Ahead of the commencement of the MH17 trials in the Netherlands on March 9, 2020, various Russian government officials have made statements defending Russia against accusations that Russia provided the Buk missile launcher that shot down MH17 on July 17, 2014. Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Maria Zakharova complained of “planted news citing some mythical ‘irrefutable’ evidence, with witnesses’ details classified and links to sources that cannot be opened” and complained of a “media campaign” against Russia supposedly launched before the trial. Other Russian officials have been more specific in their accusations. Referring to images of a Buk missile launcher in separatist held Ukraine and linked to the downing of MH17, Russia’s Ambassador to Australia, Dr. Alexey Pavlovsky, told Australia’s News9 that “Many of these pictures have been heavily tampered with. It seems that the Australian Federal Police as part of the investigation also had information to this effect but it somehow chose to withhold it from the public.” Russia has repeatedly claimed images of the Buk in Ukraine were fake, with the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs stating in June 2019 that Russia had produced “precision expert analysis proving that the video clips supporting the JIT’s [Joint Investigation Teams] conclusions were fabricated” along with an earlier presentation by the Russian Ministry of Defence in September 2018, which claimed videos published online and used by the JIT to detail the route of the Buk through Ukraine were fabricated - seemingly plagiarising said claims from bloggers. While it might seem bizarre for any government to provide plagiarised conspiracy theories and online rumours as their evidence in issues as serious as MH17, Russia has a well established track record of doing so, both with MH17 and earlier incidents, such as the August 21, 2013 Sarin attacks in Damascus, wherein Russian officials, including Russia’s Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, repeated claims made on conspiracy websites in their statements to the media.
@Eternal Fisherman No, because they've never lived in W. Africa, nor have their parents. Nothing against you or anna, or any reasonable people who might be of russian extraction. I think you know who this directed at... So why don't you focus your ire on them? You've been doing a good job with that lately. Keep going!
@Eternal Fisherman she's probably from the USSR. Every person ive ever met in the USA that was from the USSR, said they were Russian.. regardless if they were from ukraine or moldva or Lithuania or whatever.
@Fisherman the behavior of that deranged #protector betrays the fact that the main goal of the zionutters is not Palestine but Russia. the zionutters and neocons blew their chance to plunder and grab Russia in 1991 so they're foaming at the mouth now.
The girl, who is a Turkish Jew, seems very kind, adorable and polite person. Unfortunately, there is a still anti-semitism here in Turkey and I hope that discrimination against other people's religions, cultures, ethnicities and sexualities will end in the world. Greetings from Turkey by the way.
@@egedemirer8528 sizin gibi düşünen insanların var olduğunu bilmek beni hem şaşırttı hemde mutlu etti açıkçası videodaki kıza çok üzüldüm keşke türkiyede antisemitism olmasaydıda israile gitmek zorunda kalmasaydı belli halinden çokda memnun değil israilde.Maalesef ki özellikle 90 lı yıllarda yaygınlaşmaya başlayan antisemitisimden dolayı arapsaçına dönen bi durum var daha önce Türkiyede yaşayan yahudiler tanıdım bunların arasında pro israeli diyebileceğimiz kişiler var ki ben hak veriyorum şahsen kendilerini israile yakın hissetmelirini ama gel gelelim aynı kişiler türkiyede bulundukları durumdan ötürü türkiyedeki aşırı solcu-komünist topluluklara düşüncelere yakın bulmuşlar kendini ki bu gruplarda filistini destekler daima siyasetçilerimizin bizi içine soktuğu berbat durum ortaya böyle sonuçlar çıkarabiliyor ne yazıkki
Someone can tell the girl at the end of the video that I love her, she's worthy, she's precious, she belongs to humanity just as well every single human being on this earth and if I could I would hug her right now. It breaks my heart feel how she feels out of place. Be strong my dear.
Poor turkish girl. She seems like she just wants to live her life but always in the spotlight. She seems like a sweetheart. I doubt most turks are anti semitism.
Unfortunately, Antisemitism still exists to this day... (oddly) but I really want my Jews living with me in a country we all call home! Cause any country belonging specifically to one race or religion in any form is going to create bias, & bias would not lead to democracy! If only we could have a chance...
I'm not Jewish and have no Jewish family, but on a recent visit to Israel I felt strangely at home. I really like Jewish culture and the Hebrew language. I can understand anybody wanting to move to Israel but I feel sad many Jews don't feel as safe or as at home in Europe anymore.
It is because of the spiritual atmosphere, it is a blessed land. Other parts of the world where religion has been removed doesnt feel a good place to live! There is no connections to God
I appreciate Cody your efforts to have a positive things and freedom of speach to discuss about two nations side by side keep it up God bless you man love from Pakistan
When you're in Turkey they said you're Jews and vice versa.. I can relate to her as a Chinese descendant born and raised in Indonesia and now living in Taiwan.. same experience
Truly a shame that the Turkish Jewish woman was harassed here for being from Turkey. WTF? I love hearing about the variety in our backgrounds from Ethiopia to Canada to Iran. Should we judge each other based on where our families spent the most time in the diaspora? Fuck no.
@@Linda43 I didn't say it's "racism". I said it's a shame she was harassed for it. I made Aliya about 12 years ago and I've experienced how people are but the way she said it, it sounded worse. People looked at me like I was crazy and asked why I'd come here from America. It's a bit rude and maybe some would find it offensive but it really doesn't sound like that's what people said to her for being from Turkey. I personally hate Turkey as a whole but I've known and been friends with wonderful individuals from Turkey. I certainly wouldn't think any Turkish Jew would be in line with the things I hate about Turkey and certainly wouldn't prejudge him/her for being from there.
@@Avi1231 My apologies. You didn't say racism. My point was that she is going through a process which is obviously difficult for her. I agree with you about Turkey. I don't think people in Israel associate her with Turkey. After all, she is Jewish. Purim Sameach.
I don't think she necessarily meant that she was "harassed" for it, I think she just meant the irony of being judged and seen as a Jew by all all the Turks in Turkey and the native-born Israelis in Israel relate to her as a "Turk" even though she is almost certainly a Sephardic Jew from Turkey (that's what she probably meant when she said that Turks figure out she's Jewish by her name even though she's secular, most Turkish Jews have Sephardic surnames that don't sound Turkish). Almost all Russian speakers who have made aliyah can relate to this, in the USSR they were Jews and in Israel they are "Russians" (no matter if they come from Jews from Ukraine, Moldova or Uzbekistan), plus there's also suspicion that they're not really Jewish because there a bit of intermarriage and in general, at least compared to traditionalist Israeli groups like Mizrahi Jews, the Jews from the former Soviet Republic arrived in Israel with not much connection to Jewish tradition after 70 years of Communism. I can relate too; I grew up in the USA and was raised by Israeli parents, but even though Hebrew was essentially my first language, the fact of being born and raised in the USA totally made me "American" to other Israelis when I lived there (although my Hebrew accent basically sounds Israeli, lots of things about my attitude and behavior give away my Americannness during the years I lived in Israel as an adult and whenever I visit).
@Eternal Fisherman When it comes to Russian-speaking olim, I'd guess that those who came from the USSR in the 1970s (first big wave after establishment of State of Israel) were predominately of Jewish background with very little mixed marriages, those that came in the early 1990s immediately prior to and in the aftermath of the breakup of the USSR were maybe anywhere from 15% to 30% mixed Jew/non-Jewish families, and those that are coming now are probably mostly of mixed heritage.
My name is Israel my parents are from Guatemala but I love the country I’m learning Hebrew myself my dream is go to the Holy Land and kiss it... it’s a deep love inside my heart ברוך השם ידןד
Did you know that the word "Isra-el" means: Servant (Isra) of Allah (El)? If you REALLY want to be faithful to God Almighty, I invite you to read the Quran (Elquran)
@@mercytomankind9803 Israel means God contents . The Jewish god isn't Allah though, Jews address their god as Elohim, El or Yahweh, which essentially means something along the lines of god or lord, and is not the name of the god, and there are several theories that Allah was the pre Islamic moon god of Arabs, and the use of moon and moon Calendar in Islam unlike Judaism and Christianity, seems to have been the origin of it. So it is a rather disputed topic. *And since La Ilah Illa Allah means, There is no god but Allah, denoting different terms for god and Allah , does seem to suggest that Allah isn't a word that means god but the name of the Muslim God.* Also , *Jews don't go around converting your people, so why can't you just respect other's beliefs like them? and mind your own business, If by your theory Jews do indeed pray to your god, then there is nothing that needs to be changed* and hence there isn't a need to convert a Jew or any one named Israel for that matter. *Also, my name means-Daughter of the mountains, but that doesn't mean I should actually go live on a mountain.*
I feel for the Turkish girl at the end of the video. As a Dutch Turk I can relate to her struggle of being stuck in between two different cultures. I hope she finds the better future she is looking for.
I felt the suffer of the Jewish Turkish lady because I have had same suffer! I was born and raised in Kuwait and I thought I am Kuwaiti but the circumstances played against me and my family & made me immigrated to my grandfathers’ country, Iraq...I felt in Iraq same her feelings now in Israel, except in Israel is no sanction, no out of international law regime.
ron zloof العراقيين لايكرهون اليهود وخصوصاً اليهود العراقيين...توجد الكثير من المودة للأخوة اليهود العراقيين...ولكننا كعراقيين عرب لدينا استياء كبير وخيبة أمل من تصلف بعض الإسرائيليين تجاه عملية السلام...المسلمين العرب حافظوا على القدس وحفظوها معتدلة التحاصص دينيا وروحيا لقرون طويله ويستحقون جزء كبير منها.
