If you exit overland any immigration official in any nearby country will know which are the Israeli land borders. The only way you can avoid this would be to fly in and out and have immigration stamp the separate piece of paper both when you enter and exit.
"but since I have student visa on my passport..."
Sorry folks, try reading the question. OP has a student visa affixed in their passport. It doesn't matter if they fly or exit overland.
What doesn't matter? With an affixed Israeli visa in a passport, the 'stamp a separate page' thing is irrelevant.
You mean Israeli student visas are affixed and there's not any stamps on any passport page?
Yes, that's irrelevant, but 'not coming' is relevant. :))
This really sucks! I was really looking to visit Iran, this means by the time I am a student in Israel, I won't be able to visit Iran or even the UAE.
Will it be possible to remove the visa by myself, go to Iran, and then when entering Israel just telling them my visa needs to be reattached?
And what does it mean an ¨exotic¨ passport?
No. Removing the visa will certainly raise eyebrows. You're stuck until you get a new passport.
Most people on this forum fall into the "western" category of visa requirements meaning Europeans, Canadians, Americans, Ozzies... Those from countries outside these will have different visa requirements depending on the country. Meaning the bland, knee-jerk answers you get on the forum maybe not apply.
