Richard C. Dujardin / Providence Journal
PROVIDENCE, R.I. -- When Naomi Mitchell told her mother, several months
ago, that she was thinking of signing up as a soldier in the Israeli
army, Francine Mitchell suggested she do more research to decide if
that was really what she wanted to do.
By May, the 19-year-old had decided. Returning home after spending nine
months studying and volunteering in Israel, she announced she would
follow in the footsteps of her older brother, Gabi, who joined the
Israeli army, except that she might go into the Israeli navy instead.
Military service is compulsory for young men and women in Israel.
Naomi Mitchell this week boarded one of 13 chartered flights at John F.
Kennedy International Airport in New York that have been set aside this
summer to carry 2,200 American Jews on one-way flights to Israel to
become permanent Israeli residents
"This is something I've dreamed about for a very long time," Naomi
Mitchell said. "I believe in the state of Israel."
The trips are paid for by the Israeli government and are organized by
the Jerusalem-based group Nefesh B'Nefesh, which means "soul to soul."
Aside from arranging flights, the organization provides help in finding
employment and housing.
The campaign has been a success, according to the group's spokesman,
Charley Levine. Levine said that in the first year of operations, five
years ago, the group sent only one planeload, but the number of planes
has increased every year.
The 13 planes being sent this year is the biggest number so far and
suggests that American immigration to Israel is expanding at a more
rapid clip.
Those who immigrate today are of all ages but tend to be couples in
their late 20s and early 30s with university degrees in hand and one or
two children.
Original
Source
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