Israeli Jews | International Freedom Coalition
Levant Desk · Community Dossier

Israeli Jews

Case Undergoing Active Documentation

Israeli Jews are among the most internally diverse national populations on earth: a people unified by religious tradition, historical memory, and a shared political project, drawn from Ashkenazi, Mizrahi, Sephardi, Ethiopian, Yemenite, and more than a hundred other diaspora origins that converged in a single small state in under a century.

Levant Desk · Area of Documentation

Ayellet Aviv, Dossier Leader
Dossier Leader

Ayellet (Elle) Aviv

Founder, Global Peace For Israel · Israeli Air Force Veteran

Ayellet (Elle) Aviv, founder of Global Peace For Israel 501(c)(3), brings a background in national security, strategic defense, and counterterrorism shaped by her service in an elite fighter squadron of the Israeli Air Force. Following her military service she focused on raising global awareness of terrorism and its impact on Israel, America, and the wider world; in the wake of the October 7 attacks she led viral campaigns highlighting the hostage crisis and keeping international attention on those affected. She has organized high-impact events featuring diplomats, military experts, and activists, and has a proven ability to mobilize people, resources, and attention in support of critical causes.

History, Identity & Human Rights

Region History

To understand Israeli Jewish society is to understand a people shaped simultaneously by one of history's most sustained experiences of persecution and by the moral and political complexities of statehood in one of the world's most contested territories.

I · Foundations

Origins and Diaspora

Jewish civilization emerged in the southern Levant in the second millennium BCE, defined by monotheistic theology, covenantal law, and a bond to a specific land that has persisted in religious memory for three thousand years. The destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE and the suppression of the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 CE accelerated dispersal across the Roman world and beyond, producing communities in Babylon, Persia, North Africa, Iberia, the Rhine Valley, and eventually nearly every inhabited region on earth, each preserving halakha, liturgy, and the daily prayer for return to Zion.

II · Persecution & Response

Persecution and Zionism

For the Ashkenazi communities of Europe, that history is inseparable from persecution: Crusade-era massacres, the expulsions from England (1290), France (1306), and Spain (1492), recurring blood libels and pogroms, and the systematic violence of the Russian Empire. Emancipation widened opportunity but also produced racial antisemitism, which offered no escape through conversion. In this context Theodor Herzl, radicalized by the Dreyfus Affair, published Der Judenstaat in 1896 and convened the First Zionist Congress in 1897. Zionism was never monolithic, and its internal tensions still define Israeli political culture.

III · Catastrophe & Statehood

The Shoah and the Birth of Israel

The Holocaust, the systematic murder of some six million Jews by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1941 and 1945, destroyed roughly a third of the world's Jewish population and annihilated the Yiddish-speaking civilization of Eastern Europe. The surviving remnant in Europe's DP camps gave the demand for a Jewish state an urgency that could not be denied. Israel declared independence on May 14, 1948 and was immediately invaded by five Arab armies; the war ended with the new state enlarged, roughly 700,000 Palestinian Arabs displaced, and a moral and political complexity that Israeli society has never fully resolved.

"The Jews are not a race but a people: a people formed by history, held together by law, memory, and the sense that their fate is shared."

Simon Dubnow · Historian, writing in the 1920s
Communities Within a Community

The Jewish Communities of Israel

Israeli Jewish society is a mosaic of distinct ethnic, cultural, and religious traditions that converged from across the global diaspora. The entries below sketch the principal communities, their origins, and their place within the social and political fault lines of the state.

Ashkenazim

Also known as Ashkenazi Jews · European Jews

OriginCentral & Eastern Europe · Russia · Germany
Population~2.8 million in Israel
LanguagesYiddish · Hebrew · Russian · Polish
TraditionOrthodox · Conservative · Reform · Secular

The dominant founding group of the Zionist movement and the early state: the pioneers who built the kibbutzim, the Histadrut, and the Haganah were overwhelmingly Ashkenazi, and their imprint on Israel's institutions remains profound. Shaped by both the secular idealism of early Zionism and the trauma of the Holocaust, Ashkenazim long held a privileged position in Israel's social hierarchy, a disparity that has fueled political tension since the state's founding.

Mizrahim

Also known as Mizrahi Jews · Eastern Jews

OriginIraq · Morocco · Yemen · Iran · Egypt · Syria
Population~3.5 million in Israel, including mixed heritage
LanguagesJudeo-Arabic · Judeo-Persian · Aramaic
TraditionSephardic Orthodox · Traditional · Secular

Today the largest ethnic bloc in Israeli Jewish society, Mizrahim arrived mainly in the 1950s and 1960s as ancient communities across the Arab world and Iran were uprooted within a generation by violence, discrimination, and confiscation. Settled disproportionately in transit camps and peripheral towns, Mizrahi political mobilization, from the Wadi Salib riots to the Black Panthers, reshaped Israeli politics; disparities persist but are narrowing.

