ጆርጅ ሳንቶስን መቀመጫ ይረከባሉ። ከ፳/20 እጩዎች መካከል የሪፐብሊካን ፓርቲን ወክለው በምርጫው እንዲወዳደሩ የተመረጡት የ፵፬/44 ዓመቷ ማዚ ውስን የፖለቲካ ልምድ ያላቸው፤ የፖሊሲ አቋማቸውም በአብዛኛው የማይታወቅ እንደሆነ ኒው ዮርክ ታይምስ ጋዜጣ ዘግቧል።

ማዚ የሚወዳደሩበት እና በመጪው የካቲት የሚካሔደው ምርጫ ጆርጅ ሳንቶስ በተደራራቢ ቅሌቶች ከኮንግረስ ሲባረሩ የተፈጠረውን ክፍተት ለመሙላት የሚደረግ ነው።

✡️ Mazi Melesa Pilip is a “remarkable candidate,” said Matt Brooks, CEO of the Republican Jewish Coalition, in an endorsement.

The Republican candidate for Congress in a crucial Long Island special election introduced herself to voters Friday by describing her military service in Israel and with a Star of David on her necklace.

For Mazi Melesa Pilip, being Jewish is central to her identity.

New York Republicans selected Mazi Melesa Pilip, an Ethiopian-born, Orthodox Jew and Israel Defense Forces veteran, on Thursday to run for New York’s 3rd Congressional District.

A current Nassau County legislator, Pilip is running for the seat that Republican Rep. George Santos held before being expelled from the U.S. House of Representatives, on Dec. 1, following federal criminal indictments for fraud. It was also revealed that Santos had fabricated his backstory, including his supposed Jewish heritage.

Santos’s inventions stand in dramatic contrast with Pilip’s real-life biography. Born in Ethiopia, she emigrated to Israel as a refugee in 1991 as part of an Israeli operation to airlift Ethiopian Jews. She served in the IDF as a paratrooper before moving to the United States with her husband and becoming a U.S. citizen. A mother of seven, Pilip was first elected to the Nassau County legislature in 2021.

The New York 3rd district special election holds national significance, given how narrowly Republicans control the House. Following the expulsion of Santos, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) wields an eight-seat, fractious majority.

Winning this battleground seat is critical to maintaining the GOP majority in the House of Representatives,” Matt Brooks, CEO of the Republican Jewish Coalition, said in a statement. He endorsed Pilip, whom he called “a remarkable candidate whose strength of character and firm principles are clear to anyone who looks at her life story and her work.”

NY-03 was one of several Republican pickups in New York in the 2022 midterms, though Pilip will face a difficult challenger in the Democratic nominee, Tom Souzzi, who previously held the seat and has been a figure in Long Island politics for decades.

The special election will be held on Feb. 13.

Posted in Ethiopia, News/ዜና | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

ወደ እስራኤል በቅርቡ የገቡት አብዛኞቹ ኢትዮጵያውያን ክርስቲያኖች ናቸው

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on August 17, 2023

✞ ወደ እስራኤል በቅርቡ የገቡት አብዛኞቹ ኢትዮጵያውያን ክርስቲያኖች ናቸው።

👉 Courtesy: The Jerusalem Post

✞ The reason for this substantial amount of immigrants identifying as Christians is that their aliyah is considered a humanitarian act, of reuniting family members.

Two-thirds of the immigrants from Ethiopia to Israel between 2020 and 2022 identified as Christians, according to official data from the Population and Immigration Authority.

The official data was publicized by The Israeli Immigration Policy Center (IIPC) and was seen by The Jerusalem Post.

It reveals that out of more than 5,000 immigrants from Ethiopia who arrived in Israel as part of Operation Tzur Israel, 3,301 identified as Christians. In contrast, only about 1,773 identified as descendants of Jews, though this wasn’t proved to be true according to Israeli authorities. Notably, none of them were found to be eligible for aliyah under the Law of Return.

The reason for this high number identifying as Christians, is that their aliyah is considered a humanitarian act of family reunification. Therefore, it is now assumed that many members of the “Jewish communities” in Ethiopia are actually not Jewish and practice a different religion.

According to a statement on behalf of the center, a conservative Israeli think-tank, “these findings are consistent with previous reports from the IIPC. The institute’s analysis of data from the Population and Immigration Authority showed that since 2000, only about 10% of Ethiopian immigrants identified as Jews upon their arrival in Israel.”