@@saadalbadri5210 ولن ترضى عنك اليهود ولا النصارى حتى تتبع ملتهم.انت تقول شعورك مؤلم كونك كنت بالكويت ورحت للعراق وهو فعلا شي صعب جداا لكن تخيل الاصعب بيتك يهدم وتوضع في مكان صغير تجمع فيه كل الفلسطينيين وتمنع عنهم العمل .موت بطيئ.وبعد هذا وبعد صبرهم ورفضهم عروض الاقامه في الغرب وترك الاقصى.يرون التعليقات ويرون واحد من بني جلدتهم من دينهم وعروبتهم يجامل الصهاينه.والله بسهوله ياخذونك لحم ويرمونك عظم .حفظك الله ولا يغرك تبسهم فليس كل مايلمع ذهب
Indian Christian here but the thing is i sometimes feel so connected to israel and it's culture yup mostly i feel this country idk why just told my feelings We always pray for israel and her rights to exist ❤🇮🇱
@@hamzadesidragonsarwar What the hell are you talking about? 1. No Republican moved up to Canada, like ever... , 2 the Conservative party in Canada are 100% center right and have some pretty left wing social policies so none of that is US Republican in the least bit. 3. Are you actually saying that you would rather live in a society where you have only one party? That would be called a dictatorship and that type of poor and uneducated mentality is not welcomed in the west.. Please see yourself out.
I have met plenty of Palestinians in Philadelphia, NYC, Santiago Chile, and Bolivia. And most of them would not go back to Palestine even if Israel never existed. Why would they? Palestine has no economy, no real government, no anything, there hasn't been Arab sovereignty in those lands since 1300 AD. Times have changed. Arabs no longer want to live under Islamic rule because it makes everyone poor and miserable.
@@intihumala9087 @Inti Humala it's not necessary because of islamic rule it's just Arab countries in general. And the Palestinian authority is not "islamic" anyway. It's partially because of neo colonialism and corrupted regimes. I'm not Palestinian but I would be happy to live in the US because quality of life is just better. I'm getting off topic but my point is nobody would want to leave their homeland if it was safe and stable
why did they completely disregard how she said she experiences racism as a Turk in Israel? they focused on the antisemitism in Turkey but not the other part of her experience
I think that it's because they immediately knew exactly what she meant: there is a tribal aspect to the jews from the days of the 12 tribes, and I don't have an inherent problem with it, quiet the contrary, but with the negative aspect of it: too many times we are auto categorized as : "personal name", "where you came from", and the more of an individualist you are the more troubling it is. Thank the almighty my origins are from everywhere so people let go of categorizing me even a bit.
I love your project! I´ve been watching your channel for ages! Have you interview non-jewish and non-arab immigrants? I would like to hear their thoughs on Israel! I´ve met some of atheits and non-jewish people that live in Israel because they either love the culture or they find to be a great place to live!
Non-Jewish living in Israel here. Unlike olim, we don't have any benefits when we immigrate here. And I agree, he should interview us! A lot of us have interesting insights about this country.
Me too, but it helps to learn as much as possible before you go so that you can concentrate on working up fluency when you finally arrive. Even if you sign up to formal classes no one can get to fluency on a three or six month tourist visa. Trying to just "pick it up" is not a good strategy.
American Jew here. I can't see myself doing it simply because of family, culture shock and the fact that upward mobility is much harder in Israel. In another life or maybe later on, definitely.
The only rude Israeli I meet was a boy in Tel Aviv. He got angry because he thought I was mocking him. I was just trying to understand Hebrew, he said "Lo owed" or something when I tried to use my visa card . It means "it does not work" in my language. For those who don't know. I'm Aramean and I speak Aramaic, we share the same rots as the Jewish people. We have thousands of similar words like lo = no, aryiyo = lion, hamesh = five. Many Jews asked me about my heritage and they got scared when I said that we have the same alphabet. Olaf, Beth, Gomal, Dolad lol, But anyways I made lots of friends and we laughed together! I definitely felt like home in Israel! I hope the Arameans in the North Israel can preserve our nation!
Parts of known jewish religious literature and prayers are in Aramaic We sing and know what we are saying. It just feel it like Hebrew itself. Then came modern Hebrew, with Israel.
As a Turk I feel so bad for the last girl, I love Jewish people in Turkey. They have been here for 500 years (most of them came from Spain after reconquista). I had to immigrate from Turkey because of the economic and political situation. Keşke gitmemize gerek kalmasaydı :(
DISCLAIMER : that is just my experience, I have no intention of saying Erupean are antisemitic, I know most of them are really good people, but there are bad people in every country, do not think ill of them because of it. story: so, my sister friend family made an Aliya from Britain, apparently they were harassed for weeks, they got phone calls from neo nazis and some of them even sended them death threats and from immigrants as well, which is why they decided to come to Israel, because they were really afraid to stay in their home, they are British born jews but I heard the same story from many other Jews around the globe. story 2: my experience. I understood why they wanted to come to Israel after my family went on our first trip to Erupe, Erupe is beautiful, architecture is so colourful and full of history, and people are vary well mannered, sadly in every good place must be some bad. the minute my family arrived we were ordered to take down every Jewish element when we are in public so we won't be physically attacked, now I'm a true idiot that completely believed in the good of all Erupeans so I decided, like a fool, not to take off my David shield neckless, it didn't end well, it only took me one walk before hearing someone saying racial slurs behind me in line in an aggressive voice "LOOK... SHES JEWISH" now, I'm not the kind of girl to fear something so silly, but he even pointed at me to his VARY angry friends in public with some really "nice" smiles before security came to see what's happening. I'm not a fool, I know how to differentiate between the happy go lucky "Oh you're Jewish! cool!" that some Erupean say in your face to the "LOOK.... she's Jewish" menacing voice that others say. I took my necklace off. I truly couldn't understand how Erupean Jews actually LIVE their life like this, in fear, taking their Yamaka, David shield necklace and everything Jewish off of them as if trying to hide. it feels so... wrong and scary. for example there were places where we couldn't speak Hebrew and when we spoke we could literally see some vary evil gazes on us (mostly from the falafel store, but still) that followed us till we left the streets and sometimes even followed us till we came to a more public place. I can never understand how Erupean jews can live in this kind of fear.
yet, when you walk the streets of Israel, you will see Muslim women wearing the burka and Jewish women wearing their sheital. Here, we walk proudly wearing our symbols; and of course there are those who are bigoted; as there are in every country in the world. One only has to look on this site; to see who the ignorant haters really are; and most of them don't even live in Israel.
A Realistic Two-State Solution - besacenter.org besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/a-realistic-two-state-solution Jan 31, 2020 · A two-state solution-Israel and Jordan-is in the national interests of both countries, as well as in Palestinian interests. It can bring peace and prosperity and can ensure the security and stability of the region.
what is the racism against white people by jews like in Israel today? can white people move to Israel and enjoy life without discrimination for not being either a jew or a muslim? is there a Neutral neighborhood with more peaceful people in Israel?
3:15 yup , as an israeli i confirm that , you can be in a mall , look at the closest guy near you say something random as fuck like "last time im eating chocolate" , and hed just look at you and be like "word" , or "i know exactly what you mean" and carry the conversation like you two been friends for years , plus everybody here is calling eachother "achi" , which stands for - (my) brother
Ginette, the girl from Turkey, is incredibly cute and extremely gracious ; only wanted to say that. (I wonder if she has connections to France, because Ginette is an old french first-name)
@@Linda43 In Mediterranean countries French often became a language used by Jews between themselves largely due to the activities of the _Alliance Israélite Universelle_
I was referring to the something I had read about Ataturk. He basically eliminated Turkish from the curriculum and replaced it with English or French to further modernize and secularize Turkey. My Turkish Jewish collegue confirmed it.
@@marksimons8861 Yes about the Alliance. On Jaffa Road next to the Clal Building there is what remains of the old entrance to the Alliance. Its just a gate.
20% of Israel's population are Arabs who accept Israel and live there having citizenship, and the rest are often too stubborn to compromise with Israel or it's people.
@JerkySwiner215 Thats exactly my point. 1sral arbs and the pal3stnans are the same people, they just live in different parts of historic Pal3stn (the parts that were control by 1sral in 19 48 and 19 67 respectively) . Why did 19 48 arbs accept 1sral while the 19 67 arbs are hostile to it? The 1948 arbs were treated with respect and given citizenship and equal rights, while the 1967 arbs placed under military occupation. 1sral is the cause for most of the problems the 19 67 arbs face (many of them are refugees expelled from 19 48 land and not permitted to return home and their belongings and land were confiscated). Isn't it time 1sral made amends for what it did?
@@thinker1211 Today, the palestinians are the cause of Israeli persecution against them. We were on the way to peace, but the intifadas happened and then reversed all the progress, bringing religious crazies into Israeli politics.
@@SumSum030 I understand that 1srali persecution against 19 67 arbs is because of their popular uprisings against 1srali occupation (the intifadas). But did that response help or further escalate the problems? Britain faced a wave of terrorist attacks from the IRA. At the hight of it the British prime minister Margret Thatcher was almost killed, when she was targeted in bombing of the hotel she stayed at. The British didn't respond with heavy handed approach, nor built walls around Catholic neighbourhoods in northern Ireland. Instead they worked hard to find a way to agree peace. Some might say they've given in to the terrorists but they gained peace. There is a lesson here to be learned here.
Most of these people are not even religious and are only going to stolen land because of the benefits. No consciousness in them at all. Yet their main claim is based on the Torah, which they don't even believe in.
