From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Why Israelis Are Leaving in Record Numbers
Date January 12, 2026 7:45 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[[link removed]]

WHY ISRAELIS ARE LEAVING IN RECORD NUMBERS  
[[link removed]]


 

Hila Amit
January 7, 2026
+972 Magazine
[[link removed]]

*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

_ Over 150,000 citizens have left the country in the past two years
alone — many of them with a one-way ticket and no plans of
returning. _

Travelers at Ben Gurion International Airport, October 23, 2025, Nati
Shohat/Flash90

 

From Israel’s establishment in 1948, its leaders viewed the
expansion of the Jewish population as essential to the survival of the
Zionist project: a way to ensure a lasting demographic majority over
the Palestinian population and a steady supply of soldiers to defend
the state’s borders. Alongside efforts to increase Jewish birth
rates
[[link removed]],
the promotion of Jewish immigration has been central to this strategy.
Near-automatic citizenship under the Law of Return, coupled with
financial incentives, were designed to draw Jews from across the globe
and anchor them permanently in the new state.

The flip side of this policy was the state’s response to those who
left, which was often openly hostile. Jewish emigrants were officially
referred to as _yordim_ — “those who go down” — a term coined
in opposition to _olim_, who were said to “ascend” by immigrating
to Israel. 

The moral hierarchy embedded in this language framed emigration as a
personal and national failure rather than a neutral life choice (it is
worth noting, for example, that Israel does not permit citizens abroad
to vote in elections, making this division concrete). In 1976,
then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin famously dismissed Jewish emigrants
as “the fallout of weaklings,” a remark that captured the
state’s prevailing contempt for those who choose to leave.

With nearly half of the world’s Jewish population
[[link removed].]
now living in Israel, this project can, in many respects, be deemed a
success. Yet Israel’s history has also been marked by recurring
waves of emigration, usually triggered by moments of crisis. Economic
downturns, such as the recession of 1966–67
[[link removed]],
and security shocks like the 1973 Yom Kippur War, prompted significant
numbers [[link removed]] of
Jews to leave the country.

Emigration became an even more contentious issue in Israeli public
discourse during the early 2000s, when the state began to more closely
track departures. This period, which coincided with the Second
Intifada, saw increasing emigration of young, secular, middle-and
upper-class Israelis — the so-called “brain drain
[[link removed]].”
The phenomenon generated widespread concern among Israeli academics
and in the mainstream media, where it was largely framed in cultural
and economic terms. In response, the state launched taxpayer-funded
campaigns [[link removed]] aimed
at encouraging emigrants to return
[[link removed]],
marking a shift away from its earlier singular focus on attracting
Jews who had never lived in Israel.

Over the past two years, however, a wholly different wave of departure
has taken hold, one that represents a decisive break from earlier
understandings of emigration. The shift began well before October 7,
driven in part by the far-right government of Benjamin Netanyahu and
its efforts to weaken the judiciary
[[link removed]]. But the
exodus that followed the Hamas attack and Israel’s subsequent
genocidal assault on Gaza transformed departure into something more
abrupt and urgent. Increasingly, Israelis are not simply leaving but
_fleeing_ — buying one-way tickets with only days’ notice, often
with no intention of returning.

Israelis block the Ayalon Highway during a protest against the Israeli
government’s planned judicial overhaul and in response to the
removal of Tel Aviv District Commander Amichai Eshed in Tel Aviv, July
5, 2023. (Yossi Aloni/Flash90)

According to an October 2025 Knesset report
[[link removed]],
Israeli emigration surged in 2023, with 82,800 people leaving the
country for extended stays — a 44 percent increase compared to the
previous year. October 2023 saw a particularly sharp spike following
the outbreak of the war. The exodus continued into 2024, with nearly
50,000 departures recorded in the first eight months alone. For the
first time
[[link removed]],
Israel registered more long-term emigrants than returnees, with 2023
marking the largest gap between departures and returns in the
state’s history.

The pattern persisted into 2025. In its end-of-year report
[[link removed]],
Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics found that nearly 70,000
Israelis left the country over the course of the year, while only
19,000 returned.  These figures were corroborated by a report
[[link removed]]
published by the Taub Center for Social Policy Studies, which found
that after years of steady growth, Israel’s population growth slowed
in 2025. Researchers attributed the shift primarily to the sharp rise
in emigration, alongside declining fertility rates and increased
mortality linked to the war.

In total, over 150,000 Israelis have left the country in the past two
years alone, rising to over 200,000 since the current government took
power.