How the Israeli government is addressing an influx of Ethiopian immigrants

Earlier on Thursday, the Israeli government appointed a special envoy to investigate and then to recommend a solution for the aliyah crisis from Ethiopia. Thousands of Ethiopian citizens claim they are entitled to aliyah but the Israeli government says that aliyah from Ethiopia is at an end.

IIPC director Dr. Yona Cherki commented on these findings in a statement on Wednesday, claiming that “the State of Israel should enable every Jew who wishes to immigrate to Israel to do so. The transit camps in Ethiopia are periodically emptied and refilled, and every time a substantial number of people await their chance to immigrate. Data from the Population and Immigration Authority suggests that if there are individuals in Ethiopia who are entitled to return under the Jewish lineage, they aren’t making the move.

“Conversely, those who are immigrating don’t hold the right to do so,” Cherki said, adding that the new envoy on behalf of the government should “define consistent criteria for immigration to Israel, applicable across all diasporas, in alignment with the Law of Return.”

As mentioned, Aliyah and Integration Minister Ofir Sofer, has appointed Brig.-Gen. (res.) Harel Knafo to spearhead a team that will assess Israel’s current immigration policy concerning Ethiopia on Wednesday. Pending approval from the Civil Service Commission, Knafo and his team will delve into the immigration challenges, particularly focusing on those awaiting aliyah in Addis Ababa and Gondar. They will subsequently submit their findings to Sofer.

Knafo commanded the Inter-Army Command and Staff College, headed the Southern Command, and led the 890th Battalion of the Paratroopers. Earlier this week, Israeli citizens of Ethiopian descent and advocates of Ethiopian Jewish immigration assembled outside the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem. They demanded swift action to safeguard those eligible for aliyah from the turbulent Gondar region.

They pointed out to the Knesset that an astonishing 4,226 individuals from the camps in Gondar and Addis Ababa had filed requests for aliyah. As the situation worsens, particularly in areas like Gondar, those awaiting their journey to Israel face dire threats to their lives.

Last Thursday, Israel carried out a significant rescue operation, evacuating over 200 Israeli and Ethiopian nationals from Ethiopia due to the intensifying conflict between the Ethiopian Army and the FANO militia.

The rescue comprised three planes that transported Israeli citizens, Jewish Agency personnel, Project TEN volunteers, and immigrants. The joint initiative was a collaboration between the Prime Minister’s Office and The Jewish Agency, with the security operations managed by the agency’s security officers.

A coalition of advocacy groups supporting Ethiopian Jews voiced their concerns on Thursday. They emphasized, “The Department of Aliyah and Integration seems disconnected from reality.”

They added, “Thousands of Israelis, ranging from soldiers to ordinary citizens, took to the streets recently, expressing their frustrations over the government’s seeming inertia. They’re deeply concerned about our kin caught in the conflict near Gondar. A significant number of Jews are in imminent danger in Ethiopia, accentuated by the recent declaration of a state of emergency.”

Of these, 1,226 Jews have been officially recognized and qualify for immigration. However, despite its obligations, the Israeli government has not been proactive. The aliyah minister’s silence is deafening. His decision to form a committee “to review the matter” seems like a mere tactic to buy time.

A report provided by the advocacy groups underscores the discrepancy between the reported figures and reality. “While news of the rescue operation in Gondar was heartening at first, the truth is only 44 out of the 204 rescued were eligible immigrants; the majority were Israeli citizens.”

Posted in Ethiopia, Faith, Travel/ጉዞ | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Israel: Ethiopian Cultural Center in Lod Torched, Two Arab Muslims Arrested

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on March 15, 2023

🔥 በእስራኤሏ ሎድ የኢትዮጵያ የባህል ማዕከል ተቃጥሏል፤ በቃጠሎው የተጠረጠሩ ሁለት የአረብ ሙስሊሞች ታሰረዋል

ያሳዝናል፤ እኛ ኢትዮጵያውያን በየሄድንበት ሁሉ መከራና ስቃይን፣ ጥላቻንን ጥቃትን የምንጋፈጥበት ዘመን ላይ እንገኛለን፤ በኢትዮጵያ፣ በአፍሪቃ፣ በአሜሪካ፣ እስያ፣ አውሮፓና አውስትራሊያ ብንገኝም ከፈተናው የትም አናመልጠም።

