Jerusalem Post
 
Israel welcomes 2,000th India Bnei Menashe  oleh
 
By LAURA KELLY
01/17/2013
 
 
"This has been my peoples' dream for thousands of years," says  18-year-old 
Mirna Singsit upon her 
 
arrival.
Mirna Singsit Photo: courtesy  Shavei Israel
 
Israel welcomed its 2,000th member of the Bnei Menashe community on 
Thursday,  when a flight carrying 53 of the tribe’s members from Manipur, 
India, 
touched  down at Ben-Gurion Airport. 
The Bnei Menashe claim descent from one of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel,  
sent into exile for more than 27 centuries. 
The community has always observed Shabbat and kept kosher. 
Today the Bnei Menashe numbers around 7,000 and resides in India’s  
northeastern border states of Manipur and Mizoram. 
Prior to the current aliya, there were 1,725 Bnei Menashe in Israel. Most 
of  the community resides in Acre and Migdal Ha’emek. 
“I’m so very happy right now,” said 18-year-old Mirna Singsit, who was  
presented with a certificate acknowledging her as the 2,000th Bnei Menashe  
oleh. 
“Not only has this been my dream since I was born, but it has been my  
peoples’ dream for thousands of years.” 
Singsit came to Israel with her parents and three brothers, but left behind 
a  grandparent, four uncles and two aunts. She hopes to continue her 
education in  Israel, studying for her bachelors degree in political science. 
Singsit wants to live in Jerusalem, “the Holiest place on earth,” she  
said. 
After a five year hiatus, the Bnei Menashe aliya program was restarted  
following a unanimous decision by the Israeli cabinet last October, a move 
which  was championed by Immigrant Absorption Minister Sofa Landver, who pushed 
for its  approval. 
The aliya program was frozen in 2007 by the Olmert government after members 
 of the cabinet, in particular interior minister Meir Sheetrit, opposed it. 
Over the past month, immigrants arrived on five flights facilitated by 
Shavei  Israel, a nonprofit organization aimed at strengthening ties with 
Jewish 
 descendants around the world. 
“This is an emotional day for all of us,” said Shavei Israel chairman 
Michael  Freund. 
“But we will not rest until all the remaining Bnei Menashe still in India 
are  able to make aliya as well.” 
Danielle Ziri contributed to this  report.

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