Pros
A great chance to help Holocaust survivors and bring them a much needed financial help. It used to have a great work environment with people helping each other in every way. It had a good reputation in Israel - but now is tainted by fraud scandals and bad management. A good place to start for an immigrant - all the work is in English. Full benefits according to the law - including pension and personal development fund.
Cons
The caseworkers are the driving force of the organization but more and more are treated like expendables and easy-to-replace cogs. Slowly it became a Soviet stronghold - notice I didn't say Russian, but Soviet by the management's attitude towards the caseworkers and even worse towards the Holocaust victims. The experience here is very hard to translate in a different field. Big layoffs - 70% of the team when tens of thousands of files remain unprocessed. They rehired after a couple of months some people but not the most experienced ones. Maximum that someone can hope for is to get team leader if you are ''connected''. The promotion process is not transparent and only gut-based. They push only for a quick ''solution'' of the cases even if this is leading to big rejection numbers, many times acting as an insurance company seeking ways to reject your claim rather than lawfully assist the victims in receiving their rightful compensations.