הלוואי הלוואי שיכולתי לחזור לישראל נתיב חיי הביא אותי לאמריקה למרות שאני נשואה לאמרקאי למדתי ולמדתי כאן היום בגיל כמעט שמונים אני משווה למשפחה בארץ מצב הרבה יותר טוב ממני נתחיל משירותיי בריאות כאן מוציאים הון מהכיס לשרותי בריאות למרות שיש לנו בטוח בריאות דמי ההשתפות שלנו הם גבוהים אני עעדיין מרגישה זרה ומוזרה בקיצור אני עץ שנעקר משורשיו תברכו את ישראל ובלי תלונות
Going to make an Aliya soon back to Israel, im sick of visiting and watching from the side already, I want to go back home and stay and be with the rest of my family and get closer to our God.
I'm Muslim and I really like the informative videos you're making. It makes me broaden my visions. Although I don't agree or admit the state of Israel but I was really interested to know how people there think, thank you for your efforts!
good, at least you are willing to learn more about the other side. we need more open minded Muslims like you. information and education is the solution to all conflicts.
@@theendurance Why does anyone need to learn about the "other side" in this particular situation? This is not a conflict between a husband and wife so that you'd ask for people to hear from both of them. This is an occupation. Did we need to "learn" about the white Americans who enslaved the black people? was the world supposed to ask them how they feel now that the blacks no longer accept to be slaves for them? why does it matter what an American thinks about this situation? why is an American allowed to migrate to a country they've never been and Palestinians are not allowed to go back to the homes they've built and lived in? We do not need to "educate" ourselves about what the oppressors and colonizers think they're entitled to. And I have no respect for anyone who moves from the country they were born in and lived in most of their lives into a country they KNOW the original inhabitants of were killed and kicked out from, only to take their homes and live off the pain of those original inhabitants aka the Palestinians.
Get your English right. It's not "Israeli immigrants", it's "Immigrants to Israel". (Israeli immigrants you can find in London, Los Angeles, Berlin... not in Israel)
Portugal is considered the 3rd safiest country in the world. Everyone is welcome here regardless their cultural, ethnical and religious background. Shalom! Salaam!
I’m curious about Israeli’s opinion about China or Chinese people. For most of Chinese people (at least from what I heard from my relatives, neighbourhood and my friends) when we talk about Jews(we just automatically ignored the arab Israeli, sorry 😐 ), we think of intelligence, hardworking, finance etc in a positive way. And when you get into a Chinese bookstore, you can always see lots of books entitled “Raise your child in Jewish way”, “The wisdom of Jews”, “ How to get succeed as Jews” , “The Jewish Business Bible” , “ Israel: the Renaissance of a nation” etc...LOL. And when my dad watches the news about the conflicts between Israel and Palestine, he immediately imputes the fault to the Arabs (And bizarrely most of my relatives don’t know any thing about Judaism ✡️ ). After my high school, I’ve got the opportunities to study either in Israel or in France, finally I chose to go to France as I was already fluent in French, even years after that my dad “regularly” ask me: do you wanna get your Master degré in Israel after your graduation in France? Me: What a pro-Semitic!!!!!!🤔🤔🤔
This is my impression from my own social circles about Chinese: 1. One of the few existing nations that are as old, and even older than us- which is very respectable. 2. Culture seen as very strict, which results in high work ethic and excellence in academy and sports. Israelis seem to respect this aspect, but only from the outside because it's very contradictory to Israeli culture. 3. Society seems to function like an ants nest- achieving incredible feats as a massive collective (the Olympics opening show in Shanghai is often brought up as an example), but at the price of the individual in the crowd. 4. General distaste for the Chinese government, as it is seen as oppressive and extremely Orwellian towards its own people while having brow-raising, long-term expansionism ambitions on a global scale. 5. While the religions and philosophies often practiced in China are forbidden in Judaism for being rooted in idolatry, they are still often respected for thoroughly and smartly exploring the spirit of people and the world. It's also often brought up as an example of religion/philosophy, as a general sentiment and not a specific example, that dwells too deep into spirituality and abandons the material.
@@hanna319 You, not "we", there are 1st many Israelis coming to Germany, mainly Berlin but not only, and 2nd mostly they don't really care of the Holocaust anymore. So you can speak only of yourself. That's why I want him to interview people in Israel. Here, no one can proof whether you even live in Israel. שלום
@@hanna319 Hey, I never forget the Holocaust. That is a wild thing to claim! I am a German, living in Germany and I have been to Israel and love Israel. I have meet a LOT of people in Israel who either had gone to Germany or wanted to go there. / I understand how Jewish people do not want to come here. But don't forget there were also Germans suffering under the Holocaust, like "the White Rose", or the christian theologist Dietrich Bonhoeffer. It is a sensitive topic but we should speak our minds. I think it's a wrong mindset to see all Germans as potential Nazis even though Germany embraces multi culturalism and also Jewish live. I am from Ulm, the city Einstein was born, and there is a new synagouge and I love it. / At the end of the day I see you as a human, we only have the present day and we can build on it. I don't care if you are a Jewish Israeli, an atheist or whatever, what matters is respect and the pursuit of treating all people - country fellows and strangers - the same.
@@dnhg9730 OMG, I am not saying anything about the German people, i know that you are different generation, and I'm not blaming you for what the Nazis did, I'm just saying that i do not want to live in a place where my sisters and brothers were brutally murdered. I find it very very difficult, that's all. Have a great day. Peace from Israel
Fuck UA-cam it’s true, a country supporting Israel doesn’t make it’s people there not anti Semitic 😂 not so much the actual Europeans but the “refugees”
He says that every body there are anti-semitim but bec of this he didn’t was look as a Jewish didn’t wear his kippa so this is why they didn’t attack him
@@joellopes3934 It's funny that I usually get messages from people of Czech and some other European countries warning me of the Islamiaztion of Europe! I'm like, calm down brother! We don't even know where Czech is on the map!!!
@@faisalalan8633 well Portugal is not the czech republic and neither me or anyone in this forum said anything regarding the "islamization of Europe". I could care less.
I have a question can Palestinian who was born in America and is American citizen join the Palestinian army? And also when a American citizen Jewish person joins the Israel army Do they give back their citizenship?
This authentic video is the reason why I haven’t made aliya as a father Jew living in antisemitic Germany! The story of the Turkish woman/girl really touched my heart as we have a huge Turkish minority here in Germany that is systematically subjected to racism as well! Great video!
@Ian Miles Stop spreading lies ffs. As a Turk living in Germany me and my peers are subjected to racist slurs and treatment everyday. I'm not whining about it though, because it shows how insecure and consumed with negativity these racist are. İn the end positivity wins and outweighs hateful guys like yourself.
At first I thought this was a video about American olim, but then I watched some more and was surprised that you covered so many countries, except the two from where most immigrants come from: Russia and Ukraine. Maybe you should do a separate video about these olim, otherwise it's just weird to exclude the largest immigrant group by far.
@Rasha Badawi She was mostly referring to a incident in Istanbul where she was identified as a Jew in a rude manner. Apparently, they are more antisemitic there. Listen again
"In Israel she is Turkish" - how else are we meant to know where to find real burek and good coffee! Seriously though, nobody I've met has bad sentiment against Turkish Jews.
Dude: your Turkey GDP is overly exaggerated. Turkey has never been popular for immigration.. let's put it that way. Israel is constantly attacked by terrorists but their infrastructure is better than US==GDP supposedly much better than the 2.
WHOSE SON IS THE MESSIAH? 41 While the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them, 42 “What do you think about the Messiah? Whose son is he?” “The son of David,”they replied. 43 He said to them, “How is it then that David, speaking by the Spirit, calls him ‘Lord’? For he says, 44 “‘The Lord said to my Lord: “Sit at my right hand until I put your enemies under your feet. 45 If then David calls him ‘Lord,’ how can he be his son?” 46 No one could say a word in reply, and from that day on no one dared to ask him any more questions(Matthews 22:41-46)
Interesting, what I gathered from this video is that only 2 of the 8 Jewish people you interviewed claimed moving to Israel for religious reasons and being connected to the homeland. The truth of the matter is the majority of Jewish people who move to Israel don’t have a deep sense of religious connection to the land. In this video the reasons people moved there was free health care, Cheaper University, to be more social, and to live in a better economy. Meanwhile Muslims have a deep religious connection to the land and are slowly being diluted from the country to make room for people who are moving there for materialistic and non-religious emotional reasons. If the country had a bad economy and you got rid of all the juicy benefits the country offers such as health care, low income housing and low cost universities, than watch how fast these people would flock back to their previous countries. Because they have no strong religious ties to the land, if they did they would live there no matter the conditions. This is not to direct any hate towards Jewish people, but this is just the reality of what I see. If you would have interviewed 100 people in this video you would have had a minority claim moving there for religious reasons.
Strange how they always have deep religious connection to other peoples lands and temples. From hindu shrines to churches to buddhist shrines to the jewish temple to the pagan kaaba.... its almost like its intentional.
@@Linda43 those 255000 were bribed by The Jewish Agency to come. By offering free plane tickets and financial assistance. They were sold on it like it was a time share. The agency goes out looking to recruit people. Majority dont decide to move on there own because of spiritual reasons, its the free tickets, financial assistance, cheap university and promise of low income housing. Especially if your moving to a settlement. There basically just giving those homes away just to fill them up. Like I said there being sold a time share. Majority never moved for sincere spiritual reasons. Just lip service to enjoy all the benefits. They finish there cheap university and leave. The most successful people in Israel leave the country. Central Bureau of Statistics data shows that in 2017, some 4.5 Israelis with academic degrees left the country for every one who returned. Leaving because they got what they needed and left doe something better. But what can be better than there deep religious ties to there homeland? Isnt that why they moved there according to you? Your either in denial of the truth or you have alot to learn.