For this article, I interviewed several Israeli Jews who have left the
country over the past two years. Their testimonies point to a profound
loss of faith in the Zionist project itself — one that may signal a
broader systemic unraveling. Mass emigration during what the state
frames as an existential crisis exposes a central contradiction: If
Israel is meant to serve as a safe haven for Jews, why are so many
choosing to flee it? This exodus challenges core tenets of Zionist
ideology and reveals the limits of the collective responsibility
narratives that have long bound Israeli society together.

‘THERE’S REALLY NOTHING LEFT TO FIX’

For years, Asaf, 44, believed that meaningful change in
Israel-Palestine was still possible. He and his wife were among the
parents who helped found Jaffa’s bilingual Arab-Jewish school. He
worked as a journalist at Haaretz — widely considered one of
Israel’s few left-leaning outlets — before resigning in 2021,
outraged by what he described as his editors’ refusal to accurately
portray the violence against Palestinians in Jaffa during the mass
unrest of May that year. The family made a deliberate choice to live
in Jaffa, with its large Palestinian-Israeli population, rather than
in the segregated Jewish neighborhoods typical of most Israeli cities.

October 7, and everything that followed, extinguished whatever
remained of Asaf’s resolve to stay.

At 7:20 a.m that morning, Asaf booked plane tickets for himself, his
wife, and their two daughters. The following day, around noon, they
boarded one of the last flights operated by a non-Israeli airline out
of the country, each carrying a single piece of hand luggage. A
friend’s apartment in Berlin awaited them for the first week.

Two years later, Asaf has not returned, not even for a visit. His wife
went back several times to pack their belongings and settle affairs,
but the decision to stay in Germany was made as early as December
2023. During those first three months, the family moved between six
apartments, and Asaf lost his job after his Israeli employer demanded
that he physically reside in Israel — a condition he believes was
politically motivated.

“I had no illusions about reality, about how fucked up and terrible
things were, even before the war,” Asaf told +972. “We knew the
education system was crumbling, the healthcare system was falling
apart. And we knew the army mainly committed war crimes. But there was
still this illusion that, despite everything, the army would at least
fulfill the bare minimum: protecting Israeli civilians. By the
afternoon of October 7, we understood that even this wasn’t true. If
even this is broken, there’s really nothing left to fix.”

An Israeli soldier inspects the destruction caused by Hamas militants
in Kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7, southern Israel, October 30, 2023. (Chaim
Goldberg/Flash90)

Asaf noticed something else on that fateful day. “So many Israelis
started saying horrifying things, openly talking about murdering
people in Gaza. It hadn’t happened like this before,” he recalled.
“It’s been two years, and I haven’t gone back. I’m afraid to
walk down the street there, knowing that so many people around me
participated in this.

“It wasn’t that it came out of nowhere,” he added. “All of
this was already there, building up. But suddenly it was all out in
the open. Watching an entire society become Nazi — that was
frightening to watch.”

 ‘I KNOW I’LL LIVE IN EXILE UNTIL THE END OF MY DAYS’

In the days leading up to October 7, Arye, 73, and his wife had
already been planning a visit to Berlin, but had not yet booked
tickets. “The question of moving to Berlin was already in the air
before the war,” he said. “[My wife and I] are both retired, and
our only son lives here. We thought about splitting our time.”

As they watched the news that morning, they began monitoring flights,
noticing foreign airlines rapidly canceling routes in and out of
Israel. Within hours, they made a snap decision to leave earlier than
planned, securing one-way tickets on El Al for a flight ten days
later. “Until October 7, I didn’t see any reason to completely
leave the country,” he said.

But as soon as the war started, Arye understood the direction things
were heading. “Already in November 2023, a month after we arrived, I
decided that I didn’t want to be part of the genocide that Israel
had begun carrying out,” he continued. “I felt that the only —
or at least the best — way not to be complicit in this crime was to
leave the country.”

Arye stayed in Germany for the 90 days permitted under his tourist
visa, after which he and his wife returned briefly to Israel with the
intention of packing their belongings and relocating permanently. His
wife holds German citizenship, which simplified the process. A few
months later, in May 2024, they returned to Berlin for good. I asked
him what it was like to start over at an advanced age, leaving behind
a familiar community and an entire life.

Passengers at Ben-Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv,
September 18, 2025 (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90).

