Exactly like the child of a US parent born abroad, they are ELIGIBLE for citizenship. But they need to apply, actually go to Israel and live there, and go through a lengthy process. It is not automatic. Yes, as in the US example above it is rarely denied, but certainly not never. Most famously, it was denied to Meyer Lansky.
Don’t claim you ‘know’ the process when your initial statement above was flat-out factually wrong.
I didn’t agree at all. You were wrong.
Exactly like the child of a US parent born abroad, they are ELIGIBLE for citizenship. But they need to apply, actually go to Israel and live there, and go through a lengthy process. It is not automatic. Yes, as in the US example above it is rarely denied, but certainly not never. Most famously, it was denied to Meyer Lansky.
Don’t claim you ‘know’ the process when your initial statement above was flat-out factually wrong.
Meyer Lansky? Lol.