@@brissk Israel does offer help to those Jews who return to Zion. So what. Do you think that this is ever enough to leave their homes, family or culture? Life in Israel is difficult and only truly committed people(Zionists) come home to Zion. AM YISROEL CHAI ISRAEL LIVES
i really didnt expect for a turkish to be here, wow. i'm very sorry that she has gone through racism in both sides. people really need to learn to mind their own business.
The economic situation is not that much here however I don't blame anyone who faced racism to just leave the country where they were ...like parts of the states and France and Germany many jews and muslims faces racism.
@@Linda43 Everything is relative. For a Jew in Turkey or Brazil, at the moment, Israeli is more economically attractive. For a Jew in Canada, not so much. For a non-Jew from Africa or the Phillipines or Thailand (whether they are working in Israel legally on temporary work visas, like many of the Filipino nurses, Thai farm workers or Chinese construction workers, or off the books, like most of the Africans), Israel is a desirable place to work and make some money. For an American, it depends also. Like the first person interviewed (she was an Israeli who had lived in the USA for a long time, she probably had US citizenship or a green card), she said you can make lots of money in the USA (lots of ambitious Israelis who've settled in NYC, LA, and Florida have been very successful) but Israel gives you cheap health insurance, and good health care (mostly) and of course, it's home. But if you want to make *$$$$MONEY$$$* and you have a lot of drive, whether you are an independent guy with a clothing store or a high-tech coder, Israel is not so much the place; you know that. Q: How can an oleh hadash have $1 million in under a year n Israel? A: Come with $2 million!
3:15 The same for me in Dominican Republic. You can start a conversation with just about anybody at any time anywhere as long as that person is Dominican. We’re all _cousins_ 😄
@@Born_Yashish Yes. you won't drop your identity you built up in the country you were born once you enter another country. Even if you live in isolation because of your religion and you speak another language you still pick up the identity of that country. Language and environment is key, ethnicity is more than secondary.
@@chigeh After all this time, he still has a very strong Portuguese accent. I didn't hear any French accent from the other fellow. Probably wasn't originally from France.
@@chigeh I'm just commenting. Some people lose their accent easily, others (like me) not. No need to be rude and trashy. Calm down and learn some manners. I actually responded to you by mistake. I meant to answer to Dogbert52.
I have southern european blood but is imposoble for me to go back to italy, spain or any other place that i have heritage..is a very slow burocratic process and thay ask for a lot of money.. i really wish that us have the same ingroup preference that the people in this video have and even have one race based ethnostate like this people have.
Btw i use the word "this people" in my anterior comment twice because for some mysterious reason youtube even censored the word who start with same letter than "Juice" The youtube algoritms are just out of control. But they not censored the word "christian", very weird stuff.
If your grandparent were born there than it should be easy.Most Jewish people have a stronger connection to their culture than 2+ generation Europeans .
Not one Russian? That's not very representative... Russian is the third most common language in Israel
Ahead of the commencement of the MH17 trials in the Netherlands on March 9, 2020, various Russian government officials have made statements defending Russia against accusations that Russia provided the Buk missile launcher that shot down MH17 on July 17, 2014. Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Maria Zakharova complained of “planted news citing some mythical ‘irrefutable’ evidence, with witnesses’ details classified and links to sources that cannot be opened” and complained of a “media campaign” against Russia supposedly launched before the trial.
Other Russian officials have been more specific in their accusations. Referring to images of a Buk missile launcher in separatist held Ukraine and linked to the downing of MH17, Russia’s Ambassador to Australia, Dr. Alexey Pavlovsky, told Australia’s News9 that “Many of these pictures have been heavily tampered with. It seems that the Australian Federal Police as part of the investigation also had information to this effect but it somehow chose to withhold it from the public.”
Russia has repeatedly claimed images of the Buk in Ukraine were fake, with the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs stating in June 2019 that Russia had produced “precision expert analysis proving that the video clips supporting the JIT’s [Joint Investigation Teams] conclusions were fabricated” along with an earlier presentation by the Russian Ministry of Defence in September 2018, which claimed videos published online and used by the JIT to detail the route of the Buk through Ukraine were fabricated - seemingly plagiarising said claims from bloggers.
While it might seem bizarre for any government to provide plagiarised conspiracy theories and online rumours as their evidence in issues as serious as MH17, Russia has a well established track record of doing so, both with MH17 and earlier incidents, such as the August 21, 2013 Sarin attacks in Damascus, wherein Russian officials, including Russia’s Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, repeated claims made on conspiracy websites in their statements to the media.
@Eternal Fisherman What's good for the goose is good for the gander. Sorry, not sorry.
@Eternal Fisherman No, because they've never lived in W. Africa, nor have their parents. Nothing against you or anna, or any reasonable people who might be of russian extraction. I think you know who this directed at... So why don't you focus your ire on them? You've been doing a good job with that lately. Keep going!
@Eternal Fisherman she's probably from the USSR. Every person ive ever met in the USA that was from the USSR, said they were Russian.. regardless if they were from ukraine or moldva or Lithuania or whatever.
@Fisherman the behavior of that deranged #protector betrays the fact that the main goal of the zionutters is not Palestine but Russia. the zionutters and neocons blew their chance to plunder and grab Russia in 1991 so they're foaming at the mouth now.
The girl, who is a Turkish Jew, seems very kind, adorable and polite person. Unfortunately, there is a still anti-semitism here in Turkey and I hope that discrimination against other people's religions, cultures, ethnicities and sexualities will end in the world.
Greetings from Turkey by the way.
@@egedemirer8528 sizin gibi düşünen insanların var olduğunu bilmek beni hem şaşırttı hemde mutlu etti açıkçası videodaki kıza çok üzüldüm keşke türkiyede antisemitism olmasaydıda israile gitmek zorunda kalmasaydı belli halinden çokda memnun değil israilde.Maalesef ki özellikle 90 lı yıllarda yaygınlaşmaya başlayan antisemitisimden dolayı arapsaçına dönen bi durum var daha önce Türkiyede yaşayan yahudiler tanıdım bunların arasında pro israeli diyebileceğimiz kişiler var ki ben hak veriyorum şahsen kendilerini israile yakın hissetmelirini ama gel gelelim aynı kişiler türkiyede bulundukları durumdan ötürü türkiyedeki aşırı solcu-komünist topluluklara düşüncelere yakın bulmuşlar kendini ki bu gruplarda filistini destekler daima siyasetçilerimizin bizi içine soktuğu berbat durum ortaya böyle sonuçlar çıkarabiliyor ne yazıkki
I just came back from a visit in Istanbul, I miss Turkey already, I love your country.
Someone can tell the girl at the end of the video that I love her, she's worthy, she's precious, she belongs to humanity just as well every single human being on this earth and if I could I would hug her right now. It breaks my heart feel how she feels out of place. Be strong my dear.
She can go home. Unfortunately, the people she stole can't do the same.
you circumcised'?:
she aint single
There is a long queue of people wanting to hug her. Kidding apart I empathize a lot with her. Feel the same about Israel x golah
Keep your pants on
Poor turkish girl. She seems like she just wants to live her life but always in the spotlight. She seems like a sweetheart. I doubt most turks are anti semitism.
Unfortunately, Antisemitism still exists to this day... (oddly) but I really want my Jews living with me in a country we all call home!
Cause any country belonging specifically to one race or religion in any form is going to create bias, & bias would not lead to democracy!
If only we could have a chance...
I'm not Jewish and have no Jewish family, but on a recent visit to Israel I felt strangely at home. I really like Jewish culture and the Hebrew language. I can understand anybody wanting to move to Israel but I feel sad many Jews don't feel as safe or as at home in Europe anymore.
Tom Jameson Europe never be our home ONLY israel and I think all the Jewish from Europe need to be here ❤️
That's interesting. Why do you think that is, that you felt at home?
It is because of the spiritual atmosphere, it is a blessed land. Other parts of the world where religion has been removed doesnt feel a good place to live! There is no connections to God
@@user-ux8pj3rf4w you are absolutely right
@@user-ux8pj3rf4w most of israelis are not religious and practice gay paradr
I appreciate Cody your efforts to have a positive things and freedom of speach to discuss about two nations side by side keep it up God bless you man love from Pakistan
When you're in Turkey they said you're Jews and vice versa.. I can relate to her as a Chinese descendant born and raised in Indonesia and now living in Taiwan.. same experience
*Love from Libya to Libyan Jews in Israel.Libyans love Israel* ❤🇱🇾🇮🇱
GD Bless!!
@@davidweiss9891
I hate Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood I hope that Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood will be excluded But Haftar is also a bad man
@@TheRanaro thank you ❤🇮🇱🇱🇾✊
Hoàng Nguyên Israel is the only western country never to colonize anyone. Reclaiming your homeland is not colonizing.
@@ياالله-ج9م , who do you support if not Haftar?
I hope that the women at the end of the video finds her support group. Thanks for the videos, Corey.
Truly a shame that the Turkish Jewish woman was harassed here for being from Turkey. WTF? I love hearing about the variety in our backgrounds from Ethiopia to Canada to Iran. Should we judge each other based on where our families spent the most time in the diaspora? Fuck no.
Every New Oleh or Olah experiences culture shock in Israel.
I suggest you listen again to the others in the video and their more positive experiences.
@@Linda43 I didn't say it's "racism". I said it's a shame she was harassed for it. I made Aliya about 12 years ago and I've experienced how people are but the way she said it, it sounded worse. People looked at me like I was crazy and asked why I'd come here from America. It's a bit rude and maybe some would find it offensive but it really doesn't sound like that's what people said to her for being from Turkey.
I personally hate Turkey as a whole but I've known and been friends with wonderful individuals from Turkey. I certainly wouldn't think any Turkish Jew would be in line with the things I hate about Turkey and certainly wouldn't prejudge him/her for being from there.
