Hello, greetings and salutations to all. I first watched JTF almost weekly about 3 years ago, then went on and off for a year, then recently saw there was a JTF forum up and running.
Anyway, I'm not sure if the big chief, Chaim, will get to answer this, it'd be nice, but other input would be swell too, especially for anyone living in Israel.
I will be graduating come August and am considering studying Hebrew in Israel and perhaps even moving there. I went there this last summer on Birthright and absolutely loved it.
Thing is, I was raised Christian, yet my Mom's maiden name is Hebrew, Hazen, which comes from the Hebrew Khazan, which means cantor. I put this on my birthright application, I didn't [censored] my way into the trip, and I guess that was good enough for them. Most likely, my ancestors were in fact practicing Jews, but then converted to Christianity to avoid persecution. It looks like I want to go back to being Jewish, to some extent.
I don't see myself becoming entirely religious, but I think it's good for Jews to live in Israel. How would I go about proving my "Jewishness" should I apply for citizenship? Would that work, say giving them my Mom's birth certificate and pointing out her surname is Hebrew? I suppose telling them I went on Birthright would help too.
Even if that does work, like I said, I don't see myself becoming entirely religious. Despite this, is it still important for Jews who are not religious to live in Israel? I think all Jews have their part to play for world Jewry as a whole, religious, secular, etc. The world has not been kind to Jews for the last 2000 years, and Chaim is right when he says the world now wants the Jews to commit suicide in giving away Israel to pre-67 borders, he points out that even the left wing Abba Eban called the pre-67 borders "Auschwitz lines."