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Israeli Jews

Israeli Jews or Jewish Israelis (Hebrew: יהודים ישראלים Yêhūdīm Yīśrāʾēlīm) comprise Israel's largest ethnic and religious community. The core of their demographic consists of those with a Jewish identity and their descendants, including ethnic Jews and religious Jews alike. Approximately 99% of the global Israeli Jewish population resides in Israel; yerida is uncommon and is offset exponentially by aliyah, but those who do emigrate from the country typically relocate to the Western world. As such, the Israeli diaspora is closely tied to the broader Jewish diaspora.

See also: Demographics of Israel

Total population

7,181,000[a]

100,000 (80,000 in Moscow)[9][10]

10,755[11]–30,000[12]

≈30,000[13]

15,000[14]

≈10,000[15][16][17]

The country is widely described as a melting pot for the various Jewish ethnic divisions, primarily consisting of Ashkenazi Jews, Sephardic Jews, and Mizrahi Jews, as well as many smaller Jewish communities, such as the Beta Israel, the Cochin Jews, the Bene Israel, and the Karaite Jews, among others. Likewise, over 25% of Jewish children and 35% of Jewish newborns in Israel are of mixed Ashkenazi and Sephardic or Mizrahi descent, and these figures have been increasing by approximately 0.5% annually: over 50% of Israel's entire Jewish population identifies as having Ashkenazi, Sephardic, and Mizrahi admixture.[18] The integration of Judaism in Israeli Jewish life is split along four categories: the secularists (33%), the traditionalists (24%), the Orthodox (9%), and the Ultra-Orthodox (7%). In addition to religious influences, both Jewish history and Jewish culture serve as important aspects defining Israel's Jewish society, thereby contributing significantly to Israel's identity as the world's only Jewish-majority country.[19][20][21]


In 2018, Israel's Knesset narrowly voted in favour of Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People. As the Israeli government considers a person's Jewish status to be a matter of nationality and citizenship, the definition of Jewishness in the Israeli Law of Return includes patrilineal Jewish descent; this does not align with the stipulations of Judaism's halakha, which defines Jewishness through matrilineality. As of 1970, all Jews by blood and their non-Jewish spouses automatically qualify for the right to immigrate to the country and acquire Israeli citizenship.


According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, the Israeli Jewish population stood at 7,208,000 people in 2023, comprising approximately 73% of the country's total population.[22] The addition of any non-Jewish relatives (e.g., spouses) increased this figure to 7,762,000 people, comprising approximately 79% of the country's total population. In 2008, a study conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute revealed that a plurality of Israeli Jews (47%) identify as Jews first and as Israelis second, and that 39% consider themselves to be Israelis first and foremost.[23]


Upon the Israeli Declaration of Independence in 1948, the Palestinian Jews of the Yishuv in the British Mandate for Palestine became known as Israeli Jews due to their adoption of a new national identity. The former term has since fallen out of use in common speech.

Bnei Menashe

The (Hatikvah), which was written in 1878 by the secular Galician Jew Naphtali Herz Imber revolves around the nearly 2000-year-old hope of the Jewish people to be a free and sovereign people in the Land of Israel.

Israeli National Anthem

The , which was designed for the Zionist Movement in 1891 features a basic design resembling the Tallit (a Jewish prayer shawl) and features a Star of David, generally acknowledged as a symbol of Judaism.

Israeli flag

75% would not agree to live in a building with Arab residents.

More than 60% wouldn't accept any Arab visitors at their homes.

About 40% believed that Arabs should be stripped of the .

right to vote

More than 50% agree that the State should encourage of Arab citizens to other countries.

emigration

More than 59% think that Arab culture is .

primitive

When asked "What do you feel when you hear people speaking Arabic?" 31% said they feel hate and 50% said they feel fear, with only 19% stating positive or neutral feelings.

Arab citizens of Israel

History of the Jews in the Land of Israel

Israelites

List of Israeli Jews

Mashriqi Jews

Sabra (person)

Yerida

(1994). A Radical Jew: Paul and the Politics of Identity. Berkeley, Ca: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08592-3. LCCN 93036269.

Boyarin, Daniel

Deshen, Shlomo; ; Shokeid, Moshe, eds. (2017) [1995]. Israeli Judaism: The Sociology of Religion in Israel. Studies of Israeli Society, 7 (Reprint ed.). London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-56000-178-2.

Liebman, Charles S.

Deshen, Shlomo; (1974). The Predicament of Homecoming: Cultural and Social Life of North African Immigrants in Israel. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.

Shokeid, Moshe

(1982). Becoming Israelis: Political Resocialization of Soviet and American Immigrants.

Gitelman, Zvi

Hermann, Simon (1970). Israelis and Jews. The Continuity of an Identity. Philadelphia, Pa.{{}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

cite book

Khanin, Vladimir Ze'ev (2022). From Russia to Israel — And Back? Contemporary Transnational Russian Israeli Diaspora. Berlin: De Gruyter Oldenbourg.  978-3-11-066516-1.

ISBN

Khanin, Vladimir Ze'ev; Epstein, Alek; Niznik, Marina (2011). Russian Speaking Israelis at 'Home' and 'Abroad': Identity and Migration. Ramat Gan: Bar-Ilan University Press.

Kimmerling, Baruch (2005). The Invention and Decline of Isræliness: State, Society, and the Military. University of California Press.  978-0-520-24672-0.

ISBN

(1983). Attitudes Toward Jewish-Gentile Relations in the Jewish Tradition and Contemporary Israel. Cape Town: Kaplan Centre, Jewish Studies & Research, University of Cape Town.

Liebman, Charles S.

(2001). Reconceptualizing the Culture Conflict among Israeli Jews. Zivion, vol. 1. Ramat Gan: Zivion, Jolson Center for Israel, Judaism & Democracy, Faculty of Law, Bar-Ilan University.

Liebman, Charles S.

; Katz, Elihu, eds. (1997). The Jewishness of Israelis: Responses to the Guttman Report. SUNY Series in Israeli Studies. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.

Liebman, Charles S.

Rebhum, Uzi; Ari, Lilakh Lev (2010). . Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-18388-9.

American Israelis: Migration, Transnationalism, and Diasporic Identity

Rebhum, Uzi; , eds. (2004). Jews in Israel: Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns. Brandeis University Press.

Waxman, Chaim I.

(2001). "Replaying the Rape of Dinah: Women's Bodies in Israeli Cultural Discourse". In Frankel, Jonathan (ed.). Jews and Gender: The Challenge to Hierarchy. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195349771.

Sered, Susan Starr

(1989). American Aliya: Portrait of an Innovative Migration Movement. Detroit, Mi: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-1936-9.

Waxman, Chaim I.

(1993). "Israeli Society and Culture". In Wertheimer, Jack (ed.). The Modern Jewish Experience: A Reader's Guide. New York; London: NYU Press. pp. 72–79. ISBN 978-0-8147-9261-2.

Waxman, Chaim I.

Yadgar, Yaacov (2020). Israel's Jewish Identity Crisis: State and Politics in the Middle East. Cambridge University Press.

Media related to Jewish people of Israel at Wikimedia Commons