@@Avi1231 My apologies.
You didn't say racism.
My point was that she is going through a process which is obviously difficult for her.
I agree with you about Turkey. I don't think people in Israel associate her with Turkey. After all, she is Jewish.
Purim Sameach.
I don't think she necessarily meant that she was "harassed" for it, I think she just meant the irony of being judged and seen as a Jew by all all the Turks in Turkey and the native-born Israelis in Israel relate to her as a "Turk" even though she is almost certainly a Sephardic Jew from Turkey (that's what she probably meant when she said that Turks figure out she's Jewish by her name even though she's secular, most Turkish Jews have Sephardic surnames that don't sound Turkish). Almost all Russian speakers who have made aliyah can relate to this, in the USSR they were Jews and in Israel they are "Russians" (no matter if they come from Jews from Ukraine, Moldova or Uzbekistan), plus there's also suspicion that they're not really Jewish because there a bit of intermarriage and in general, at least compared to traditionalist Israeli groups like Mizrahi Jews, the Jews from the former Soviet Republic arrived in Israel with not much connection to Jewish tradition after 70 years of Communism.
I can relate too; I grew up in the USA and was raised by Israeli parents, but even though Hebrew was essentially my first language, the fact of being born and raised in the USA totally made me "American" to other Israelis when I lived there (although my Hebrew accent basically sounds Israeli, lots of things about my attitude and behavior give away my Americannness during the years I lived in Israel as an adult and whenever I visit).
@Eternal Fisherman When it comes to Russian-speaking olim, I'd guess that those who came from the USSR in the 1970s (first big wave after establishment of State of Israel) were predominately of Jewish background with very little mixed marriages, those that came in the early 1990s immediately prior to and in the aftermath of the breakup of the USSR were maybe anywhere from 15% to 30% mixed Jew/non-Jewish families, and those that are coming now are probably mostly of mixed heritage.
My name is Israel my parents are from Guatemala but I love the country I’m learning Hebrew myself my dream is go to the Holy Land and kiss it... it’s a deep love inside my heart ברוך השם ידןד
Did you know that the word "Isra-el" means: Servant (Isra) of Allah (El)? If you REALLY want to be faithful to God Almighty, I invite you to read the Quran (Elquran)
@@mercytomankind9803 I really can't stand people that proselytise. If your religion is what Israel is meant to follow? He will.
@@mercytomankind9803 it is a Hebrew Name, don't twist it! and jews do not proselytise
@@mercytomankind9803 Israel means God contents .
The Jewish god isn't Allah though,
Jews address their god as Elohim, El or Yahweh, which essentially means something along the lines of god or lord, and is not the name of the god,
and there are several theories that Allah was the pre Islamic moon god of Arabs, and the use of moon and moon Calendar in Islam unlike Judaism and Christianity, seems to have been the origin of it. So it is a rather disputed topic.
*And since La Ilah Illa Allah means, There is no god but Allah, denoting different terms for god and Allah , does seem to suggest that Allah isn't a word that means god but the name of the Muslim God.*
Also , *Jews don't go around converting your people, so why can't you just respect other's beliefs like them? and mind your own business, If by your theory Jews do indeed pray to your god, then there is nothing that needs to be changed* and hence there isn't a need to convert a Jew or any one named Israel for that matter.
*Also, my name means-Daughter of the mountains, but that doesn't mean I should actually go live on a mountain.*
@@mercytomankind9803 Its isra(servent) of el(elohim) not allah allah is word for god in arabic not hebrew
I feel for the Turkish girl at the end of the video. As a Dutch Turk I can relate to her struggle of being stuck in between two different cultures. I hope she finds the better future she is looking for.
@Moljo tell that to muslims in the west
It’s better to not immigrate and feel like you don’t belong. It’s best for all Jews to return home.
They need more land. Jews. Life and Indian (Hindu). Life are living with. Similar problem.
go back then if u are not ready to adapt fully
I felt the suffer of the Jewish Turkish lady because I have had same suffer!
I was born and raised in Kuwait and I thought I am Kuwaiti but the circumstances played against me and my family & made me immigrated to my grandfathers’ country, Iraq...I felt in Iraq same her feelings now in Israel, except in Israel is no sanction, no out of international law regime.
@Swej kcuf You seem very well tutored in the contents of the Torah. Who was your teacher?
اش لونک؟ انا من اسرایل وامی وا ابونی من عراق . انا ولتو ہونی فی اسرایل ال "زیرسلم پوست" یکتب 95% من عراقی اودم ما یحبونا لش؟
ron zloof العراقيين لايكرهون اليهود وخصوصاً اليهود العراقيين...توجد الكثير من المودة للأخوة اليهود العراقيين...ولكننا كعراقيين عرب لدينا استياء كبير وخيبة أمل من تصلف بعض الإسرائيليين تجاه عملية السلام...المسلمين العرب حافظوا على القدس وحفظوها معتدلة التحاصص دينيا وروحيا لقرون طويله ويستحقون جزء كبير منها.
Ard you saad about it?
@@saadalbadri5210 ولن ترضى عنك اليهود ولا النصارى حتى تتبع ملتهم.انت تقول شعورك مؤلم كونك كنت بالكويت ورحت للعراق وهو فعلا شي صعب جداا لكن تخيل الاصعب بيتك يهدم وتوضع في مكان صغير تجمع فيه كل الفلسطينيين وتمنع عنهم العمل .موت بطيئ.وبعد هذا وبعد صبرهم ورفضهم عروض الاقامه في الغرب وترك الاقصى.يرون التعليقات ويرون واحد من بني جلدتهم من دينهم وعروبتهم يجامل الصهاينه.والله بسهوله ياخذونك لحم ويرمونك عظم .حفظك الله ولا يغرك تبسهم فليس كل مايلمع ذهب
Indian Christian here but the thing is i sometimes feel so connected to israel and it's culture yup mostly i feel this country idk why just told my feelings
We always pray for israel and her rights to exist ❤🇮🇱
NOT everyone in France is antisemitic.
From a french who love jews and Israël.
Love.
@ochaleklaw , it was temporary birth control that was given to 20 Ethiopian women for health reasons (they were weak from the voyage)
There are many Jews in Israel who speak French (my family for example : I think most of the hate to israel come from Arab immigrants
Bentley free nernia
Trust me as a Jew who lived in France it’s not a good experience
royi levin why you even live there .....
7:26 the girl is from my town is the voice of many people who felt discrimination just because her name.
But same in so called Israel!!
You ain't seen discrimination yet.
Yasin Acarbaş Your town? Its a turkish town.
Tbh she doesn't really seem like the type of person who suffers from discrimination. Judging by her demeanor, she seems to be doing just fine.
People in Toronto are especially rude and hostile. If she went to other parts of Canada ... you can talk to anybody.
Canada is worse then US because our daft Republicans moved up there so they pretty much ruined Canada
@@hamzadesidragonsarwar What the hell are you talking about? 1. No Republican moved up to Canada, like ever... , 2 the Conservative party in Canada are 100% center right and have some pretty left wing social policies so none of that is US Republican in the least bit. 3. Are you actually saying that you would rather live in a society where you have only one party? That would be called a dictatorship and that type of poor and uneducated mentality is not welcomed in the west.. Please see yourself out.
Colonists enjoying their lives while the indigenous Palestinians suffering occupied in open air prisons
No one will give a f about you cause if you just going to lie and tell your own truth
@@itoshzaani2387practice what you preach your lies are despicable
Best wishes to all those in your clip. Hope they succeed in their new life.
Love your videos . Me and my Jewish Israeli wife enjoy them together , cheers
You should ask Palestinians in the US and Canada why they moved there..
I have met plenty of Palestinians in Philadelphia, NYC, Santiago Chile, and Bolivia. And most of them would not go back to Palestine even if Israel never existed. Why would they? Palestine has no economy, no real government, no anything, there hasn't been Arab sovereignty in those lands since 1300 AD. Times have changed. Arabs no longer want to live under Islamic rule because it makes everyone poor and miserable.
@@intihumala9087 @Inti Humala it's not necessary because of islamic rule it's just Arab countries in general. And the Palestinian authority is not "islamic" anyway. It's partially because of neo colonialism and corrupted regimes. I'm not Palestinian but I would be happy to live in the US because quality of life is just better. I'm getting off topic but my point is nobody would want to leave their homeland if it was safe and stable
why did they completely disregard how she said she experiences racism as a Turk in Israel? they focused on the antisemitism in Turkey but not the other part of her experience
I think that it's because they immediately knew exactly what she meant: there is a tribal aspect to the jews from the days of the 12 tribes, and I don't have an inherent problem with it, quiet the contrary, but with the negative aspect of it: too many times we are auto categorized as : "personal name", "where you came from", and the more of an individualist you are the more troubling it is. Thank the almighty my origins are from everywhere so people let go of categorizing me even a bit.
they didn't say 'racism'.
I love your project! I´ve been watching your channel for ages! Have you interview non-jewish and non-arab immigrants? I would like to hear their thoughs on Israel! I´ve met some of atheits and non-jewish people that live in Israel because they either love the culture or they find to be a great place to live!
Non-Jewish living in Israel here. Unlike olim, we don't have any benefits when we immigrate here. And I agree, he should interview us! A lot of us have interesting insights about this country.
He did interview Druze and Samaritans. Dorian Kim interviews Asian Israelis on his channel.
@@screamtoasigh9984 druze and samaritans are arabs
Difficult now to travel to Israel because of the Coronavirus. Government says you have to be 2 weeks quarantined in the country except your hotel.
