(JEWISH GROUP) For fleeing Jews, Venezuela was a golden land -- now in exile, they watch their homeland's unrest with tre
For fleeing Jews, Venezuela was a golden land now in exile, they watch their homelands unrest with trepidation
After their overcrowded motorboat ran aground and took on water, the 15 migrants swam up to a Tampa beach. The men they paid back in Havana had promised theyd be in Miami within five hours; instead they were at sea for five days, running out of food and water.
Two of the migrants had to be carried ashore, where they were swiftly detained by the police. Years prior, their entry would have been easy with a pathway to citizenship, but now with an anti-immigrant backlash they were sentenced to a year in jail.
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Since 2012, a quarter of Venezuelas population, nearly 8 million people, have left, fleeing food insecurity, political oppression and spiraling gang violence.
Though Venezuela was once home to a community of 25,000 Jews, its Jewish population has fallen to 5,000. Alicia Freilich remembers full synagogues, and generous charities that allowed for even the poor to attend Jewish day schools and take advantage of the busy community center, and Jewish retirement home. Now the first thing visitors to the website of the nations leading Sephardic organization see is detailed information on how to apply for Spanish citizenship,
While there was a small Sephardic Jewish community in Venezuela in the 19th century, the countrys Sephardic families came mainly from Morocco during the countrys post-war oil boom. Most Venezuelan Jews, however, are Ashkenazi, the children or grandchildren of Eastern European Jews who left Europe before the Holocaust, like Alicias parents Máximo and Rifka, or survivors who came after the war, like Alicias ex-husband Jaime Segal.
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