US citizen begs for his life and freedom from Israel
US citizen begs for his life and freedom from Israel
Marianne Azizi writes:
I met with
Yadidya in a coffee shop in Tel Aviv. As with most trapped
foreign nationals, he was still in shock that this could be
happening to him. We sat down for a coffee, and he tells me
his story.
The big questions are: where is the US
government or embassy, and why and how could he be trapped
in Israel with no way out?
Yadidya has been in Israel for
almost a year. He has no work permit, no visa and no home.
Yet, on the basis of his ex-wife’s words only, he is
expected to find a king’s ransom to be able to leave the
country.
The trap
Yadidya dreamed of living in Israel,
the place where Jews are supposed to feel safe. He met his
bride in 2008 in Haifa. He was a US coastguard with a
brilliant future ahead of him. He was only 30 years old at
the time, and had waited for the “right” woman. He
wanted to marry her and take her back to the United States.
Originally of Columbian origin, his family had full US
status.
The two tied the knot in Israel in 2009 but the
marriage was a disaster from the outset. Upon learning that
she was pregnant, his wife sought an abortion but ultimately
decided to go through with the pregnancy.
On 4 January
2011 she gave birth to their son. Yadidya needed to return
to the USA in order to keep his permit in Israel and, while
there, he was offered a job as a US Air Marshall. His
potential life in America was full of opportunity, yet his
wife and son were in Israel.
The marriage was almost over
as soon as it had begun. The child was registered on the
birth certificate as having no father. Yadidya was
devastated, and he returned to Israel to try to prove he was
the father.
Those who knew the system told him that was
the biggest mistake of his life.
Not quite Jewish
enough
Yadidya became prey to many unscrupulous groups
who declared he wasn’t quite Jewish enough. The papers
proving his Jewish provenance were insufficient for him to
emigrate to Israel. He went back and forth from the USA to
Israel to prove he was the biological father and to keep
some contact with his son.
Yadidya tried everything he
could with the USA, including opening a case at the Hague at
the end of 2011. He met with parents groups and joined an
organisation called “I stand for Parents”. He and others
from the organisation even met with Hillary Clinton.
In
September 2012, when his son was one and a half years old,
Yadidya gave his wife a Jewish divorce. He had proven by DNA
testing that he was the father, but immediately after that
he received an order to pay back child support
benefits.
Almost every day I hear stories which, for
those who tell them, are their whole world. There are so
many stories, I filter out the details and realise there is
just one big story: systematic and profitable abuse of
family breakdown in Israel. I’m told it is worth USD 7.9
billion. Others inform me it is at least USD 1 billion
dollars. The figures are unfathomable. They runs into
billions, of that there is no doubt.
Yadidya sits before
us. I am reminded of an animal that is about to be
slaughtered, and there is absolutely nothing I can do to
help him.
He returns to his story. In 2014, he secured a
position with Time Magazine as a graphic designer. In
July of that year he decided to visit Israel to see his son.
He had been warned over and over not to go, but he was
blinded by his faith in the country and decided to travel
nonetheless.
“You can check out anytime you like but
you can never leave”
Yadidya is still in Israel to this
day. Only a week after his arrival he was issued with a No
Exit Order and told to pay USD 145,000 in child support in
return for his freedom. He tried to fight in court, but
didn’t have a translator, and was unaware of his own
meagre rights.
He was given a state lawyer, someone who
really did’t know the laws on freedom and reciprocal
maintenance.
Today Yadidya called me in desperation. He
cannot work in Israel, for he has no permit to do so. His
bright career was cut short again. He is allowed to see his
son, but only in a contact centre. These are heavily guarded
with cameras and security. He is torn in half. He wants to
be a father, but during his year in captivity in Israel has
been allowed to see his son for only 100 hours under
supervision. He realises he has to leave but certainly not
through the US embassy, for the US authorities warn their
citizens that they risk their freedom if they have domestic
connections to Israel, so no help can be expected from that
quarter.
Yesterday, Yadidya contacted me to tell me that
a judge had finally allowed him to see his son outside of
the contact centre. But his hopes were rapidly quashed as
his ex wife, through her lawyer, vehemently insisted he was
a dangerous man – capable of kidnap – and requested that
he be imprisoned for not paying child support.
Yadidya is
one of tens of thousands of people who are slowly broken by
the system in Israel. What is the reason? I have no answers.
Perhaps it is really only for money.
As I sit comfortably
back in the UK, the horror and nightmares of those trapped
in Israel are brought back to me. I feel a surge of energy
and indignation at a country which, despite the overwhelming
evidence, is in denial.
Is there anything that can be
done? Yadidya asked for help.
He is a US citizen. He
needs
support.
ENDS