“…Since the creation of the State of Israel in 1948, about 92,000 Jews migrated from Latin America ( Lesser, 2016 ) and well over half this group have come from Argentina (58%), with smaller groups from Brazil (11%), Uruguay (9%), Chile (6%), Mexico (4%), Colombia (3%), Venezuela (2%), and other countries (7%) ( Babis, 2016 ). Although ideological, political, and religious reasons for aliyah have featured emphatically in the academic literature ( Babis, 2016 ), Latin Americans’ motivations to migrate to Israel frequently include financial and political factors, and anti-Semitism ( Rein, 2010 , 2013 ; Siebzehner, 2010 , 2016 ; Klor, 2016 ). For example, the cyclical behavior of the Argentine economy and the 2-year anti-Semitic campaign that followed the kidnapping of Eichmann contributed to a surge in the number of Argentine immigrants to Israel in 1963 ( Rein, 2001 ) and, besides the impact of anti-Semitism on migrants’ decisions, most were seriously affected by the country’s economic fluctuations, recessions, and currency devaluations ( Krupnik, 2020 ).…”