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Court rules Judaism, not place of birth, is grounds for Israeli citizenship

so israel is saying he has to put he is jewish to keep his citizenship.


http://forward.com/articles/156327/israel-citizenship-based-on-religion-not-birthplac/


http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/court-rules-judaism-not-place-of-birth-is-grounds-for-israeli-citizenship-1.430676




http://www.jewishjournal.com/israel/article/court_rules_judaism_not_place_of_birth_is_grounds_for_israeli_citizenship_2/






'Olim' (new immigrants) to Israel from the United States step off the plane for the first time.
Photo by JINI


Court rules Judaism, not place of birth, is grounds for Israeli citizenship

Israeli court denies petition by anti-coercion
activist to be recognized as Israeli without connection to Judaism, says
citizenship is solely determined by law of return.


By
Revital Hovel




May.15, 2012
7:05 PM



35













The Haifa
District Court on Tuesday rejected an appeal submitted by Professor Uzzi
Ornan, who sought to compel Israel's Interior Ministry to recognize his
citizenship based on the fact that he was born in Israel, rather than
on the grounds that he was Jewish.




Ornan, a linguist and member of the Academy of the Hebrew Language, who
is also the founder of the League against Religious Coercion in Israel,
petitioned the Interior Ministry in 2010 to recognize him as an
Israeli, not on grounds of being Jewish but because he was born in
Israel.

In his ruling on Tuesday, Judge Daniel Fisch said that
it was without a doubt that the petitioner, Prof Uzzi Ornan, was born to
a Jewish mother, and was therefore Jewish, which the law of return
states as the source of his citizenship.

"While the
legislator's definition of 'Jew' was only added to the Law of Return in
1970," Fisch wrote, "the turn to the accepted Jewish halakhaic law is
not a novelty, and an overview of the ruling preceding the amendment
shows that any time that a man's Judaism needs to be determined, that
source has not been overlooked."

The judge also referred Ornan
to two rulings from 1962 and 1968, prior to the 1970 amendment that
stipulated that "a Jew is anyone born to a Jewish mother or that has
converted and is not of another religion."

Speaking to Haaretz,
Ornan said that, while he was very disappointed by the ruling, he
intended to continue and appeal the case to the Supreme Court.

"A judge appeals to Jewish law, and the ruling shows that Israel is a Jewish community and not a civilian state," Ornan added.




In response to the petition, the State Prosecutor's Office, responding
in the Interior Ministry's name, said, "Ornan is allowed to hold the
opinion that the laws in question are racist legislation, but he cannot
impose his personal opinion on the Authority and force it to act against
the letter of the law."




The State Prosecutor's Office rejected Ornan's claim that he is "of
another religion" and thus exempt from being classified as a Jew
according to the Law of Return. "The fact that the petitioner is listed
in the Population Registry according to his declaration as a person with
no religion does not affect his being a Jew according to halachic test
determined in the Law of Return," the state replied.




"Accepting the petitioner's interpretation would bring about a
far-reaching and unacceptable result that the sons of Jewish mothers
living abroad who declare to population registries abroad or in other
ways that they have no religion, would be denied the right to make
aliyah to Israel."




Ornan, 89, was born and grew up in Jerusalem, and lives today in the
Galilee village Nofit. During the British Mandate, he fought in the
Etzel and in 1944 was exiled to Eritrea after being informed on to the
British.




When he returned to Israel in 1948, he registered in the country's
first census and insisted that he not be listed as a Jew. In the
religion box, he wrote that he has no religion and in the "nationality"
box, he wrote "Hebrew." In those days, the Interior Ministry tended to
accept what people wrote without asking too many questions.




"In '48, it wasn't an issue," said Ornan. "The general atmosphere was
that this is a free and democratic country. There was force then too,
but nobody tried to change my 'nationality' to Jew."


Click to view image: 'cc34b5fd48a0-olim.jpg'

Added: May-17-2012 Occurred On: May-17-2012
By: OnlyLiarsBlock
In:
Regional News
Tags: israel, jew, law of return, citizenship
Location: Israel (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 795 | Comments: 17 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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