Arutz-7\'s Ariel Kahane carried out some meticulous research today, and found that despite the dangers and difficulties currently faced by residents of Yesha, Israelis continue to want to come. He prepared the following random list of several Yesha communities and their forecasted population \"transfers\" for this coming year:

Kokhav Yaakov (north of Jerusalem) - 50 families will come, some will apparently leave.

Tel Tzion, adjacent to Kokhav Yaakov - 84 new families arriving.

Avnei Heifetz (western Shomron) - 4-5 will come, no information on departures.

Adurah (west of Hevron) - one family coming, some will likely leave.

Beit El - 35 will come, a handful will leave.

Adam is expecting 100 new families.

Elon Moreh - 8 will come, 5 will leave.

Beit Haggai (south of Hevron) - 3 to come, none expected to leave.

Ofrah - 5 new families, 2 couples may leave.

N\'vei Tzuf - none coming, 5 leaving.

Brachah - positive balance, did not want to release figures.

Shavei Shomron - 2 new families came, 2 will probably soon come, no one leaving.

Chinanit (south of Um el Fahm) - completing a new absorption center that will take in 27 families.

Gadid (Gush Katif) - 3 families coming, none leaving.

Kfar Darom (Gush Katif) - 6 new families to come, none leaving.

Neriah (western Binyamin) - 3 will come, 4 will leave.

Kfar Adumim (south of Jericho) - 3 to come, none will leave.

Karmei Tzur (south of Gush Etzion) 6 coming, none leaving.

Migdalim (just west of the Jordan Valley) - none coming, 2 leaving.

Rimonim (between Jericho and Ofrah) - none coming, 3-4 leaving.



Some communities told Kahane that they simply have a technical problem of no apartments or caravans to absorb new families.