Israeli Activists Warn of Missionary Group’s New Coffee Shop Strategy to Convert Jews
The Israeli activist organization Yad L'Achim, which has been combating missionary activity for over fifty years, has uncovered a new tactic employed by the notorious missionary group Jews for Jesus. According to detailed and documented information received by Yad L'Achim, the group has established an unofficial network of coffee shops across several Israeli cities. These venues serve as "third spaces" designed to evangelize Jews who would not typically invite missionaries into their homes or attend church services.
This initiative, internally called the "third space model," aims to create neutral, non-threatening environments where personal conversations and relationships can foster missionary outreach. The missionaries acknowledge that most Jews will not enter traditional churches or invite missionaries into their homes, so they are shifting to more subtle and sophisticated methods to engage new audiences. The coffee shops are not merely businesses but strategic locations to expose visitors to missionary messages and materials, often forbidden or controversial.
Currently, these coffee shops operate in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and Haifa, with plans to open another branch in Beersheba. One such café, Basemta, is owned by Joel Ben David, a well-known missionary pastor who previously led missionary training in Israel for Jews for Jesus. Prices at these cafés are deliberately kept low to attract more visitors and fund the missionary activities rather than generate profit.
Yad L'Achim reports that the consequences of this strategy are already evident. A recent internal missionary report revealed that a woman who frequented one of these cafés in Tel Aviv was baptized after exposure to the New Testament and missionary efforts there. Yad L'Achim condemns this development and is preparing legal and public awareness responses to counter this escalated missionary activity.
The organization stresses that these internal missionary publications clearly reveal the intent behind these new centers and vows to continue its fight against such efforts to convert Jews.
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