To be honest not recommend coming now The situation sucks all the clubs market party r close and you need to be to week literally to week at home
That's even for residents who left and came back. My cousin was quarantined after returning home to Israel.
A dream of mine is to actually travel to Israel and learn hebrew.👍🇮🇱
You are welcome and G-d bless.
@Swej kcuf You are nasty piece of work.
Me too, but it helps to learn as much as possible before you go so that you can concentrate on working up fluency when you finally arrive.
Even if you sign up to formal classes no one can get to fluency on a three or six month tourist visa. Trying to just "pick it up" is not a good strategy.
@@marksimons8861 Yeah i plan on doing something like that
man israel loves sabaton
American Jew here. I can't see myself doing it simply because of family, culture shock and the fact that upward mobility is much harder in Israel.
In another life or maybe later on, definitely.
I likes Jews whether in diaspora or in Israel.
Love hearing the stories in this video.
How do you know if someone is Jewish?
@@chugalongway01 You can usually tell by the rabid dingo following them around barking.
Huh thxx
The Protector damn imagine insulting a people group who accomplished more than you could ever dream of doing in your moms basement
The only rude Israeli I meet was a boy in Tel Aviv. He got angry because he thought I was mocking him. I was just trying to understand Hebrew, he said "Lo owed" or something when I tried to use my visa card . It means "it does not work" in my language. For those who don't know. I'm Aramean and I speak Aramaic, we share the same rots as the Jewish people. We have thousands of similar words like lo = no, aryiyo = lion, hamesh = five. Many Jews asked me about my heritage and they got scared when I said that we have the same alphabet. Olaf, Beth, Gomal, Dolad lol, But anyways I made lots of friends and we laughed together! I definitely felt like home in Israel! I hope the Arameans in the North Israel can preserve our nation!
Parts of known jewish religious literature and prayers are in Aramaic We sing and know what we are saying. It just feel it like Hebrew itself. Then came modern Hebrew, with Israel.
Please, tell me where you find the guy on 4:52. I have to have several beers with him. What a nice character!
As a Turk I feel so bad for the last girl, I love Jewish people in Turkey. They have been here for 500 years (most of them came from Spain after reconquista). I had to immigrate from Turkey because of the economic and political situation. Keşke gitmemize gerek kalmasaydı :(
DISCLAIMER : that is just my experience, I have no intention of saying Erupean are antisemitic, I know most of them are really good people, but there are bad people in every country, do not think ill of them because of it.
story:
so, my sister friend family made an Aliya from Britain, apparently they were harassed for weeks, they got phone calls from neo nazis and some of them even sended them death threats and from immigrants as well, which is why they decided to come to Israel, because they were really afraid to stay in their home, they are British born jews but I heard the same story from many other Jews around the globe.
story 2: my experience.
I understood why they wanted to come to Israel after my family went on our first trip to Erupe, Erupe is beautiful, architecture is so colourful and full of history, and people are vary well mannered, sadly in every good place must be some bad. the minute my family arrived we were ordered to take down every Jewish element when we are in public so we won't be physically attacked, now I'm a true idiot that completely believed in the good of all Erupeans so I decided, like a fool, not to take off my David shield neckless, it didn't end well, it only took me one walk before hearing someone saying racial slurs behind me in line in an aggressive voice "LOOK... SHES JEWISH" now, I'm not the kind of girl to fear something so silly, but he even pointed at me to his VARY angry friends in public with some really "nice" smiles before security came to see what's happening. I'm not a fool, I know how to differentiate between the happy go lucky "Oh you're Jewish! cool!" that some Erupean say in your face to the "LOOK.... she's Jewish" menacing voice that others say.
I took my necklace off.
I truly couldn't understand how Erupean Jews actually LIVE their life like this, in fear, taking their Yamaka, David shield necklace and everything Jewish off of them as if trying to hide. it feels so... wrong and scary. for example there were places where we couldn't speak Hebrew and when we spoke we could literally see some vary evil gazes on us (mostly from the falafel store, but still) that followed us till we left the streets and sometimes even followed us till we came to a more public place.
I can never understand how Erupean jews can live in this kind of fear.
Thats why they are making aliyah.
yet, when you walk the streets of Israel, you will see Muslim women wearing the burka and Jewish women wearing their sheital. Here, we walk proudly wearing our symbols; and of course there are those who are bigoted; as there are in every country in the world.
One only has to look on this site; to see who the ignorant haters really are; and most of them don't even live in Israel.
@@jeunesseeternelle9803 Yt also deletes but we hear you.
You can write anything you want about Europe but we are not killing women and children like Bibi and your army have been doing for 20 years.
@@jeunesseeternelle9803 mine was deleted as well.
Home Sweet Home ..
*AM YISRAEL CHAI!* 😊🇮🇱💙
A Realistic Two-State Solution - besacenter.org
besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/a-realistic-two-state-solution
Jan 31, 2020 · A two-state solution-Israel and Jordan-is in the national interests of both countries, as well as in Palestinian interests. It can bring peace and prosperity and can ensure the security and stability of the region.
what means CHA
@@bahataha2861 it's Hebrew and means Life or in this case The people of Israel lives ...Amen..🇮🇱✡🔯♥️
@@avi3860
thanks and CHA lsrael lam arab and muslim l love lsrael from saudi arabia
Patriots For Israel agreed
Thank you Corey
Free Palestine from israhell
That's a silly question, why she didn't move to the US or Canada. If you don't have a citizenship or a refugee you can't just move.
she prefers Israel than USA. i love israel
Exactly. In Israel she is a citizen and in the US she would have been on a work visa at most
Great video!
I'm too want to live in Israel, but now I can't, hello from Ukraine!
Why cant you?
Is it really that difficult for Ukrainians to migrate to Israel? I meet a couple on the kibbutz I was on.
good! stay there plz
@@tsukicat4848 define “free Palestine?”
Yes come quickly because Israeli government have many land and houses what they got from Palestinians
I am Indian Jews is very peaceful religion all Indians love and respect Israelis peoples❤️🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇱🇮🇱💪💪
Israel ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
🥰
God bless India.
Sharma tarma karma.!
Apex Master maybe this is crazy cow....’
what is the racism against white people by jews like in Israel today?
can white people move to Israel and enjoy life without discrimination for not being either a jew or a muslim?
is there a Neutral neighborhood with more peaceful people in Israel?
3:15 yup , as an israeli i confirm that , you can be in a mall , look at the closest guy near you say something random as fuck like "last time im eating chocolate" , and hed just look at you and be like "word" , or "i know exactly what you mean" and carry the conversation like you two been friends for years , plus everybody here is calling eachother "achi" , which stands for - (my) brother
But you have to shout according to another girl haha
it looks like Brazil haha
Man I really want to make aliyah now. Been thinking about it for a while.
Disgraceful that these occupiers feel no shame living on stolen land.
We can say that this country is like a football club from all over the world
I immigrated to Israel because Judea is my natural homeland!
West bank *
And no its not your homeland
@@zain3253 ... west bank is a recent made up name
Its real name is Judea and Samaria
@@freejay3 its the west bank , get over yourself
@@zain3253 Learn history ignoramus
You are really welcome here !
We welcome all Jews, secular and religious.
@@tsukicat4848
It is our country
And it will always be
Is it hard to find jobs there?
I live your videos, but is there a way you can fix the subtitles so they are not there twice. It’s difficult to read. Thanks.
Ginette, the girl from Turkey, is incredibly cute and extremely gracious ; only wanted to say that. (I wonder if she has connections to France, because Ginette is an old french first-name)
In Turkey, the school system uses either French or English.
@@Linda43 OK, interesting. Thank you !
@@Linda43 In Mediterranean countries French often became a language used by Jews between themselves largely due to the activities of the _Alliance Israélite Universelle_
I was referring to the something I had read about Ataturk. He basically eliminated Turkish from the curriculum and replaced it with English or French to further modernize and secularize Turkey. My Turkish Jewish collegue confirmed it.
@@marksimons8861 Yes about the Alliance. On Jaffa Road next to the Clal Building there is what remains of the old entrance to the Alliance. Its just a gate.
Israel welcome migrants from all around the world. Why does it not accept the people who are already living under its occupation?
Lovely strawman
20% of Israel's population are Arabs who accept Israel and live there having citizenship, and the rest are often too stubborn to compromise with Israel or it's people.
@JerkySwiner215 Thats exactly my point. 1sral arbs and the pal3stnans are the same people, they just live in different parts of historic Pal3stn (the parts that were control by 1sral in 19 48 and 19 67 respectively) . Why did 19 48 arbs accept 1sral while the 19 67 arbs are hostile to it? The 1948 arbs were treated with respect and given citizenship and equal rights, while the 1967 arbs placed under military occupation.
1sral is the cause for most of the problems the 19 67 arbs face (many of them are refugees expelled from 19 48 land and not permitted to return home and their belongings and land were confiscated). Isn't it time 1sral made amends for what it did?
@@thinker1211 Today, the palestinians are the cause of Israeli persecution against them. We were on the way to peace, but the intifadas happened and then reversed all the progress, bringing religious crazies into Israeli politics.
@@SumSum030 I understand that 1srali persecution against 19 67 arbs is because of their popular uprisings against 1srali occupation (the intifadas). But did that response help or further escalate the problems?
Britain faced a wave of terrorist attacks from the IRA. At the hight of it the British prime minister Margret Thatcher was almost killed, when she was targeted in bombing of the hotel she stayed at. The British didn't respond with heavy handed approach, nor built walls around Catholic neighbourhoods in northern Ireland. Instead they worked hard to find a way to agree peace. Some might say they've given in to the terrorists but they gained peace. There is a lesson here to be learned here.
