Israel Is Home of Choice for its Citizens (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Matthew Ackerman 06/06/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/06/06/israel-is-home-of-choice-for-its-citizens/
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An article by Pini Herman, a principal at Phillips and Herman
Demographic Research, published today in the Forward, directly takes
on the popular notion that “millions” of Israelis live abroad. If
Herman is right, rather than facing an ongoing drain of some of its
most successful Jewish citizens, Israel has been largely successful
in either retaining them or recapturing those who left to spend
significant time abroad.
In other words, even after a decade
that has seen 1,000 Israelis
killed in the worst terrorist onslaught in the history of modern
Jewish immigration to the Land of Israel, two inconclusive wars, an
ongoing and seemingly insoluble conflict with the Palestinians, the
rise to power of Islamists across its near abroad, the steady march
of a foe committed to its destruction toward nuclear weapons, and
rising condemnations of its very existence seemingly in every corner
of the globe, the Jewish state continues to be the home of choice for
its citizens, even those with easy opportunities to move their lives
to other friendly and developed countries.
Herman bases his
argument on a new study from Pew that found only
230,000 Jewish Israelis are now living outside of the country. He
writes, “The new data confirms that Israel, at 4 percent, has
retained its Jewish native-born population at a higher rate, usually
double the average 8 percent retention of native borns of most other
countries in the world.” Many Israelis return to their native country
after spending time abroad picking up skills in valuable industries
like high-tech that then become assets for the development of more
initiatives based in Israel itself. So instead of draining talent,
Israeli emigration is often circulatory, enabling an ever higher
percentage of talented Israelis to find the work opportunities they
seek without leaving home.
Some of the best-known recent success
stories of Israelis confirm
Herman’s idea. Tal Ben-Shahar achieved extraordinary success in the
United States through his teaching of a popular course at Harvard on
popular psychology, which itself led to the publication of a popular
book, and appearances on “60 Minutes,” “The Daily Show,” and other
popular media, opening the possibility of a lucrative and satisfying
career on his subject matter of choice in the United States. Instead,
as he explains in a new movie he narrates about life in Israel, after
more than a decade in America he returned to Israel to be with his
family and where he feels most at home. (While in the United States
Ben-Shahar was also one of the early thought leaders behind The David
Project.)
Similarly, as described in Dan Senor and Saul Singer’s
Start-Up
Nation, Israeli engineer Michael Laor had proven himself so important
to Cisco in California that when he decided to return to Israel in
1997, they built their first R&D center outside of the United States
in Israel in order to keep him.
Even many of Israel’s supporters
have the strange habit of seeing in
its successes – whether they are military victories or the creation
of native industries – dangers to its ultimate survival. Serious
challenges do indeed exist. But that’s no reason not to look with a
clear eye at all the Jewish state has going in its favor.
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