የሚገርም ነው አይሁዱ የአሜሪካ የውጭ ጉዳይ ሃላፊ አንቶኒ ብሊንከን ወደ ኢትዮጵያ በሚያመሩበት ወቅት፤ የእስራኤሉም ጠቅላይ ሚንስትር ቢኒያም ኔቴንያሁ ወደ “ጴጋሞን” በርሊን ለማምራት አቅደው ነበር፤ ነገር የም ዕራብ ሜዲያዎች “በእስራኤል የሰብ ዓዊ መብትን” እየተጋፋቸውን እያሉ በመጮኽ ላይ ስለሆኑ ጉብኝታቸውን አዘግይተውታል።

እንግዲህ ከእኛ ጋር እናነጻጽረው፤ ከሚሊየን በላይ ኦርቶዶክስ ክርስቲያኖችን ለመጨፍጨፍ የበቃውን አረመኔ ጋላ-ኦሮሞ ግራኝ አብዮት አህመድ አሊን የአሜሪካው የውጭ ጉዳይ ሚንስትር ለመጎብኘት ወደ አዲስ አበባ ሲያመሩ “ለሰብዓዊ መብት እንቆረቆራለን” የሚሉት ሜዲያዎችና መንግስታት ሁሉ ዝም ጭጭ ብለዋል። ግብዝ፣ አስቀያሚና ቆሻሻ ዓለም!

Too bad; We Ethiopians are in an age where we face suffering, hatred and violence wherever we go. Even if we are in Ethiopia, Africa, America, Asia, Europe and Australia, we will not escape the challenge anywhere.

It is surprising that when the Jewish US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken is heading to Ethiopia; Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu too planned to go to “Pergamon” Berlin; However, they delayed their visit because the Western media are shouting loud that “Israel is violating human rights”.

The German government is under pressure for hosting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was due to arrive in Berlin later Wednesday and facing strong criticism over planned legal reforms.

On the eve of Netanyahu’s departure for Germany and ahead of a planned trip to Britain, 1,000 writers, artists and academics wrote to the two European nations’ ambassadors urging their governments to scrap the visits.

👉 Berlin under fire over Netanyahu’s visit

👉 So let’s compare this with the situation in Ethiopia and encounter ‘double standards:

When the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken heades departs for Ethiopia to meet the barbaric Gala-Oromo Ahmed Ali, who massacred more than a million Orthodox Christians, all the media and governments that said, “We will fight for human rights” say and do nothing. Hypocritical, ugly and dirty world!

💭 Mixed Jewish-Arab city has been a flashpoint of nationalistic crime in the past.

Israel Police have arrested two Arabs on suspicion that they set fire to the “Beit HaGadzo,” a cultural center for Ethiopian Jews located behind the pre-military training school in the Ramat Eshkol neighborhood of Lod.

“We will not be silent,” local residents responded, and announced that they would be holding a demonstration. “At 8:30 p.m. we will all gather at the site for the evening prayer and raise a cry of protest.”

Investigators from the Lod Police Station used advanced technological means to investigate the crime leading to the swift apprehension of two Lod residents aged 18 and 25, who are suspected of the arson. At the conclusion of their interrogation, it will be decided whether to ask the court to extend their detention.

👉 Courtesy: Israelnationalnews

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Posted in Ethiopia, Faith, War & Crisis | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

የቤተ እስራኤል ወገኖቻችን ከታቦተ ጽዮን ጋር ዛሬ እስራኤል ገብተው ይሆንን?

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on December 3, 2020

፫፻፲፮/ 316 የሚሆኑ ኢትዮጵያውያን ስደተኞች ሐሙስ በቴል አቪቭ አቅራቢያ ቤን ጉሪዮን አውሮፕላን ማረፊያ አረፉ፡፡ በእስራኤል ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር ኔታንያሁ ፣ ባለቤታቸው እና በመንግስት ባለስልጣናት አቀባበል የተደረገላቸው ሲሆን በሁለቱ አገራት መካከል የተከፋፈሉ ቤተሰቦች እንደገና እንዲገናኙ ለማድረግ ቃል ገብተዋል፡፡

የኢትዮጵያ አየር መንገድ የበረራ ተሳፋሪዎች ወደ አየር ማረፊያው ሲራመዱ ብዙዎች የኢትዮጵያን ባህላዊ ልብስ ለብሰውና የእስራኤልንም ባንዲራ ያውለበለቡ ነበሩ፡፡

በጦርነት ስም የጀመረው “ዘመቻ አክሱም ጽዮን”ብዙ ተንኮሎችን የያዘ ነው። ይህ ሁሉ እንቅስቃሴ የጽዮን ማርያምን አመታዊ ክብረ በዓልን ተከትሎ መታየቱ ሊያሳስበን ይገባል። ቆሻሻው ግራኝ አብዮት አህመድ አሊ እንደሆነ ዕድል ኖሮት ታቦተ ጽዮንን ቢያገኝ አሳልፎ እንደሚሰጥ አልጠራጠርም።

👉 መጀመሪያ የማርያም መቀነትን፣ ከዚያ ክቡር መስቀሉን ቀጥሎ ኢትዮጵያን እየተነጠቅን ነው | ዋ!