Most of these people are not even religious and are only going to stolen land because of the benefits. No consciousness in them at all. Yet their main claim is based on the Torah, which they don't even believe in.
הלוואי הלוואי שיכולתי לחזור לישראל נתיב חיי הביא אותי לאמריקה למרות שאני נשואה לאמרקאי למדתי ולמדתי כאן היום בגיל כמעט שמונים אני משווה למשפחה בארץ מצב הרבה יותר טוב ממני נתחיל משירותיי בריאות כאן מוציאים הון מהכיס לשרותי בריאות למרות שיש לנו בטוח בריאות דמי ההשתפות שלנו הם גבוהים אני עעדיין מרגישה זרה ומוזרה בקיצור אני עץ שנעקר משורשיו תברכו את ישראל ובלי תלונות
respect for the Israel from a Greek
Corey love your videos, where can I send you questions? Can I just post them here?
8:57 askisraelis@gmail.com
Mark Simons thanks I never watch the whole video lol
I would love to move to Israel. Great country nice weather
R u jew?
"Everyone in France is anti semite", nice. Glad that dude found another place to live then.
I have a friend that moved to Israel after he got sick of the antisemitism and not being able to even put a kippah freely
Need help moving my life and family to Israel. Shalom
Going to make an Aliya soon back to Israel, im sick of visiting and watching from the side already, I want to go back home and stay and be with the rest of my family and get closer to our God.
Mazal tov. Hatzlacha
@@putzgadol תודה אחי
@Starhopper yalla, you can stay for a Shabbat at my place with your whole family
@@noamrotstain3182 🔥🔥🔥
איפה אתה עכשיו?
I'm Muslim and I really like the informative videos you're making. It makes me broaden my visions. Although I don't agree or admit the state of Israel but I was really interested to know how people there think, thank you for your efforts!
Recognize* not admit
Great comment tho 👍🏻
good, at least you are willing to learn more about the other side. we need more open minded Muslims like you. information and education is the solution to all conflicts.
@@theendurance Why does anyone need to learn about the "other side" in this particular situation? This is not a conflict between a husband and wife so that you'd ask for people to hear from both of them. This is an occupation. Did we need to "learn" about the white Americans who enslaved the black people? was the world supposed to ask them how they feel now that the blacks no longer accept to be slaves for them? why does it matter what an American thinks about this situation? why is an American allowed to migrate to a country they've never been and Palestinians are not allowed to go back to the homes they've built and lived in? We do not need to "educate" ourselves about what the oppressors and colonizers think they're entitled to. And I have no respect for anyone who moves from the country they were born in and lived in most of their lives into a country they KNOW the original inhabitants of were killed and kicked out from, only to take their homes and live off the pain of those original inhabitants aka the Palestinians.
@@theendurance
Yes there are two sides: Occupier and Occupied peoole.
people*
Get your English right. It's not "Israeli immigrants", it's "Immigrants to Israel". (Israeli immigrants you can find in London, Los Angeles, Berlin... not in Israel)
Is your Hebrew as good as her English?
please interview the indian jews about life in Israel.
Portugal is considered the 3rd safiest country in the world. Everyone is welcome here regardless their cultural, ethnical and religious background. Shalom! Salaam!
Portugal is awesome. One of my favourite places! :)
I’m curious about Israeli’s opinion about China or Chinese people. For most of Chinese people (at least from what I heard from my relatives, neighbourhood and my friends) when we talk about Jews(we just automatically ignored the arab Israeli, sorry 😐 ), we think of intelligence, hardworking, finance etc in a positive way. And when you get into a Chinese bookstore, you can always see lots of books entitled “Raise your child in Jewish way”, “The wisdom of Jews”, “ How to get succeed as Jews” , “The Jewish Business Bible” , “ Israel: the Renaissance of a nation” etc...LOL. And when my dad watches the news about the conflicts between Israel and Palestine, he immediately imputes the fault to the Arabs (And bizarrely most of my relatives don’t know any thing about Judaism ✡️ ). After my high school, I’ve got the opportunities to study either in Israel or in France, finally I chose to go to France as I was already fluent in French, even years after that my dad “regularly” ask me: do you wanna get your Master degré in Israel after your graduation in France? Me: What a pro-Semitic!!!!!!🤔🤔🤔
林祝凱 I pity the Chinese. You guys are being swindled;(
@ *PCCCCCP* I'm glad u madd;)
Exist a Israeli guy chinese born in Hebrom
@Rasha Badawi "They think that you are Corona" The only person who said that here is you. If you're looking for the racist you should try a mirror.
This is my impression from my own social circles about Chinese:
1. One of the few existing nations that are as old, and even older than us- which is very respectable.
2. Culture seen as very strict, which results in high work ethic and excellence in academy and sports. Israelis seem to respect this aspect, but only from the outside because it's very contradictory to Israeli culture.
3. Society seems to function like an ants nest- achieving incredible feats as a massive collective (the Olympics opening show in Shanghai is often brought up as an example), but at the price of the individual in the crowd.
4. General distaste for the Chinese government, as it is seen as oppressive and extremely Orwellian towards its own people while having brow-raising, long-term expansionism ambitions on a global scale.
5. While the religions and philosophies often practiced in China are forbidden in Judaism for being rooted in idolatry, they are still often respected for thoroughly and smartly exploring the spirit of people and the world. It's also often brought up as an example of religion/philosophy, as a general sentiment and not a specific example, that dwells too deep into spirituality and abandons the material.
Ask some German Jews if they miss Germany. So many Israelis go to Berlin. Can the German Jews imagine to go back? Why, why not?
No, Israel is our homeland, we don't want to go back, we still strongly remember the holocaust.
@@hanna319 You, not "we", there are 1st many Israelis coming to Germany, mainly Berlin but not only, and 2nd mostly they don't really care of the Holocaust anymore. So you can speak only of yourself. That's why I want him to interview people in Israel. Here, no one can proof whether you even live in Israel. שלום
@@dnhg9730 I said it on behalf my family, of course not everyone.
אני גרה בישראל, לא יכולה לשכוח את השואה, אין לי מושג איך אתה יכול
@@hanna319 Hey, I never forget the Holocaust. That is a wild thing to claim! I am a German, living in Germany and I have been to Israel and love Israel. I have meet a LOT of people in Israel who either had gone to Germany or wanted to go there. / I understand how Jewish people do not want to come here. But don't forget there were also Germans suffering under the Holocaust, like "the White Rose", or the christian theologist Dietrich Bonhoeffer. It is a sensitive topic but we should speak our minds. I think it's a wrong mindset to see all Germans as potential Nazis even though Germany embraces multi culturalism and also Jewish live. I am from Ulm, the city Einstein was born, and there is a new synagouge and I love it. / At the end of the day I see you as a human, we only have the present day and we can build on it. I don't care if you are a Jewish Israeli, an atheist or whatever, what matters is respect and the pursuit of treating all people - country fellows and strangers - the same.
@@dnhg9730 OMG, I am not saying anything about the German people, i know that you are different generation, and I'm not blaming you for what the Nazis did, I'm just saying that i do not want to live in a place where my sisters and brothers were brutally murdered. I find it very very difficult, that's all.
Have a great day. Peace from Israel
So basically non of them is indigenous, they are all immigrants
Immigrants*
@@SilverMoon459 yeah that's what they are
This is literally what the whole fucking video is about: Israeli Immigrants.
THE LAST LADY WAS SO TRUE PEOPLE IN ISRAEL CAN BE TOUGH..
"As a Jew, I never experienced anything bad in France" moments later "there is anti-semitism everywhere in France"
ok boss got you.
France is heavily anti Semitic as well as most of Europe, he was speaking from personal experience
Fuck UA-cam it’s true, a country supporting Israel doesn’t make it’s people there not anti Semitic 😂 not so much the actual Europeans but the “refugees”
He says that every body there are anti-semitim but bec of this he didn’t was look as a Jewish didn’t wear his kippa so this is why they didn’t attack him
It’s a fantastic video
Portugal!! That sense of humor is so Portuguese ahahah. I am Portuguese btw
Durmi no aviao!!!!!
Help me find Portugal on the map!
@@faisalalan8633 it´s the most western country of continental Europe, making a border with Spain. We sometimes call it the "ass of Europe" hahah.
@@joellopes3934 It's funny that I usually get messages from people of Czech and some other European countries warning me of the Islamiaztion of Europe! I'm like, calm down brother! We don't even know where Czech is on the map!!!
@@faisalalan8633 well Portugal is not the czech republic and neither me or anyone in this forum said anything regarding the "islamization of Europe". I could care less.
I really want to live in Israel but I'm not a Jew. I want to contribute to their innovative society.
Merry a Jewish girl)
Watching from Pakistan..Would love Israel if they allow Palestinian to have their state
And many people may love Palestine if they supported the existence of the state of Israel... It's circular.
I have a question can Palestinian who was born in America and is American citizen join the Palestinian army? And also when a American citizen Jewish person joins the Israel army Do they give back their citizenship?
This authentic video is the reason why I haven’t made aliya as a father Jew living in antisemitic Germany!
The story of the Turkish woman/girl really touched my heart as we have a huge Turkish minority here in Germany that is systematically subjected to racism as well!
Great video!
You can put your Wurst where the sun don't shine, Hans.
@Ian Miles Stop spreading lies ffs. As a Turk living in Germany me and my peers are subjected to racist slurs and treatment everyday. I'm not whining about it though, because it shows how insecure and consumed with negativity these racist are. İn the end positivity wins and outweighs hateful guys like yourself.
@Gabro Ego Grüße gehen raus an meine Süryani bros 😘
Gabro Ego come and live in the Netherlands we have a large community of Suryoye and Dutch ppl are less Racism
Modern Germany is anti-semitic? I don't believe you.
