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MyHeritage Publishes 1.7 million-record Israeli Immigration List

January 10, 2023

by: JNS

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Passengers view Mount Carmel from the deck of the Mala immigrant ship as it enters the port of Haifa, July 11, 1948.

Tuesday, 10 January 2023 | Online genealogy platform MyHeritage announced on Sunday the publication of a database comprising 1.7 million records, covering immigration to Israel from 1919. The company called it “the Israeli equivalent of the famous ‘Ellis Island’ immigration database for the United States.”

For more than a year, MyHeritage indexed thousands of public domain images from the Israel State Archives, linking them to surviving records of those who immigrated to Israel by ship and by plane starting in 1919.

MyHeritage said it is the first organization to create a searchable index for the collection and link it with the scanned images.

The collection is available to search for free and without having to sign up to the company’s website, to make it easily accessible for those researching their Jewish roots in Israel.

The records in the collection include the name of the immigrant, the names of relatives who immigrated with them, the country of origin, the name of the ship they arrived on, the date of arrival, the names of parents, the names of relatives who were expecting them in Israel and their destination city in Israel.

Historians have defined several waves of aliyah [immigration to Israel] between 1882 and the beginning of World War II. The collection starts with the Third Aliyah period (1919–1923). The first two waves took place from 1882 to 1918 under Ottoman rule, and are not covered in this collection.

The collection was created from scanned books stored by the Israel State Archives, with lists of immigrants arranged in chronological order according to the arrival dates of the ships or planes.

The records also included the arrival of tourists to Israel, or the return of Israeli residents from trips abroad. Pedestrian arrivals are also listed; those who came in through border crossings in the north or south.

Posted on January 10, 2023

Source: (This article was originally published by the Jewish News Syndicate on January 9, 2023. Time-related language has been modified to reflect our republication today. See original article at this link.)

Photo Credit: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Martin Silver/jns.org