በግብረ-ሰዶማውያን ተመርጦ ስልጣን ላይ የወጣው የአብዮት አህመድ አሊ ተልዕኮ ጸረ-ኢትዮጵያ፣ ጸረ-ተዋሕዶና ጸረ-ክርስቶስ መሆኑ ግልጽ ነውና ዛሬ ሰሜን ኢትዮጵያውያንን ለመጨፍጨፍ ብሎም ታሪካቸውንና ቅርሳቸውን አንድ በአንድ ለማጥፋት የተላከውን “ሰራዊት” የሚደግፍ ሁሉ ፀረ-ኢትዮጵያ፣ ፀረ-ክርስቶስ፣ ፀረ-ጽዮን ማርያም ብሎም የግብረ-ሰዶማውያንን አጀንዳ አራማጅ ነው። ይህ ሰራዊት ስለ ጽዮን ዝም የማይሉትን የተዋሕዶ ልጆችን እንጅ ጠላት ሶማሊያን፣ ጠላት ሱዳንን፣ ጠላት ኦሮሚያን፣ ጠላት አረብን፣ ጠላት ግብጽን፣ ጠላት ቱርክን፣ ባጠቃላይ ጠላት ኤዶማውያንን እና እስማኤላውያንን ያጠቃ ዘንድ የተላከ ሰራዊት አይደለም። ወዮላችሁ!

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It’s Not Easy Being An Ethiopian Jew

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on April 7, 2009

It’s not easy being an Ethiopian Jew in America’ writes Haaretz. Well, in fact, it’s not easy being an Ethiopian anywhere else – inlculding in Ethiopia. .. and „I personally prefer to be stabbed in the back by a gentile, and not my own brother Jew“, says the Ethiopian Jew. It must be very painful, it’s painful!


ethiojews

Well, it’s is to say, but, at times, it probably could be a blessing to face hardship, as it’s mostly a byproduct of porsperity.

Besides, every hardship could be about another chance for cultivating our hearts. The path of the heart is the most righteous path to the ultimate prosperity.


Farmers know the pain of cultivating wheat or teff, they know the suffering in cultivation, where, at the same time, the challenge in the feild is often taken as joy, because when the bitterness goes away, sweetness will come and true happiness will arrive.


http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1077094.html


When Avishai Mekonen, 35, the Israeli photographer who has lived for the past seven years in New York City, lectured before American high-school students in Savannah, GA, one of them asked him to roll up his sleeve.


“Where is the number?” he asked. Mekonen didn’t get it at first.


“I thought Jews are Holocausts survivors, aren’t you a Holocaust survivor?” explained the teenager. With experiences of this kind, admits Avishai, it’s not always easy to be the Ethiopian Jew in America. As if it was anywhere else.


In his new exhibition, “Seven Generations”, he wishes to return to his community the pride of its authentic tradition. Then irony in his quest for the shards of the traditional identity is that his work is being displayed in New York, and not in Israel.


It is customary for Ethiopians, before getting married, to have the community elders account for seven generations of each family, in order to ensure that no accidental cases of incest can occur. This tradition also became one of the foundations of the elders’ authority. One who is able to count seven generations back would receive the respect of the community. Those who can count 14 generations are perceived as geniuses.


“Once an Israeli cab driver who took me to an Ethiopian funeral, cursed and said: ‘Those Ethiopians! Only one died, yet hundreds are coming!'” recalls Mekonen. “But in our tradition, you must invite all your extended relatives, 7 generations back, both to the weddings and to funerals. It’s like one big family.”


Some of the youngsters he interviewed for the film accompanying the exhibition have no idea what all of this means, or they don’t really care. Mekonen himself, who married Shari, a Jewish American filmmaker, didn’t really need the elders’ services to count generations of his bride’s family. His parents, who flew all the way from Israel to the U.S. for the wedding, were quite shocked to see the small number of guests. “This is the whole family?” his mother asked, a bit disappointed.


