Seleqseya
Seleqṣeya was the Israeli policy of selective immigration imposed on poor Moroccan Jews adopted in mid 1951. It was applied by Cadima, the Zionist apparatus overseen by agents from Mossad LeAliyah and the Jewish Agency that administered the migration of Moroccan Jews to Israel from 1949 to 1956.
History
In the summer of 1951, the recently established State of Israel sought to severely limit the immigration of poor Moroccan Jews by adopting Seleqṣeya, a policy of selective immigration. With this policy, the Jewish Agency discriminated against poor Moroccan Jews unable to pay for their own immigration, families without a breadwinner in the age range of 18–45, and families with a member in need of medical care. The American historian Norman Stillman described the Seleqṣeya as a "draconian and frequently cruel policy." This policy was also imposed to a lesser extent upon Tunisian Jews.The policy caused bitterness among Moroccan and Maghrebi Jews. It was debated among members of Israeli administration, and it was rescinded in 1953 as Cadima sought to increase its activity in the twilight of French colonial rule in Morocco.