Last 3 Jews in South Sudan make aliyah

A project that took a year and a half and spanned several countries ended with a touching family reunion at Ben-Gurion Airport on Tuesday night.

by Ariel Kahana, ISRAEL HAYOM

Last 3 Jews in South Sudan make aliyah

Suzy Markoriel, right, and her mother are reunited at Ben-Gurion Airport, Tuesday | Photo: Yossi Zeliger

An unusual family reunion took place Tuesday evening at Ben-Gurion International Airport, when Suzi Makoriel and her three children – the last Jews remaining in South Sudan – landed as new immigrants.

Suzy met her mother, from whom she was separated more than 10 years ago, at the end of a long journey to bring her and her children to Israel that spanned four countries, directed by Binyamin resident Aharon Tsuf.

A year and a half ago, Tsuf met with Suzy’s mother and she told him that two of her daughters were in South Sudan and unable to leave the country. Thirty years ago, while she was making her way to Israel, the mother was kidnapped and taken to South Sudan. She and her other children returned to Ethiopia, but two of her daughters were forced to marry Sudanese men.

“I was touched by the story. I realized that if I didn’t help this family, no one would,” Tsuf said.

He proceeded to set the process of bringing Suzy and her children to Israel, a project that involved four different countries. At first, he enlisted Suzy’s brother to help find her and her sister, which took until December 2018, when they traveled to Ethiopia.

“It was the first time they had seen their mother in 10 years,” Tsuf said. He took care to bring the mother and one of her daughters to Israel, while Suzy went back to South Sudan to fetch her children.

“The sister and her children made aliyah in April and lived at my house until their mother joined them. Suzy and her children stayed behind,” Tsuf explained.

He continued to tackle the logistic difficulties in bringing Suzy and her children to Israel.

“At the end of June, I fulfilled all the demands of the South Sudanese Interior Ministry, and with the help of the ambassadors, I brought them to Ethiopia. They waited there about 40 days, partly because Suzy had come down with malaria.”

Assisted by donations from friends, Christians in Africa who support Israel, head of the Binyamin Regional Council Yisrael Gantz, and Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, Tsuf had the family recognized as part of the Jewish people. He then organized travel to Israel for Suzy and her children.

“It was hard to get here. In the end, she took an eight-day bus ride from South Sudan to Ethiopia via Uganda and Kenya. Halfway there, she got lost and went back. The project encountered a lot of difficulties. We’re talking about countries that have no identity cards or good communications,” Tsuf noted.

In total, it cost 120,000 shekels ($34,000) to bring Suzy and her children to Israel. Tsuf paid a third of the cost. “After an exhausting year and a half, this unbelievable moment has arrived. I’m tearing up,” he said.

For the next few months, the new arrivals will live in an immigrant absorption center

August 25, 2019 | Comments »

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