Several hundred mixed-race Peruvian converts, also known as the  "Jews of the Amazon," are not being granted permission to immigrate to  Israel under the Law of Return, despite meeting all the requirements for  eligibility, Jewish Agency and Conservative Movement leaders charge.
          Jack Corcos, director of the Jewish Agency unit that approves  eligibility for immigration, told a gathering in Jerusalem today that he  did not understand the Ministry of Interior's ongoing refusal to  approve the requests by the converts to move to Israel. "There is no  reason they should be waiting any longer," he said during a session held  by the Jewish Agency Board of Governors. "The whole story is very odd."
           
        Asked why the Ministry of Interior was holding up approval of these  immigration requests, spokeswoman Sabine Haddad responded: "A discussion  on the issue was held last week with the Jewish Agency and relevant  parties from the Population and Immigration Authority. The issue awaits a  decision of the senior echelon."
           
        The group of 284 Peruvians, who come from Iquitos, the largest city in  the Peruvian rainforest, were converted to Judaism by a Conservative  rabbinical court in August 2011 after they had engaged in Jewish studies  for five years. They are the descendants of Moroccan Jews who arrived  in the Amazon in the 19th century seeking employment in the rubber industry, and who married and had children with local women.
           
        If the Ministry of Interior ultimately decides to reject their  citizenship applications, senior officials in the Jewish organizational  world warn it could seriously undermine relations between the government  of Israel and the world Conservative Movement.  "I can tell you that  the Conservative movement leadership will not take this in stride," said  one such official. "As far as they see it, it's an act of contempt – a  total disregard for the validity of their conversions."
           
        Yizhar Hess, the director of the Conservative movement in Israel, who  participated in this morning's session, told Haaretz: "Hundreds of Jews  are waiting today in Peru to immigrate to Israel, and their only sin is  that they are Conservative."
           
        Most, though not all, of the Peruvian converts have declared their  intention to move to Israel. The plan was for them to come gradually in  several separate groups.
        Hundreds of members of the Iquitos community have already immigrated to  Israel in two separate waves -- one in 2001 and the other in 2005.  Unlike the current group, many of whose members are their relatives,  they encountered no problems whatsoever in the process. Most of them  live today in the city of Ramle, which is prepared to absorb the  remaining members of the community. The Ministry of Interior spokeswoman  did not respond to a question about why the applications of the current  group were being held up, while those of the previous groups were  approved promptly.
           
        Under current immigration procedures, individuals who are not born  Jewish are expected to spend nine months as active members of their  local Jewish communities after they have completed the conversion  process – regardless of what type of conversion they have undergone --  before moving to Israel. During this time, their applications are  reviewed by the Ministry of Interior. The Ministry of Interior, which  does not have its own emissaries abroad, typically relies on  recommendations from the Jewish Agency about the validity of conversions  performed abroad.
           
        The Jewish Agency last year notified the Ministry of Interior that it  had determined the conversions performed on this group of 284 Peruvians  fulfilled all the necessary criteria to make them eligible for  immigrating to Israel under the Law of Return.
          Based on this recommendation, they should have been able to immigrate to Israel in May 2012.
         
        But, as Corcos reported to the Jewish Agency gathering this morning,  Interior Ministry officials suddenly informed him that bringing this  large a group to Israel required a special cabinet decision. When Jewish  Agency officials consulted with their legal advisers, they were told  that a cabinet decision is only required when the group members have not  yet been converted, but rather, plan to convert in Israel, as in the  case of the Falashmura from Ethiopia.
          Haddad did not respond to a question about why Ministry of Interior  officials insist that a cabinet decision is required for the Peruvian  group to come to Israel, when Jewish Agency legal advisers have  determined otherwise.
           
        Rabbi Andrew Sacks, director of the Conservative movement's Rabbinical  Assembly in Israel, was invited by Jewish Agency officials to  participate in last week's meeting with Ministry of Interior  representatives because of his connections to the rabbis who performed  the conversions in Peru. But as he sat down, he was asked by the  Interior Ministry officials to leave the room, prompting an angry  response from the Jewish Agency officials present. As Sacks stormed out  of the room, he charged that the case of the Peruvians was "another  example of racism in the Interior Ministry."
           
        Following the meeting, Sacks told Haaretz that based on his experience  with converts, "when they are people of color, they are guaranteed to  run into a roadblock and obfuscation in their attempts to make aliyah."  The ministry spokeswoman also declined to respond to this accusation.