Answer 1
While Jews throughout the world can move to Israel and gain automatic citizenship, non-Jews do not have such a right. The minor exception to this rule is Palestinians who were born to Palestinian parents who have Israeli citizenship.
Answer 2
-- The question asks whether non-Jews can be citizens, not whether citizenship is automatic.
The correct answer is that significant fractions of Israel's population are Muslim citizens, Christian citizens, or Druze citizens, and that other small portions of the population are Buddhist citizens, Hindu citizens, Baha'i citizens, and atheist citizens, among others. All citizens of Israel have voting rights, and Muslims, Christians, and Druze representatives have been elected to seats in Israel's national parliament.
There is in fact a difference between Jewish Israeli citizenship and Arab Israeli citizenship. All Jewish citizens of Israel are required to do military service. Arab Muslim citizens are not. (There are other Arab citizens who are also required to do military service or may volunteer.)
Regarding "automatic citizenship", note that such a practice is virtually non-existent in the world, even in the US, the UK, etc. Immigration and citizenship in virtually all countries is limited, and subject to quotas and qualifications. (It is curious to note that other nations do have automatic citizenship for a certain ethnic group, such as Poland for Poles, Lithuania for Lithuanians, Armenia for Armenians and so on but nobody argues against these laws and calls them unfair.)
Jews have been citizens of their home country for four thousand years, but in some periods of history have lacked access to that country. In 1948, the home country of the Jews was restored in Israel, and it welcomes its rightful citizens from all of the other places in the world where they're not wanted.
-- The statement that non-Jews are prohibited from purchasing land in Israel is false, and the statement that non-Jews have limited educational opportunities in Israel because they are non-Jews is false.
-- The non-Jewish Palestinian population in Israel lives throughout the country,
including heavily-ethnic-Arab towns and villages in Israel, where they predominate in the education, employment, commerce. and culture of those Israeli towns and villages. Those who are Israeli citizens vote in their towns and villages during elections.
Note also that non-citizen, non-Jewish, non-resident Palestinians have brought land-use cases against Israel's government, in Israeli courts, and have won their cases.
Note also that although there are large numbers of Palestinians in Israel, both citizens and non-citizens, there are no 'refugee camps' in Israel.
41% of all Jews live in israel
The advantages of the creation of the state of Israel are first, that there is a country to which Jews may flee when they are victims of anti-Semitism, and second, that Jews who live in Israel will be satisfied that they are fulfilling a religious obligation to live in the specific land that was given to the Jews by God (according to the Torah). The disadvantages of the creation of the state of Israel are that this has created a conflict between the Israeli Jews and the Muslims in the middle east, who believe that Israel, formerly known as Palestine, was stolen from them by the Jews, and that Muslims are the ones who are religiously obligated to live there, not the Jews; in addition, the Arab-Israeli conflict has damaged relations between all the nations allied to Israel and all the nations seeking to destroy Israel, and this hostility is a fundamental source of international terrorism and the various wars that have resulted from that terrorism.
Some Jews live in Israel.
In the state of Georgia, there are 127,470 Jews. In the nation of Georgia, there are 13,000 Jews. It is worth noting that the Georgian Jewish community (i.e. Jews from the Republic of Georgia) is mostly in Israel, where there are around 200,000 Georgian Jews. However, only 13,000 remain in Georgia. The total number of Georgian Jews is 250,000 individuals.
They came from Israel and now, they live all around the world
There are Jews all over the world. The one who live in Israel are Israeli Jews, like those in the U.S called American Jews.
The Jewish home is considered to be Israel. All Jews are welcome there, and some Jews think that all Jews should live in Israel.
Approximately 2/3 of the world's Jews live in Israel.
jews are made to live in heaven.
Approximately 25% of the Israeli population is not Jewish being made up of Muslims, Christians, Druze, and many other religions.
The answer depends on how the question is read:Reading 1: At what time did only Jews and no other people live in Israel?Never. Jewish people have lived in Israel for thousands of years, but there has never been a time when ONLY Jewish people lived within it's borders.Reading 2: At what time did all Jews live exclusively in Israel?The Jewish People lived exclusively in Israel from their early development as a nation (in what is now Israel and the West Bank) up to 586 BCE when the Babylonians conquered the Kingdom of Judah and exiled the Jewish aristocracy to Babylon (and therefore made part of the Jewish community live outside of Israel). Never again did the Jews exclusively live in Israel.
The percentage of Muslims in Israel is roughly 20%. The vast majority of Muslims live in the Galilee and Golan Region (North Israel) where in some areas they constitute upwards of 70% of the population. See the related link for further information on Arab Israelis.