Sephardim

Also known as Sephardic Jews · Iberian Jews

OriginSpain · Portugal · Ottoman Empire · Balkans
Population~200,000 to 400,000 in Israel
LanguagesLadino (Judeo-Spanish) · Greek · Turkish
TraditionSephardic Orthodox · Traditional

Descendants of the Jews expelled from Spain in 1492 and Portugal in 1497, who dispersed across the Ottoman Empire carrying Ladino and a distinctive liturgical culture. Salonika, the largest Jewish city community in the world around 1900, was virtually annihilated in the Holocaust: 96% of its roughly 50,000 Jews were deported to Auschwitz in 1943. The Ladino language is now critically endangered.

Ethiopian Jews

Also known as Beta Israel

OriginGondar & Tigray regions, Ethiopia
Population~165,000 in Israel
LanguagesAmharic · Ge'ez (liturgical) · Tigrinya
TraditionBeta Israel (pre-Talmudic Jewish tradition)

Beta Israel maintained a distinctive pre-Talmudic Judaism in the Ethiopian highlands for at least fifteen centuries, led by hereditary Kesim rather than rabbis. Airlifted to Israel in Operation Moses (1984 to 1985) and Operation Solomon (1991), which carried 14,325 people in 36 hours, their integration has been painful: Ethiopian Israelis face documented discrimination in education, housing, employment, and policing, with poverty more than double the national average, and have led some of Israel's most significant civil rights protests.

Yemenite Jews

Also known as Teimanim · Baladi Jews

OriginYemen (Sana'a, Aden, Hadramawt, Sa'dah)
Population~400,000 including descendants
LanguagesJudeo-Yemenite Arabic · Hebrew
TraditionBaladi Orthodox · Shami · Traditional

Tracing their presence in Arabia to before the destruction of the Second Temple, Yemenite Jews preserved a Hebrew pronunciation and liturgy lost elsewhere in the Jewish world. Operation Magic Carpet (1949 to 1950) airlifted nearly 50,000 to Israel, and the Yemenite vocal tradition has shaped Israeli music from Shoshana Damari to Ofra Haza. The Yemenite Children Affair, in which hundreds of infants were taken from their parents in 1950s transit camps, remains one of Israel's most painful unresolved episodes.

Russian-Speaking Israelis

Also known as FSU Olim

OriginRussia · Ukraine · Belarus · Georgia · Central Asia
Population~1.2 to 1.5 million in Israel
LanguagesRussian · Ukrainian · Georgian
TraditionSecular majority · Orthodox · Traditional

More than one million immigrants arrived from the collapsing Soviet Union between 1990 and 2001, the largest wave in Israeli history, bringing a concentration of engineers, scientists, doctors, and musicians that helped catalyze the high-tech sector. Several hundred thousand who qualified under the Law of Return are not Jewish by halakhic definition and cannot marry in Israel, where marriage is governed exclusively by religious authorities.

Haredi Jews

Also known as Ultra-Orthodox · Charedim

OriginEastern Europe · Jerusalem · Bnei Brak
Population~1.2 million and growing rapidly
LanguagesYiddish (home) · Hebrew (religious and public)
TraditionHasidic · Litvak · Sephardic Haredi

The fastest-growing sector of Israeli Jewry, with a birth rate roughly three times the national average and projected to reach 20 to 25% of Israeli Jews by mid-century. Haredi life centers on full-time Torah study, rabbinic authority, and separation from secular culture. The community's exemption from military service, covering over 65,000 eligible men and ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 2024, has become Israel's most divisive internal issue, sharpened by the demands of the post-October 7 war.

Secular & Hiloni Israelis

Also known as Hilonim

BasisLabor Zionism · Hebrew culture · Israeli nationalism
Population~40 to 45% of Israeli Jews
LanguagesHebrew · English · Russian
PracticeNon-observant · Cultural Judaism · Secular

The plurality of Israeli Jewish society and the backbone of its professional, military, academic, and technology sectors. Most hilonim keep Passover seders and fast on Yom Kippur while rejecting rabbinic authority over their civic lives; the absence of civil marriage is a standing grievance. The 2023 judicial overhaul crisis brought hundreds of thousands of overwhelmingly secular protesters into the streets weekly for nine months, a movement interrupted but not ended by October 7.

Appendix · Historical Persecution

Crimes Against the Jewish People: A Historical Record

This record documents the principal categories of persecution directed against the Jewish people across history. It does not diminish the suffering of other peoples; it exists because this history is essential to understanding the conditions that produced Zionism, the State of Israel, and Israeli security consciousness. Entries draw on Yad Vashem, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, academic scholarship, and contemporary human rights documentation.

