Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Jewish Agency partnership with Canadian evangelical group prompts furor over missionary activity

“Whether these volunteers are missionizing to olim or just doing the gardening, we should not be partnering with Messianics,” said Shannon Nuszen, founder and director of Beyneynu.

Dean Bye, head of Return Ministries, which runs the Aliyah Return Center operating at JAFI’s Bikat Kinarot educational complex in the Jordan Valley. Source: YouTube.
Dean Bye, head of Return Ministries, which runs the Aliyah Return Center operating at JAFI’s Bikat Kinarot educational complex in the Jordan Valley. Source: YouTube.

In a strongly worded letter dated Dec. 6, leaders of Beyneynu, an Israeli nonprofit group dedicated to “good relations,” calls for the Jewish Agency for Israel (JAFI) to investigate and put an end to their partnership with Return Ministries, a Canadian Christian group they say has an openly missionary agenda.

Return Ministries, headed by Dean Bye, runs the Aliyah Return Center operating at JAFI’s Bikat Kinarot educational complex in the Jordan Valley. The goal of the center is to assist with the absorption of new immigrants, including lone soldiers in the Israel Defense Forces.

The letter, sent to JAFI chairman Isaac Herzog and members of the JAFI Board of Governors, includes a link to video footage of Aliyah Return Center leaders who laud the partnership with JAFI.

“What’s really amazing is that there’s this partnership with the Jewish Agency with the Aliyah Return Center that’s headed in this country by a Messianic Jew,” exclaims Bye in the video. The center is run by his son-in-law, Chaim Malespin, a self-proclaimed Messianic Jew.

Chaim Malespin. Source: Aliyah Return Center/Facebook.
Chaim Malespin. Source: Aliyah Return Center/Facebook.

The Return Ministries website states: “Return Ministries is honored to facilitate this huge multi-million-dollar project in which nations are being exhorted to serve alongside Christians and the Jewish Agency for Israel in fundraising, restoring the older buildings and preparing the Bikat Kinarot Center to receive and settle more and more Olim. Our prayer is that this will be the first of many International Christian ‘Return Teaching Centers’ established in the land of Israel.”

Natan Sharansky, who served as chairman of the Jewish Agency between 2009 and 2018 when cooperation with Return Ministries was initiated, told JNS that he was unaware of the agreement with the Canadian Christian group. “Any missionary activity is of course, absolutely unacceptable,” he said.

Sharansky noted that during his term, there was “very positive cooperation with Christian organizations all over the world. I don’t see anything bad in it.”

He said he was particularly grateful for the assistance of Christian volunteers who were on the ground in Ukraine when hostilities with Russia broke out in 2014 and Jewish Agency emissaries were in short supply. More than 30,000 Ukrainians made aliyah between 2014 and 2018.

‘Grave mistake happened here’

The partnership of Return Ministries and JAFI appears to be a magnet for other missionary groups to operate in northern Israel near the iconic Kibbutz Degania.

In a recent issue of Laborers with Christ News, the directors—a Christian couple living in Beit Zera, a kibbutz adjacent to Bikat Kinarot—write: “The ministry of the ARC located in Beit Zera is likened to a busy, buzzing beehive. In fact, we haven’t seen a busier ministry in all our years of missionary service.”

Shannon Nuszen, founder and director of Beyneynu, and Rabbi Tovia Singer, its outreach Judaism director, assert in their letter that “a partnership between the Jewish Agency and any segment of the Messianic movement is a slap in the face to Jewish communities that have been struggling for decades to defend the integrity of Jewish identity in the face of messianic/missionary efforts.”

Nuszen told JNS: “Essentially, what we have here is a partnership that legitimates Messianics. No Diaspora community would allow that. For some reason, this grave mistake has happened here in Israel.”

JAFI officials declined JNS requests for an interview. However, it sent a written response to the Beyneynu letter that says that the formal agreement with Return Ministries is “to provide volunteers and to assist with construction, maintenance and landscaping work.” The contractual framework stipulates that any kind of missionary activity is strictly prohibited.

The JAFI statement goes on to explain that Return Ministries has no involvement with any JAFI programming. “The Jewish Agency will make no compromise on allowing any missionary activity.” Responding to the Beyneynu allegations of missionary intent on the part of Return Ministries, JAFI stated: “… they do raise grave questions and concerns for us concerning our relationship with Return Ministries. We are examining the allegations and intend to take firm action if they are found to be correct.”

After reading the JAFI statement, Nuszen told JNS, “Whether these volunteers are missionizing to olim or just doing the gardening, we should not be partnering with Messianics. I assure you we are on the same side with regard to safeguarding the Jewish future, and we would be happy to help the Jewish Agency address this serious matter.”

Judy Lash Balint is a Jerusalem-based freelance writer and author of Jerusalem Diaries: In Tense Times and Jerusalem Diaries: What’s Really Happening in Israel. She has reported from Jerusalem since making aliyah in 1998, with her work appearing in publications worldwide.
The president’s call for a national Shabbat “celebrates our religion and it refocuses on our job to become a light unto the nations,” Rabbi Steven Burg of Aish told JNS.
Moments after Varsha Gandikota-Nellutla, of the Hague Group, made the admission, Andrew Gilmour, a former senior U.N. official, warned her that “there are 108 people on this call, so just assume it’s not confidential.”
Charlotte Head, 30, Samuel Corner, 23, Leona Kamio, 30, and Fatema Rajwani, 21, destroyed property and clashed with security guards at the Israeli defense firm’s facility near Bristol, England.
“Doris Fisher leaves behind a legacy of deep commitment to her family and our city,” San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie said.
The Israeli consul general in New York told JNS that this year was the first time the Jewish state held an Independence Day celebration in New York City under a mayor who doesn’t recognize it.
The Jewish governor of Illinois, widely thought to be a candidate for president, accused the Israeli prime minister of making it “near-impossible” to obtain peace.