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A person who is *recognized* as Jewish (with or without Jewish descent) is entitled to citizenship; that would expedite the procedure. A person who is *not* Jewish (again, regardless of descent) is not. So, someone who converts (no Jewish descent) will be granted citizenship, but an adult whose father, mother's father, and mother's mother's father were all Jewish and not Israeli citizens won't. (A man who is Jewish can bring his non-Jewish wife and minor children with him and all will be granted citizenship as a family.)

2006-07-31 07:43:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Again, depands how Jweish you are by the law (as weird as it sounds).

According to the "Halacha", a person is Jewish only if his mother was Jewish or he converted to Judaism and he doesn't have another religion. If you belong to one of these cases: you won't have a problem, you're Jewish.
The state of Israel also gives citizenships to sons and daughters of a Jewish father and to his grandsons and granddaughters.

2006-07-31 08:25:34 · answer #2 · answered by yotg 6 · 0 0

How descended is "descent"?.
d.

2006-07-31 07:23:19 · answer #3 · answered by Dan S 6 · 0 0

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