We eat hummus in a small Manhattan restaurant as Mekonen tells me that many years ago he had this idea to make a documentary about the painful generation gap of the Ethiopian community, but dawdled, and his move to the U.S. to join his wife further complicated the matter.


“But one day it struck me, that I met a young Ethiopian in Israel who is able to count generations. This tradition will just disappear, and nothing will be left of it.”


He says that Israeli bureaucrats unknowingly contributed to the destruction of the custom: when Mekonen made Aliya to Israel in 1984, instead of taking on his father’s name as his family name, according to tradition, he was instead registered under his great-grandfather’s name, along with the rest of his family. Born Agegnehu (“gift” in Amharic), he became Avraham upon his arrival. Later, he changed his name to Avishai, to return some semblance of his original name.


“But I’m still Mekonen, and the elders get confused when they try to count generations – it doesn’t seem logical to them, this jump from my great-grandfather to me. Mekonen is supposed to belong to other generation.”


The entire family in Israel was recruited to work on a project. His father made phone calls to community elders, arranging meetings; his mother baked injera, the traditional bread, to honor the hosts; the younger brother was appointed to contact Israeli-Ethiopian hip-hop bands and rebellious teenage girls with tattoos.


“The parents’ generation understood the importance of this project, dressed nicely and fully cooperated. The youngsters neglected it until I talked to them, when they admitted that because of their detachment from tradition they have had serious identity problems. They said they feel “empty and humiliated” when some policeman tells them: “You are Ethiopian, you understand nothing.”


The tears within the Ethiopian community seem so distant from the noisy lobby at the Jewish Community Center building in Manhattan, where his exhibition is presented. In the afternoon, African-American nannies bring children for activities at the Center. 30-year old Jolly is taking care of two active Jewish toddlers, and she seems quite surprised when she sees the pictures: “I never thought there were black Jews!”


Some of the Ethiopians sought comfort in Harlem, so they wouldn’t be forced to deal with the perceptions that “Jews are white”. But Mekonen says “it’s complicated”. In his documentary-in-progress, “400 Miles to freedom”, he explores his personal story and identity, and through this exploration he meets a variety of diverse Jews both in Israel and in America, including Rabbi Capers Funnye, a leader of the African American Jewish community and second cousin of First Lady Michelle Obama, who shares his own historical roots and path to Judaism. He says that although the Ethiopians, unlike the African-Americans, haven’t been enslaved and detached from their history, he feels that the conversations with the community present a strong opportunity to learn about the history of slavery in the U.S.


“There are obvious advantages to being part of a big and influential community,” he admits. “The first time I saw a giant poster featuring a black model, I was stunned and excited that here people actually think that black sells. I wanted it to happen in Israel too. Then in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina where the blacks were neglected, I said, ‘thank God I’m Israeli.’ But when Obama won the election and all our neighbors ran down the street yelling and dancing and singing – I shouted something in Hebrew as well, something like: ‘The good guys won!’ It was perhaps the first time that I felt I belong to this fest, and I said I’m so grateful to be here to witness this historical moment.”


Like almost every Israeli living in New York and hoping “to return one day”, Mekonen dreams of going back to Israel and buying a house in Rosh Pina. He recalls with nostalgia his service in the Israel Defense Force’s combat engineering unit, the day he was wounded in Hebron by a Molotov cocktail and his days in Lebanon.


“I was a Zionist,” he says. “After I finished my studies I made some documentaries, and one of the films was screened on Channel 1. Even so, I hated headlines like ‘The first Ethiopian filmmaker’ – it made me feel as though they don’t expect anything more from me – you’ve already done your duty, you’re free to go. But I felt that my career had just begun.”


“And then I suddenly found myself organizing the shelves of an N.Y. supermarket, and I didn’t even have a name – I was a ‘garbage boy’. I didn’t come ‘to conquer America’. Frankly, I was horrified of the thought of a second immigration, after we walked by foot from Ethiopia to Sudan. I had all kinds of weird phobias, like that being a black Jew might even get me killed over here. Every day I cursed the American food – it seemed so tasteless. For two months, I ate only hot dogs – it was the only thing I could name in English. When I was working at the moving company, like so many other Israelis, one sofa slipped out of my hands and rolled down the stairs, so I had to quit. I thought I would have to give up art. I would bring my CV to production companies, but who has heard of Tel-Hai college? Who knows what Channel 1 is here? They were a bit curious about the black guy coming from Israel, but they always finished with: ‘We’ll call you back,’ and you know exactly what that means. The only thing that kept me strong was that I put a small table in the corner, and started writing scripts?”