“I don’t want to sound over the top, but it’s good. As retirees,
we don’t need to build a career or find a livelihood. All we need to
do is choose from the infinite supply of cultural events,” Arye
said. “My wife knows German; I don’t. I’m trying to learn, but
it’s not easy.

“I know I’ll never be German — that I’ll live in exile until
the end of my days. But I’m not the first,” he continued. “And
for exiles, we’re living in the most privileged way possible. Our
income hasn’t changed: We had two pensions in Israel, and as senior
citizens we receive old-age allowances from Israel’s National
Insurance Institute. We also rent out an apartment in Jerusalem. As
long as the Israeli economy doesn’t collapse
[[link removed]], we’re
fine.”

Friends in Israel, Arye recalled, worried that he and his wife would
be isolated. “They asked us: who will your friends be in Berlin? Who
will you go to the movies or the theater with?” But the concern
quickly proved unfounded. “When we arrived, we discovered something
very interesting: many couples our age from Israel had also moved to
Berlin, people troubled by exactly the same things, constantly looking
for one another.”

Today, Arye and his wife socialize regularly with three Israeli
couples in Berlin, all of whom arrived within the last two years.
“We didn’t know any of them in Israel,” he said. “They’re
all from the same political spectrum.”

As a Berlin resident myself, I knew of a Facebook group connecting
Israeli retirees in the city. When I asked Arye whether he had joined
it, he said he deliberately stayed away: the group, he explained, had
ties to Israel’s Ministry of Aliyah and Integration, and he had no
interest in participating in anything connected to the Israeli state.

I later learned that while the group was initially created by private
individuals, it soon received support from an organization called
Zusammen [[link removed]]
(“Together” in German). A recent article
[[link removed]]
in Haaretz revealed that the umbrella organization managing Zusammen
and similar initiatives across Europe — Israeli Community in Europe
(ICE) — is heavily funded by the Israeli government. This is just
one example of how Israeli state institutions continue to entrench
themselves in the lives of citizens who have chosen to leave.

PROTECTING THE CHILDREN

Mordechai, 42, left Israel with his wife and two sons on October 12,
2023. Like many other emigrants who spoke to +972, he says the
decision took shape almost immediately. As they followed the news on
October 7, he said, it became clear that they were not safe —
“that nobody was protecting us.” They booked the first affordable
flight they could find out of the country and landed in Cyprus, moving
on to Athens a few days later. By November, they knew they would not
be returning. “At some point we understood that this chapter of our
lives in Israel was over,” he said. “We wanted normalcy for our
children.”

An El Al flight takes off at Ben Gurion International Airport, outside
of Tel Aviv, August 14, 2025 (Yossi Aloni/Flash90)

Their decision was also shaped by concerns about personal safety tied
to their political activism. Mordechai had volunteered for years with
an NGO that transported Palestinian patients from the West Bank to
hospitals inside Israel and worked for an organization operating
bilingual schools. In the weeks following October 7, he watched fellow
activists increasingly become targets
[[link removed]].
“There was a journalist who was almost lynched
[[link removed]]
for criticizing what Israeli soldiers were doing in Gaza,” he said.
“Our political opinions were public — on social media and through
our work. It really felt unsafe.”

Leaving, Mordechai added, was also a way to remove his children from
“the hands of the army.” His sons are now settled in Greece and
relieved not to face Israel’s mandatory military service. The Jewish
community in Athens, he said, rallied to support many of the Israelis
who arrived in the city in the aftermath of October 7.

Noga, 53, left Israel for Italy a year after October 7, with her two
children. Like Mordechai, she made the decision out of a desire to
prevent her children from being conscripted. “My son was 14 when we
left,” she said. “I was afraid that if we stayed, he would go
through a very militaristic and nationalist school system — the
brainwashing, the social pressure — and eventually want to
enlist.”

From the first days of the war, Noga said, she feared the scale of
devastation Israel would unleash in Gaza. What ultimately pushed her
to leave, however, was not only the war itself, but the reaction
within her own community during the first year of the genocide.
“Everyone is in denial, as if there’s no war, as if they’re not
killing 30 children every day,” she said, describing gatherings with
friends where mundane discussions eclipsed any acknowledgment of what
was happening in Gaza. “They were talking about which restaurant to
go to on Saturday morning, what to do with the kids. No one was
talking about what we, as a society, are doing in Gaza.

“I couldn’t be part of that society, and I don’t want my
children to grow up in it,” Noga added. “We’re raising our
children inside this, and we’re not even discussing it. I felt
completely alone, like I couldn’t say anything. I was forced to
participate in this fake normality.”