At first I thought this was a video about American olim, but then I watched some more and was surprised that you covered so many countries, except the two from where most immigrants come from: Russia and Ukraine. Maybe you should do a separate video about these olim, otherwise it's just weird to exclude the largest immigrant group by far.
Colonialism in Palestine
the woman at 3:00 sums it up perfectly. this is my feeling also
Its not an Israeli attitude or culture if you wanna see it like that. Its actualy (southern mostly) Mediterranean.
@@babisz8640 Yeah it is southern, a huge contrast with western mentality.
1:20 I had no clue that Joanna Jedrzejczyk is actually Jewish :D
lol
In turkey she is jewish,and in israel she is turkish!!!sad for her.
In Israel she can be a Jew without fear of harassment. That is the point.
@Rasha Badawi
She was mostly referring to a incident in Istanbul where she was identified as a Jew in a rude manner.
Apparently, they are more antisemitic there.
Listen again
"In Israel she is Turkish" - how else are we meant to know where to find real burek and good coffee! Seriously though, nobody I've met has bad sentiment against Turkish Jews.
@@interestingyoutubechannel1 Another personal made-up life experience passed as " truth". Typical online.
@@matiasbrachini8741 That makes no sense. It is her experience. What right do you have to question it?
I wish i was jewish seems so fun out there in israel
Not that much😅 Peoples are so loud and getting angry really quicklly. And im sure your country is also fun and good😊
@@רקפוטין love you brother from india 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳😚😚😚😚😚😚😚😚😚😚😚🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱
Yes because you don't need to do anything because you can get everything from Palestinians land and houses also asshole
Turkey's GDP is approx. 1 trillion
Israel's GDP is b/w 300-400 billion...
Oh yah turkey faces economic problems😰
Dude: your Turkey GDP is overly exaggerated. Turkey has never been popular for immigration.. let's put it that way. Israel is constantly attacked by terrorists but their infrastructure is better than US==GDP supposedly much better than the 2.
Israel is my home
WHOSE SON IS THE MESSIAH?
41 While the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them, 42 “What do you think about the Messiah? Whose son is he?”
“The son of David,”they replied.
43 He said to them, “How is it then that David, speaking by the Spirit, calls him ‘Lord’? For he says,
44 “‘The Lord said to my Lord:
“Sit at my right hand
until I put your enemies
under your feet.
45 If then David calls him ‘Lord,’ how can he be his son?” 46 No one could say a word in reply, and from that day on no one dared to ask him any more questions(Matthews 22:41-46)
Will you interview Isreali about azan prevention in Jerusalem?
To be fair, a lot of people make Aliya from the US. It is a shit hole when compared to say the UK or Canada.
Interesting, what I gathered from this video is that only 2 of the 8 Jewish people you interviewed claimed moving to Israel for religious reasons and being connected to the homeland. The truth of the matter is the majority of Jewish people who move to Israel don’t have a deep sense of religious connection to the land. In this video the reasons people moved there was free health care, Cheaper University, to be more social, and to live in a better economy. Meanwhile Muslims have a deep religious connection to the land and are slowly being diluted from the country to make room for people who are moving there for materialistic and non-religious emotional reasons. If the country had a bad economy and you got rid of all the juicy benefits the country offers such as health care, low income housing and low cost universities, than watch how fast these people would flock back to their previous countries. Because they have no strong religious ties to the land, if they did they would live there no matter the conditions. This is not to direct any hate towards Jewish people, but this is just the reality of what I see. If you would have interviewed 100 people in this video you would have had a minority claim moving there for religious reasons.
In the last decade, 255000 Jews from the West made aliyah to Israel. The majority were observant Jews.
Strange how they always have deep religious connection to other peoples lands and temples. From hindu shrines to churches to buddhist shrines to the jewish temple to the pagan kaaba.... its almost like its intentional.
@@Linda43 those 255000 were bribed by The Jewish Agency to come. By offering free plane tickets and financial assistance. They were sold on it like it was a time share. The agency goes out looking to recruit people. Majority dont decide to move on there own because of spiritual reasons, its the free tickets, financial assistance, cheap university and promise of low income housing. Especially if your moving to a settlement. There basically just giving those homes away just to fill them up. Like I said there being sold a time share. Majority never moved for sincere spiritual reasons. Just lip service to enjoy all the benefits. They finish there cheap university and leave. The most successful people in Israel leave the country. Central Bureau of Statistics data shows that in 2017, some 4.5 Israelis with academic degrees left the country for every one who returned. Leaving because they got what they needed and left doe something better. But what can be better than there deep religious ties to there homeland? Isnt that why they moved there according to you?
Your either in denial of the truth or you have alot to learn.
@@dogbert52 not even going to bother with you. Your completely deluded, uneducated, and have no idea what your talking about.
@@brissk
Israel does offer help to those Jews who return to Zion. So what.
Do you think that this is ever enough to leave their homes, family or culture?
Life in Israel is difficult and only truly committed people(Zionists) come home to Zion.
AM YISROEL CHAI ISRAEL LIVES
Greating to all Algerian jews in Israel and in algeria
Long live palestine Jerusalem 🇵🇸🙏❤️
@Yoav Daniel
🇵🇸🇵🇸🇵🇸🇵🇸🇵🇸❤️🙏 Forever
Down fake Palestine, Israel fir Jewish people only...
i really didnt expect for a turkish to be here, wow. i'm very sorry that she has gone through racism in both sides. people really need to learn to mind their own business.
There sre many Turks in Israel especially in Tel Aviv
Ginette, Kesin izmirlidir dedik tabii ki izmirlisin :)
Can Bayar türklerin ve türkiyenin degerini görmüs simdi bunlar zanediyorlar ki yabanci ülkeler mükkemel
I falled asleep on a plane.. Goood one😂
Love from Turkey ı hope anytime ı will be able to visit there
Free Palestine from israhell
It's the only place on earth I'd wish to visit before I die
The economic situation is not that much here however I don't blame anyone who faced racism to just leave the country where they were ...like parts of the states and France and Germany many jews and muslims faces racism.
The economy in Israel is strong.
This video shows mostly success stories.
In the last decade, 255000 Jews made aliyah.
@@Linda43 Everything is relative. For a Jew in Turkey or Brazil, at the moment, Israeli is more economically attractive. For a Jew in Canada, not so much. For a non-Jew from Africa or the Phillipines or Thailand (whether they are working in Israel legally on temporary work visas, like many of the Filipino nurses, Thai farm workers or Chinese construction workers, or off the books, like most of the Africans), Israel is a desirable place to work and make some money.
For an American, it depends also. Like the first person interviewed (she was an Israeli who had lived in the USA for a long time, she probably had US citizenship or a green card), she said you can make lots of money in the USA (lots of ambitious Israelis who've settled in NYC, LA, and Florida have been very successful) but Israel gives you cheap health insurance, and good health care (mostly) and of course, it's home. But if you want to make *$$$$MONEY$$$* and you have a lot of drive, whether you are an independent guy with a clothing store or a high-tech coder, Israel is not so much the place; you know that.
Q: How can an oleh hadash have $1 million in under a year n Israel?
A: Come with $2 million!
Depends who u ask and country of origin. Hard one to generalize. For some countries its an economical upgrade, for others not, but spiritual
3:15 The same for me in Dominican Republic. You can start a conversation with just about anybody at any time anywhere as long as that person is Dominican. We’re all _cousins_ 😄
America is too busy giving you guy billions each year
Hope I can move to the promised land one day, the land of my ancestors.
what about me can I go back to
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umm_az-Zinat
@@basedpalestinian6773 , no becuase of demographics
@@davidweiss9891 then why would you want a jew to come ?!???! thats racism
@Rasha Badawi
I will come and have a family, and there's nothing you can do about it, baby
@@basedpalestinian6773
There's a big country full of your people, it's called Jordan.
Interestingly, everyone has the same personality as the people in the country where they came from in Europe or other places.
Almost as if the environment and culture one is born and raised in has a profound impact on one's personality.
@@Born_Yashish Yes. you won't drop your identity you built up in the country you were born once you enter another country. Even if you live in isolation because of your religion and you speak another language you still pick up the identity of that country. Language and environment is key, ethnicity is more than secondary.
Interesting not one person said to worship Lord God Almighty.
The girl coughing in the background just started the spread of Corona in Israel
A very nice clip in general. Loved the portugese man!
"Why did you move here?"
"I fell asleep on the plane"
Had me sideways
@@chigeh After all this time, he still has a very strong Portuguese accent. I didn't hear any French accent from the other fellow. Probably wasn't originally from France.
@@manon562 wtf does that have to do with anything?
@@chigeh I'm just commenting. Some people lose their accent easily, others (like me) not. No need to be rude and trashy. Calm down and learn some manners. I actually responded to you by mistake. I meant to answer to Dogbert52.
@@manon562 ah my apologies then
Hi, Cody...It would be interesting to know why you made aliyah. TY for work
7:26i must know the girl huh
@יואב דניאל סרץ' לא פשוט היא ניראת אבודה והייתי רוצה להיות חברה שלה
I have southern european blood but is imposoble for me to go back to italy, spain or any other place that i have heritage..is a very slow burocratic process and thay ask for a lot of money.. i really wish that us have the same ingroup preference that the people in this video have and even have one race based ethnostate like this people have.
Btw i use the word "this people" in my anterior comment twice because for some mysterious reason youtube even censored the word who start with same letter than "Juice"
The youtube algoritms are just out of control.
But they not censored the word "christian", very weird stuff.
If your grandparent were born there than it should be easy.Most Jewish people have a stronger connection to their culture than 2+ generation Europeans .