Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Israeli War Criminals,Argentina’s Jewish Leaders Afraid Of Jewish Assimilation


Israeli War Criminals,Argentina’s Jewish Leaders Afraid Of Jewish Assimilation


Story image for argentina israel from +972 Magazine

Israelis demand state open up past ties to Argentine junta

+972 Magazine-Mar 22, 2016
Forty years after the fall of Argentina's murderous military dictatorship, dozens of Argentine-Israelis are demanding the Israeli government open ...







Argentina’s Jewish Leaders Ask for Israel’s Help in Face of Accelerated Assimilation

MARCH 25, 2016 10:23 AM

Sinagoga de la Congregación Israelita Argentina, a synagogue in Buenos Aires. Credit: GameOfLight via Wikimedia Commons.
Sinagoga de la Congregación Israelita Argentina, a synagogue in Buenos Aires. Credit: GameOfLight via Wikimedia Commons.
JNS.org – Leaders of Argentina’s Jewish community have warned that accelerated assimilation by Jews in the South American nation and worldwide is “placing the Jewish people’s future at risk.” The phenomenon, they said, is akin to “quiet terrorism.”
Buenos Aires is home to one of the largest Jewish communities in the world, numbering nearly 300,000 people. Recent data, however, suggests that more 50 percent of young Jews in the country lose touch with their heritage. Community officials said the issue transcends the “classic assimilation” of mixed marriages, and that it seems young Jews increasingly choose to shun their religion and even distance themselves from the State of Israel.
In a letter sent to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week, Argentine Sephardic Rabbi Isaac Saka wrote, “This painful situation will lead to future generations, millions of Jews, who will be oblivious to their Jewish identity, and have no affiliation with the State of Israel. Millions of others might know they are Jewish, but they will lack any understanding of their heritage.”
Saka urged Netanyahu to form a special forum comprising the heads of Jewish communities and organizations worldwide to prevent accelerated assimilation, and suggested an international summit “to discuss this urgent, important, and dramatic issue’s implications on the Jewish people’s future.”
(Exclusive from Israel Hayom.)

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