The Two Waves of Russian-Jewish Migration from the USSR/FSU to Israel: Dissidents of the 1970s and Pragmatics of the 1990s

L. Remennick
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Drawing on a hybrid view of migrant generations (demographic and historical/political), I examine generational dynamics among Russian-Jewish immigrants in Israel. The first wave of Soviet Jewish migration to Israel in the early 1970s (some 150,000 migrants) was catalyzed by a surge of Zionist sentiment after Israel’s victory in 1967 and enabled by strong political pressure on the USSR from the West. Reflecting their Zionist persuasion, the 1970s arrivals often discarded their former identities, switched to Hebrew, and soon integrated into Israel’s social mainstream. By contrast, the 1990s wave was set in motion by the political turmoil and economic hardships of the post-communist transition, while Zionist ideals were secondary to most émigrés. About 1 million ex-Soviets of Jewish descent migrated to Israel as the most accessible destination throughout the 1990s. They have kept intense and positive ties with their former homeland, in part because one-third of them are Russians married to Jews or mixed ethnics and have family members remaining in the Former Soviet Union. At the same time, their integration in Israel has been fraught with problems. The different attitudes toward the ex-homeland among the parental generations of the 1970s and 1990s have influenced the extent of Russian cultural continuity among their children born in Israel.
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从苏联/前苏联到以色列的两波俄罗斯犹太人移民:20世纪70年代的持不同政见者和90年代的语用学
借鉴移民世代(人口统计学和历史/政治)的混合观点,我研究了以色列俄罗斯犹太移民的代际动态。在1967年以色列胜利后,犹太复国主义情绪高涨,西方国家对苏联施加了强大的政治压力,这促成了20世纪70年代初苏联犹太人向以色列的第一波移民潮(约15万移民)。20世纪70年代来到以色列的人往往抛弃了他们以前的身份,转而使用希伯来语,并很快融入了以色列的社会主流,这反映了他们对犹太复国主义的信念。相比之下,20世纪90年代的浪潮是由后共产主义过渡时期的政治动荡和经济困难引发的,而犹太复国主义的理想则是次要的。在整个20世纪90年代,大约有100万前苏联犹太人移民到以色列,作为最容易到达的目的地。他们与自己的祖国保持着密切而积极的联系,部分原因是其中三分之一的俄罗斯人与犹太人或混血民族结婚,他们的家人仍留在前苏联。与此同时,他们在以色列的融合也充满了问题。20世纪70年代和90年代父母对前故土的不同态度影响了他们在以色列出生的孩子对俄罗斯文化的延续程度。
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