- Fourth Aliyah
The Fourth Aliyah refers to the fourth wave of the Jewish immigration to
Israel fromEurope andAsia whom came based onZionist motives between the years 1924 [ [http://www.moia.gov.il/Moia_en/AboutIsrael/aliya4.htm Israeli government site on the Fourth Aliyah] ] and 1928.The character of the Fourth Aliyah
Since 1924 the character and the composition of the immigration to the Land of Israel changed, and even though this immigration wave was very close to the previous immigration wave, it has been categorized as separate.
A big immigration wave that began in 1924 and continued during two years, brought a rapid urban development mainly in
Tel Aviv which absorbed a considerable amount of the immigrants. But during the years 1926 - 1927 an economic crisis occurred in the country, from the toughest which the Jewish settlement had during the period of the British mandate, and in spite of the economic comeback between the years 1928 - 1929, the crisis was identified with all of the period of the Fourth immigration. In the period of the crisis about 23,000 immigrants decided to leave the country.In the fourth Aliyah about 80,000 immigrants [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Immigration/Fourth_Aliyah.html Small summary about the Fourth Aliyah] ] came to the Land of Israel, mainly from the countries of
eastern Europe , half of the immigrants fromPoland and the rest fromUSSR ,Romania andLithuania . In addition to that 12% of all immigrants were fromAsia , mainlyYemen andIraq . From the rest of Europe and America there were only a few immigrants. Due to the 10,000 immigrants who left the Land of Israel during those years, the contribution of the immigrants who stayed in the Jewish settlement in those years was very important and decisive.The causes for the Immigration
Many of the new Jewish immigrants whom arrived during this period, came as a result of increasing
Anti-Semitism throughoutEurope . The restrictive immigration quotas and laws of theUnited States kept Jews out. This group contained manymiddle class families that moved to the growing cities, establishing small businesses and light industry.References
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