The grinding bureaucracy encountered
by new immigrants to Israel
is the stuff of legend.
G-d only knows how many potential
olim simply never applied to the Jewish
Agency for Israel for permission to emigrate
because they found the prospect of
such a grueling ordeal too daunting to
consider seriously.
In this age of Nefesh B’Nefesh aliyah
can still be pretty tough, as this excerpt
from a blog called “Israeli or bust,” would
seem to attest. Written by Dr. Herman
Weiss, until recently of West Hempstead,
it describes his encounter last week with a
clerk at an office of Israel's Department of
Motor Vehicles:
I am next and show her my
paperwork. Sitting not three
feet from a copier she tells me I
need to get these documents
(passports, Teudat Oleh, etc...)
copied twice. I say O.K., there is a
copier and I point to it. She did not
even acknowledge that I said any
thing as she handed me back my
documents ..... I get everything
copied and race back to the DMV .....
She takes a look at everything I
copied and with disgust she hurls
one of the copies back at me and
says in Hebrew, 'I did not tell you to
copy this.'
Weissfamilymove.blogspot.com
Obviously, the process of uprooting
one’s family and entire life and moving it
from one country to another may never
be completely free of aggravation. But
Nefesh B’Nefesh has undoubtedly rendered
the process a lot more palatable,
and the evidence would seem to be the
organization’s spectacular success in helping
15,000 North Americans make the
move in the last six years.
Yet, Nefesh B’Nefesh has now racked
up a far greater accomplishment, the likes
of which could not really have been predicted
when it began implementing its
system of technical and bureaucractic efficiencies,
which have shaved hours and
days and weeks of waiting and standing
on line from the process of moving to
Israel.
This week it was announced that
Nefesh B’Nefesh, a private organization,
will take over from the Jewish Agency, a
goverment organization, the primary
responsibility for the marketing and promotion
of North American aliyah.
The Jewish agency will maintain its
control over aliyah eligibility, but the
bureaucrats responsible for that process
will work in a small office, which we have
visited, in the basement of the Nefesh
B’Nefesh headquarters in Jerusalem.
An amazing triumph of private enterprise
over an inefficient government
monopoly.