Eventually, Mekonen started to exhibit his works, got some grants for his projects and was able to go back to filmmaking. But he still feels like a guest in America.


“At the Jewish community I sometimes hear: ‘Did you come with Operation Moshe? I donated to it!’ The thing is my mother lives it every day. Each morning she says: ‘Thank God, thanks to America’. But I start telling people, that we were not only sitting there and waiting for someone to rescue us. We walked for months, and thousands died on the way. But they don’t get it, and some even become angry because it doesn’t fit their stereotypes of the naïve Africans that are supposed to be grateful until their last day. It’s pretty difficult for me to see sometimes the fundraising campaigns for the Ethiopian community in Israel, they look so miserable. I want people to see my culture as a rich and happy one. But then probably no one would donate money, and it really helps many people.”


In Israel he misses many things that the native Israelis would rather escape.


“I adore those moments, when you come off the plane and the cab driver starts to haggle over each shekel, things like that,” he laughs. “And of course, I ask myself where I would be today if I had stayed there.”


He doubts that his 4-year-old son Ariel will speak Amharic. “But I want him at least to know Hebrew.” At this moment, he would be glad if his exhibition will finally reach Israel. “I want the elders to see it. They deserve it.”


Slightly more than a thousand Ethiopian Jews have settled in North America since the beginning of the 1990s, and about 500 live in New York City. The Israeli Consulate, which used to ignore the trend, nowadays prefers to keep in touch with the Israelis living in the city.


The new New Yorkers themselves hate when one defines it as a “phenomenon”. They are fed up with questions about the racism in Israel and America, and they reject any question that smells of arrogance and an effort to distinguish them from any other young Israelis who head to seek themselves “in the big world.”


Bizu Rikki Mulu, one of the Ethiopian-Israeli-American community veterans, established the organization aimed to facilitate the transfer for the newcomers. She called it Chassida Shmella (“Shmella” means stork in Amharic, she took it from the song people in her village would sing while seeing the migrating birds: “Stork, stork, how is our Holy Land?”). She thinks that the stream of the newcomers will increase now that Obama is president.


“You have here in N.Y.C. maybe one hundred thousand Yemenite Jews, maybe half a million Russian Jews, and now we have the Ethiopian Jews,” she says. “It’s a normal thing. It is better to keep them attached to the community, instead of saying: ‘We’ve spent so much money to bring them to Israel, they should go back there. If someone succeeds, it’s a success for all of us.'”


Mulu, native of a small village in Gondar, came to Israel in 1978 with a group of 150 Jews as part of Operation Begin. She arrived in New York for the first time in 1991, and although she managed to get a green card, she warns that for most young Ethiopians the absorption is not so simple.


“It looks easy from Israel, but then they come here and work illegally in all kinds of odd jobs, and no one really cares about them,” she says. “A few fared better, some have their own businesses, and one woman works at the local hospital because her profession facilitates the immigration process. And there are plenty of guys who didn’t really succeed, but they don’t want to go back home with empty hands. I think it’s quite healthy to be able to say: ‘I failed and I’m going to try to make it at home.’ Not everyone is like Obama. In many places in America still, the blacks are here and the whites are there. Only in the 60s, segregation was abolished formally. The young Ethiopians coming here don’t think about these things.”


Chassida Shmella organizes cultural and educational events, but most of the newcomers ask for material assistance. “They ask directly: ‘What can you do for me?’ At first, they are less interested in preserving their religious and cultural identity. But most of them come from religious families, and here there are no parents to prepare the Shabbat meal. They are trying to find their place. At first, people at synagogue might stare at them, but eventually they get used to it, and the rabbi is excited. Only upon coming here I discovered how much the American Jews did for the Ethiopian Jews. But there are also a lot of prejudices and stereotypes. Many still want to see us as the guys dressed in white coming off the plane, because that’s how they remember this Aliyah.”


“The Ethiopian Jews sobered later,” declares one fresh arrival. “In Israel, dog eats dog. Here you have plenty of problems as well, but I personally prefer to be stabbed in the back by a gentile, and not my own brother Jew. Here the Ethiopians tend to succeed more, because people don’t look at your origin and family name, they look at what you have to offer them. With God’s help, we’ll get back to Israel empowered, economically and mentally, to Jerusalem and not to the state-sponsored trailers.”


This might interest you

http://sheba.org.il/index.php

http://www.abc.net.au/atthemovies/txt/s1601742.htm

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