01

Communal Violence · State-Condoned Massacre

Pogroms in the Russian Empire and Eastern Europe

Organized anti-Jewish riots, typically prepared in advance and conducted with police standing by, defined Jewish life in the Pale of Settlement. The wave that followed 1881 drove some two million Jews to emigrate; the Kishinev pogrom of 1903 killed 49 people, and the Ukrainian pogroms of 1919 to 1921 killed an estimated 50,000 to 200,000, the largest anti-Jewish mass killings before the Holocaust.

02

Forced Displacement

Medieval and Early Modern Expulsions

Jews were expelled from England in 1290, France in 1306 and 1394, Portugal in 1497, and, most catastrophically, from Spain in 1492, when the Alhambra Decree gave 200,000 to 300,000 people three months to convert or leave. These expulsions, the Spanish decree formally rescinded only in 1968, created the geography of the pre-Holocaust diaspora.

03

Ideological Persecution

Modern Racial Antisemitism

Late nineteenth-century antisemitism recast Jews as an immutable biological race, closing the escape that conversion had offered under religious anti-Judaism. Forgeries such as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion supplied its conspiracy literature; the Dreyfus Affair revealed institutional antisemitism in emancipated France and convinced Herzl of the necessity of a Jewish state; the 1935 Nuremberg Laws turned the ideology into legal machinery for exclusion and, ultimately, murder.

04

Religious Persecution · Forced Conversion

The Inquisition and Forced Conversion

The mob violence of 1391 forced the conversion of an estimated 100,000 Spanish Jews, and the Inquisition established in 1478 spent centuries detecting secret Jewish practice among their descendants, executing 3,000 to 5,000 people. Portugal forcibly converted its entire Jewish population in 1497, with children taken from their parents and baptized by force. Crypto-Jewish communities preserved their practice in secret for generations.

05

Genocide

The Holocaust (Shoah), 1941 to 1945

The systematic, state-organized genocide of European Jewry proceeded from legal exclusion through ghettoization to industrial murder in the death camps and the mass shootings of the Einsatzgruppen, including 33,771 people killed at Babi Yar in two days. Pursued even at the cost of the German war effort, it destroyed two millennia of Jewish civilization in Europe, including roughly ninety percent of Polish Jewry. The loss is incalculable and irreversible.

~6M
Jews murdered by Nazi Germany and collaborators
~1.5M
Jewish children killed
~1M
Killed at Auschwitz-Birkenau alone
1 in 3
Of the world's Jewish population killed in five years
06

Forced Displacement · Ethnic Cleansing

Expulsion of Jewish Communities from Arab Countries

Between 1948 and the early 1970s roughly 850,000 Jews were driven from Arab countries and Iran by pogroms, citizenship revocation, and property confiscation. Iraq's community, older than Islam itself, fell from about 150,000 in 1948 to under 400 by 1972 following the 1941 Farhud, denationalization laws, and the 1969 public hangings in Baghdad. Egypt expelled nearly its entire remaining community within months of the 1956 Suez Crisis.

~850K
Jews displaced from Arab countries and Iran, 1948 to 1972
2,500+
Years of Jewish community in Iraq (Babylon)
~5,000
Jews remaining in all Arab countries combined today (est.)
$700M+
Property confiscated from Egyptian Jews alone (est.)
07

Terrorism · War Crime · Crime Against Humanity

The October 7, 2023 Hamas Attacks

On October 7, 2023, roughly 3,000 Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad fighters breached the Gaza security fence and killed approximately 1,200 people, the deadliest single day for Jewish people since the Holocaust, taking some 250 hostages including infants and Holocaust survivors. At Kibbutz Be'eri, 112 residents were murdered house to house; at the Nova festival, 364 were killed. The UN Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict documented clear and convincing information that rape and sexual mutilation occurred during the attacks.

~1,200
Killed, the largest single-day Jewish death toll since the Holocaust
~250
Hostages taken into Gaza
364
Killed at the Nova music festival massacre alone
7:29 AM
Time of the first Hamas breach of the Gaza security fence
08

Contemporary Persecution

The Global Resurgence of Antisemitism

Antisemitic incidents have surged worldwide, accelerating sharply after October 7: the Community Security Trust recorded a 589% increase in the United Kingdom and the Anti-Defamation League a 337% increase in the United States in the following weeks. The 2018 Tree of Life massacre in Pittsburgh, the deadliest antisemitic attack in American history, and the organized 2024 assaults on Israeli football fans in Amsterdam mark the same pattern across far-right, far-left, and Islamist streams.

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