Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Russia orders Jewish Agency to alter operations inside country

The development comes amid tensions centered on Israel’s position on the war in Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin. Credit: Photographer RM/Shutterstock.
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Credit: Photographer RM/Shutterstock.

Russia has ordered the Jewish Agency for Israel to modify its operations inside the country in a move that could hamper the organization’s ability to function, according to Israeli media reports.

The development comes amid tensions centered on Israel’s position on the war in Ukraine, which Russian forces invaded in February, and ongoing Israeli strikes against Iranian assets in Syria, where Moscow remains the dominant military player.

The Jewish Agency’s primary function is to promote and facilitate Jewish immigration to Israel and, as such, the reports said Russia’s decision could significantly curtail the capacity of Jews to make aliyah.

“People from the Jewish community have been feeling the Iron Curtain setting on them and they fear they won’t be able to escape the country,” one report quoted senior sources in Russia’s Jewish community as saying.

Russia’s Ministry of Justice issued the directive in a letter sent last week to the Jewish Agency, whose representatives, in coordination with Israeli officials, are in the process of formulating a response.

Israeli forces destroyed two routes totaling 2 km in the central Strip, uncovering weapons, rockets and explosives during operations.
“We’ll go a different route if everything doesn’t get signed up, buttoned up,” the president warned Iran.
Suspects were detained over synagogue and ambulance arson, threats against Jews on a bus, and TikTok harassment videos.
The planned new flights to Saigon come at as Israelis are increasingly flying to the Far East amid a burst of antisemitism in much of the West.
American military personnel worked from the IDF’s underground central command center during “Operation Roaring Lion/Epic Fury” and were exposed to the IDF’s capabilities.
“If a non-Jewish person so greatly respects our religion and even calls on non-Jews to rest on Shabbat, then all the more so should we Jews,” said Rabbi David Yosef.