The Biden Syndrome and its effect on Aliyah
Turmoil, uncertainty and overall mistrust can be a catalyst for making Aliyah. These turbulent times can make the choice much easier.
Turmoil, uncertainty and overall mistrust can be a catalyst for making Aliyah. These turbulent times can make the choice much easier.
The ‘leisure time’ spent during the lock down in the diaspora is best spent planning and preparing for inevitable Aliyah.
The increase in Aliyah may stem more from a survival instinct rather than from a desire to fulfill the sacred commandment.
Coping with the pandemic and lockdown while adjusting and experiencing the Aliyah process.
The ‘lockdown blues’ in connection with ‘Aliyah blues’ is an indication of lacking a certain kind of focus to combat fear.
The more one tangles and hassles about and against the lockdown the worse the virus gets (it seems).
Despite the hardships and impossibilities and what seems foolish, make Aliyah anyway.
Despite the hardships and impossibilities and what seems foolish, make Aliyah anyway.
The plague rages on to the confusion and awareness of others resulting in fear, interest and learning.
The effects of the upcoming strange new season, challenging lockdown (quarantine) on Aliyah.
The importance of what to take which is the main focus that helps one to organize and experience the joy of settling in the Land of Israel.
What to take and what to leave fortifies the adjustment process of aliyah and settling in the Land of Israel.
Has G-d got it all wrong? What is needed to convince ‘the 80%’ to make Aliyah?
The coronavirus pandemic and anti-Semitism are fueling a wave of immigration to Israel unlike previous waves.
Does it make a difference if aliyah is running to or away from something?
Is Aliyah the true antidote for the current ongoing coronavirus pandemic among other things?
Aliyah: a process of grief and a process of joy, with grief being an integral part of JOY. Both grief & joy make up one side of ‘the coin.’
The psychology of Aliyah as it relates to extreme fear of change.
If ‘Yankee Doodle’ is dead in America, how will the Jews there respond? Will Jews allow fear to be the dominate factor in making Aliyah?
The 'price' people seem to have to pay or receive when making Aliyah needs to be seriously considered.
The civil unrest in the Diaspora that Jews are blamed for including the coronavirus may very well affect the Aliyah rate in unusual ways.
Adjustment or maladjustment is dealt with effectively during the Aliyah process in Israel.
The ever-increasing spike in violence against Jews in the Diaspora appears to correspond with ever-increasing spike in Aliyah.
Kristallnacht as compared to the ongoing riots occurring now in America. Are the dynamics similar for similar reasons?
The effects of post coronavirus fear-trauma on the current rate of Aliyah.
Emotionally preparing for possible second round of coronavirus and ways to get through the ordeal virtually unscathed.
Just what is normal let alone new normal? Making Aliyah brings about a new normal in itself along with recovery from the coronavirus.
Are Diaspora Jews becoming more aware that Israel is the safest place on earth for Jews due to how their homelands are handling COVID-19?
How to deal with the confusion that these conspiracy theories cause when planning Aliyah.
Whatever aliyah plans are currently made, should they now be dropped because of the dangerous plague (virus) or stepped up and hastened?
Could the quarantine imposed in order to stem the spread of the virus affect the timing of aliyah?
Can there be a time when it might be too late to make aliyah? Should those who are planning aliyah wait until the plague (virus) is over?
The often-heard question of ‘what will it take for Jews to leave the Diaspora?’ has been debated and discussed for decades.
What can be done to promote aliyah despite the ‘discouraging’ pandemic of coronavirus?
Are the effects of the elections on Aliyah negative; thereby, ‘giving’ the naysayers more to complain about?
Aliyah and the RUDE AWAKENING that comes with it can induce the Jew into considering and reassessing his or her quality of life.
The challenges that the process of Aliyah presents are curative, healing in design.
Are there ‘legitimate’ reasons and not just excuses not to make aliyah?
Aliyah can be the remedy for ‘home confusion’ which can lead to mistaken identity during the Aliyah process.
Knowing what to carry, not only outside but inside, can very well determine and profoundly affect the ongoing aliyah process.
It appears the question of Diaspora is being answered as the Jew hating violence continues to escalate.
Will upgraded security in the Diaspora be effective in stopping Jew-hating violence, thereby assuring overall safety for Jews?
Will increased security in the Diaspora be effective in stopping anti-Semitic violence, thereby assuring overall safety for Jews?
Discouraging aliyah can result in Jews' self-hatred, increased denial of the Jew-hating violence, and apathy.
The Jews' response to anti-Semitism and violent Jew-hatred, both ancient and current, affects the Jew in ways so subtle.
The causes behind contemporary anti-Semitism and why now is the time - more than ever - Jews should be making Aliyah to Israel.
What happens to those self-hating Jews who choose to remain in the Diaspora and are ‘content’ to do so?
The process of considering aliyah includes who and what the individual Jew is in relation to his or her future.
The time has come to confront the tacit acceptance of anti-Jewish violence. What is the cause - and the cure?
The similarities between the Aliyah to Israel today, and the story of Noah’s Ark.
Aliyah is a special adjustment process, through which Jews are blessed like never before.
Just what is prosperity when it comes to Jews and aliyah?
Do Jews have an intrinsic inclination towards Aliyah?
Do Jew-hatred and assimilation depend on location? If so, how are these influences manifested? What actually is ESCAPE AND SAFETY?
Can resisting Aliyah for long periods of time contribute to a hazardous condition to a Jew's soul or spirit?
The choice to make aliyah is a function of the potential immigrant’s sense of self-worth as a Jew or Israelite.
Why the transitional anxiety that one experiences when making Aliyah is really a blessing.
Is Jewish self-hatred a defense mechanism aimed at getting the world to love Jews and Israel?
Is the cause of some Jews' self-hatred the result of millennium of persecutions?
Why many of the Jews in the Diaspora become convinced that remaining in the exile is the heroic thing to do.