All illegals should be deported immediately.  No exceptions.
---

Exact numbers of undocumented Jews are not available, and estimates are 
hard to find, but activists believe there are at least several thousand 
Jews currently living in the shadows of society. They are Israelis who 
immigrated to the United States without proper papers — some joining 
ultra-Orthodox communities, others seeking to pursue better financial 
opportunities and some who have used Israel as a stepping stone on their 
way to America from the former Soviet Union, without obtaining the 
necessary immigration status. And while their numbers are minuscule in 
comparison with the estimated 11 million mostly from Mexico and Latin 
America, Israeli undocumented immigrants share a similar fate.

Yamzi Rosen has been living in the United States for nearly nine years. 
Rosen said she and her family moved to Brooklyn from Israel after she lost 
her son to a violent murder in her hometown of Netanya. The family hoped 
the distance would help them overcome the tragedy. The seven family members 
crammed into a one-bedroom apartment, and began working odd jobs for which 
papers were not required.

But the American dream turned out to be hard to achieve. A lawyer dealing 
with their request for obtaining a green card, which grants legal residence 
in the United States, was arrested for fraud. Meanwhile, a temporary work 
visa expired, and Rosen was diagnosed with cancer and underwent surgery and 
chemotherapy.

Since she does not have legal status, Rosen is afraid to drive, and because 
she lacks health insurance, she relies solely on Jewish charities to help 
her deal with the large medical bills that accumulated because of her 
sickness. “They are *tzaddikim*” she said, using the Hebrew term for 
“righteous people” when she speaks of the Satmar Bikur Cholim charity 
organization that walked her through the maze of medical procedures she 
needed.

The Rosen family is reluctant to request any kind of welfare assistance, 
fearing that it will hamper their hopes to achieve a green card in the 
future. But most difficult, Rosen said in a recent phone conversation with 
the Forward, is not being able to leave the United States and visit Israel, 
since being undocumented ensures that she would not be allowed back in. “I 
just want to see my son’s grave,” she said. “Is there anything worse in 
life than a mother who cannot visit her son’s grave?”

There are several types of undocumented Jews living in the United States. 
They include Israelis who left Israel seeking a better future in America 
and are now living in neighborhoods with large Israeli expatriate 
populations in New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and other large cities. 
Of them, some are members of Hasidic or ultra-Orthodox groups that have 
joined their communities in the United States, and others are secular 
Israelis who left Israel in their 20s to try a new life. Both share the 
same problem: They cannot leave the United States, since they know they’ll 
be barred from returning, due to their immigration violations. Most of 
these Israelis entered the United States on tourist visas, which are 
usually limited to a six-month visit, but they overstayed without 
correcting their legal status.

“After my army service, I saw that the country won’t give me anything and 
that I can get a much higher salary elsewhere, so I decided to leave,” said 
an Israeli immigrant who asked to be identified as Sean, a first name he 
adopted here. Sean entered the United States on a tourist visa and joined 
family in New York. He quickly found work at a moving company owned by an 
Israeli and established his life in Brooklyn, but was disappointed to 
discover that the expatriate Israeli community in the United States was far 
from helpful and that the broader American Jewish community is “very 
closed.”

But Sean’s American dream has a happier end. He fell in love with an 
American citizen, and after marrying her he obtained a green card. Sean 
said, however, that even in the period when he lived as an undocumented 
immigrant, he had no fear. “I didn’t feel as if I am breaking the law,” he 
said. “I’m not a criminal.”

Another group of undocumented Israelis is Russian-speaking Jews from the 
former Soviet Union who left in the mass immigration that followed the 
collapse of the communist bloc. These emigrants wished to come to the 
United States but were unable to obtain immigration permits. So they chose 
Israel, which under its Law of Return accepts for citizenship any 
individual with at least one Jewish grandparent. After a short stay in 
Israel they moved to America and many joined family or friends here.

The third category of undocumented Jews is a more transient group: young 
Israelis who come to work illegally in the United States, mostly as 
salespersons in shopping mall vending carts. For most, this is seen as an 
opportunity to make some easy money to pay for their months-long trip to 
South America, a common destiny for Israelis after their compulsory 
military service. While these undocumented Israelis do not intend to 
immigrate, they are still viewed by American authorities as illegal aliens 
and are subject to deportation if caught. The American Embassy in Tel Aviv 
recently launched an ad campaign warning young Israelis against attempting 
to work illegally in America. A video clip produced by the embassy includes 
testimonies of Israelis who were apprehended by American authorities and 
put in prison with criminals as they awaited deportation.

For most undocumented Israelis in the United States, the hardship of living 
without papers has increased in recent years with the economic downturn, as 
jobs have become harder to find.

“Many of them don’t have written language skills, they don’t have a degree 
and they have very little work experience,” said Angela Task, a social 
worker with the Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty who helps 
undocumented Israelis who come to her office in Brooklyn seeking 
assistance. “It is difficult for anyone to find a job nowadays, and even 
more if you don’t have papers.” Task said that most undocumented Israelis 
she sees hope to marry an American citizen, since that is currently the 
only legal path they have to citizenship. A few have also tried to obtain 
special visas for religious employees who work as clergy in synagogues, as 
Jewish schoolteachers or as kosher slaughterers.

“A lot of the problems we see are with those who are older and are here 20 
to 30 years without papers,” Task said. For these Israeli immigrants, many 
of them disabled, finding a job is practically impossible, and medical help 
is available only through clinics operated by charity organizations.

The best and only hope for undocumented Jews is the passage of 
comprehensive immigration reform legislation that would provide those 
living in the United States without papers with a path to legalization and 
eventually to citizenship. But the current political winds don’t favor 
approval of such legislation. “It is definitely in the cards for the 
future, but not for this Congress,” said Melanie Nezer, senior director for 
American policy and advocacy at the Hebrew Immigration Aid Society. Nezer 
explained that if a future political agreement on immigration reform is 
reached, it will cover the small number of undocumented Jews living in 
America, as well.

But this group is far from being on the agenda of the Jewish community. 
Undocumented Israelis in need receive support via charity groups such as 
the Metropolitan Council and local religious medical and financial 
assistance programs. But the Jewish community has not taken on the issue as 
part of its pro-immigration advocacy agenda.

“It is difficult to use them for advocacy because like other undocumented 
populations, they are largely invisible,” said Gideon Aronoff, president 
and CEO of HIAS. Still, he noted, the organized Jewish community’s drive 
for immigration reform will also help undocumented Israelis.

Aronoff acknowledged that the issue of Israelis who left their country in 
favor of America “does create some philosophical discomfort” for the 
broader Jewish community. But that is a matter that must be addressed 
eventually by the local communities in which the undocumented Israelis 
live, he said.

*Contact Nathan Guttman at [email protected] <[email protected]>*


Read more: 
http://forward.com/news/139523/undocumented-jews-live-in-shadows-of-us-society/#ixzz3r8jlsCRH

On Tuesday, November 10, 2015 at 1:54:43 PM UTC-6, Travis wrote:
>
> All illegals should be deported immediately.  No exceptions.
>
> On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 1:08 PM, plainolamerican <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> so it was acceptable for Ronald 'I Can't Recall' Reagan to grant amnesty 
>> but not acceptable for Obama to defer deportations, eh?
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, November 10, 2015 at 10:17:04 AM UTC-6, Travis wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> http://www.buzzfeed.com/adolfoflores/appeals-court-rules-against-obamas-executive-actions-on-immi#.wi3gvpAYA
>>>  
>>>
>>> -- 
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