WHO GETS TO LEAVE? 

It is important to emphasize that most of the Israelis interviewed for
this article are Ashkenazi Jews — members of the country’s ruling
hegemony. Many hold dual citizenship, often obtained through European
ancestry tied to families who survived the Holocaust. Those who do not
have a second passport have nonetheless been able to create exit
routes through higher education, professional mobility, or a
spouse’s citizenship.

At the same time, it is also crucial to note that large segments of
Israel’s Jewish population, mostly Jews of non-Ashkenazi origin
[[link removed]], lack
any realistic option to emigrate. This group, which constitutes
roughly half of Israel’s Jewish population, consists largely of
descendants of Jews brought to Israel by state authorities in
1949–50 from the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. In Israel’s early
years, they were used as pawns to boost the Jewish demographic share
of the population, and have since been subjected to persistent and
well-documented social and economic discrimination.

Yet regardless of these internal hierarchies, both groups are far less
exposed than Palestinians to the daily violence Israel unleashes
across the land. And, Jewish Israeli citizens retain the ability to
leave — if only temporarily — and to return at will (in fact,
Israelis returning after extended stays abroad are entitled to
generous state benefits
[[link removed]]).
In this sense, Israeli citizenship operates as a form of colonial
privilege: it grants members of the hegemonic group the ability to
abandon the project when its political and material costs become
unbearable.

Several interviewees reflected openly on this privilege. Noga, a
single mother, said she lacked the financial and emotional capacity to
become a full-time activist. “The most noble thing is to stay and
physically protect Palestinians,” she said. “But I couldn’t
realistically do that. Staying, living your daily life there with
children, forces you to participate in and normalize the situation
just by being present.”

Others, like Asaf and Mordechai, who had spent years opposing
apartheid and occupation from within Israeli society, described
reaching a point of political exhaustion. They felt they had done
everything available to them, and that there were simply not enough
people on the Israeli left to effect meaningful change. “Yes, I
could stay there and die there and let my children die there,” Asaf
said. “But that won’t stop the horrors from happening.”

_DR. HILA AMIT is an independent researcher and writer. Her 2018 book
"A Queer Way Out: The Politics of queer Emigration from Israel" showed
that sexual orientation and left-wing political affiliation play
significant roles in decisions to leave Israel. The book received the
2019 Association for Middle East Women's Studies Book Award. She is
the author of two works of fiction, and of the queer feminist Hebrew
learning book "Hebrew for All"._

IF YOU BELIEVE THESE STORIES ARE IMPORTANT, BECOME A +972 MEMBER
[[link removed]] TODAY TO MAKE SURE WE CAN
KEEP TELLING THEM. 

For those who care deeply about the people living between the Jordan
River and the Mediterranean Sea, this is your opportunity to move from
despair into action.  

The effects of Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza are still being
felt: much of the Strip lies in ruins, millions remain displaced with
nowhere to return to, tens of thousands have been killed, and many
more are believed to be buried beneath the rubble. 

In the West Bank, the Israeli army has displaced tens of thousands of
Palestinians from refugee camps, while state-sponsored settler
violence is wiping rural communities off the map on a weekly basis. At
the same time, Israel’s ever-escalating regional aggression
threatens to drag the entire Middle East into the inferno. 

We are here on the ground — from Gaza to Tel Aviv to Masafer Yatta
— exposing the crimes, reporting the horrors, and amplifying the
voices of those resisting injustice to an audience of millions around
the world. If there was ever a time the world needed +972 Magazine, it
is now. 

As a binational team based in Israel-Palestine, we are best placed to
cover this pivotal moment in a way that no other outlet can — but we
need your help to do it. JOIN US AS A MEMBER
[[link removed]] to become part of our
mission, and support independent journalism that really makes a
difference.

BECOME A +972 MEMBER TODAY [[link removed]]

* emigration
[[link removed]]
* October 7
[[link removed]]
* Israeli citizenship
[[link removed]]
* Anti-Netanyahu protests
[[link removed]]
* zionism
[[link removed]]
* Berlin
[[link removed]]

*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

 

 

 

INTERPRET THE WORLD AND CHANGE IT

 

 

Submit via web
[[link removed]]

Submit via email
Frequently asked questions
[[link removed]]
Manage subscription
[[link removed]]
Visit xxxxxx.org
[[link removed]]

Bluesky [[link removed]]

Facebook [[link removed]]

 




[link removed]

To unsubscribe, click the following link:
[link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis