Category
page 1Aliyah
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Aliyah
thumb|upright=1.5|100 years of Aliyah (immigration) to Mandatory Palestine and [[Israel, between 1919 and 2020]]
Jewish Agency for Israel
Zionist non-profit organization (1929-)
Jewish exodus from the Muslim world
departure of Jews from Arab countries from 1948 to the 1970s
Laurence Oliphant
British author, traveller, diplomat and Christian mystic (1829-1888)
revival of the Hebrew language
process of making Hebrew a lingua franca in Israel

ulpan
thumb|Ulpan in Dimona, 1955

refusenik
thumb|January 10, 1973. Soviet Jewish refusenik demonstration in front of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the right to emigrate to Israel, before being broken up by Soviet authorities.
thumb|A rare type 2 USSR exit visa. This type of visa was issued to those who received permission to leave the USSR permanently and lost their Soviet citizenship. Many people who wanted to emigrate were unable to receive this kind of exit visa.
thumb|Letter from the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs|MVD to a 76-year-old man from Sverdlovsk refusing him permission to move to Israel due to "knowledge of sta

Ma'abarot
thumb|250px|Yemenite Jews at a [[Tu BiShvat celebration, Ma'abara Rosh HaAyin, 1950]]

Bricha
Bricha (), also called the Bericha Movement, was the underground organized effort that helped Jewish Holocaust survivors settle in British Mandate for Palestine in violation of the White Paper of 1939. It ended when Israel declared independence and annulled the White Paper.
Jewish state
political term used to describe the nation-state of Israel
Youth Aliyah
organization
Yechiel of Paris
person associated with Hebrew manuscripts

Yom HaAliyah
Israeli national holiday
Yerida
Yerida (, "descent") is emigration by Jews from the State of Israel (or in religious texts, Land of Israel). Yerida is the opposite of aliyah (Hebrew: , lit. "ascent"), which is immigration of Jews to Israel. Zionists are generally critical of the act of yerida and the term has traditionally carried a negative connotation. The term applies specifically to Jewish emigrants and does not include the emigration of non-Jewish Israeli citizens.
youth village
boarding school
Mefkure
Turkish ship
Russian immigration to Israel in the 1990s
migration of Jews from the former USSR to Israel
Nefesh B'Nefesh
nonprofit organization assisting Aliyah (Jewish immigration to Israel) from the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom
Ephraim Carlebach
German rabbi (1879–1936)
One Million Plan
Jewish strategic plan detailing the methods of return to British Mandatory Palestine
Gathering of Israel
the biblical promise of Deuteronomy 30:1-5 given by Moses to the people of Israel prior to their entrance into the Land of Israel
Prisoner of Zion
Jew who was imprisoned or deported for Zionist activity
Atlit detainee camp
internment camp in Mandatory Palestine
Judah HeHasid
Polish rabbi

Russian immigration to Israel in the 1970s
immigration of Russian Jews to Israel
Hakhshara
thumb|Betar members engaged in sifting wheat at the Ze'ev Jabotinsky training farm (hakhshara) in Zastavna, Romania, 1946.
Hakhshara (; also transliterated Hachsharah, Hachshara or Hakhsharah) is a Hebrew word that literally means "preparation". The term is used for training programs and agricultural centres in Europe and elsewhere. At these centers Zionist youth and young adults would learn vocational skills necessary for their emigration to Israel and subsequent life in kibbutzim. Such camps existed before World War II, and still exist today.
Aliyah and yishuv during World War I
Aliyah from Ethiopia
immigration of Ethiopian Jews to Israel
Ringworm affair
medical incident in Israel, 1948–1960
Negation of the Diaspora
concept in Zionism that Israeli Jews should be unlike Diaspora Jews
Odessa Committee
NAALE Program
program sponsored by the Israeli Ministry of Education and the Sochnut (Jewish Agency for Israel)