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Page 1 Judaism The Rev. Roger Fritts March 3, 2013 Once there
Page 1 Judaism The Rev. Roger Fritts March 3, 2013 Once there

... that traced their descent from Jacob's sons. The Bible describes how Jacob’s sons sold one of their brothers, Joseph, into slavery in Egypt. Joseph's wisdom and honesty enabled him to become the Prime Minister to the Egyptian pharaoh. Joseph invited his brothers and their families to Egypt after a f ...
Essence of Jewishness?
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... or habit but out of a genuine desire to fulfill the word of G-d. This is the road which Yisro took and because he realized the enormous religious profundity of Judaism and every mitzvah he was prepared to give everything else up. As such he challenged each Jew. It was the famous non-Jewish literary ...
2017 Chapters 11 and 12 MC Test - Mr. Stearns
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... to a vast urbanization and the growth of manufacture and trade in the Middle East; the development of new industries that produced a wide array of goods (e.g., ceramics, chemicals, clocks, glass, mosaics, pulp and paper, pharmaceuticals, shipbuilding, textiles, and weapons); the expansion of local ...
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... Mitnagdim or misnagdim is a Hebrew word meaning “opponents”; this term was used to refer to Ashkenazi religious Jews who opposed Hasidic Judaism. Today the term mitnagdim is loosely used by Hasidim to refer to European religious Orthodox Jews who are not Hasidic, although they are not necessarily op ...
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Judaism - McCook Public Schools
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... books in the bible God guided the Jewish people through many troubles and gave them a set of rules This was a beginning of Judaism as a structured religion. They became a powerful people with kings. Around 920 BCE the kingdom fell apart and the Jewish people ...


... books in the bible God guided the Jewish people through many troubles and gave them a set of rules This was a beginning of Judaism as a structured religion. They became a powerful people with kings. Around 920 BCE the kingdom fell apart and the Jewish people ...
Where did Judaism originate from? Judaism originated in Israel
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... the Jews from the wrath of God, and negotiated with God on their behalf. What is the Symbol of Judaism? The symbol or emblem of the Jewish people is the Magen David (Shield of David), also known as the Star of David. What is a Menorah? The Menorah is one of the oldest symbols of the Jewish faith. It ...
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Old Yishuv

The Old Yishuv (Hebrew: היישוב הישן‎, ha-Yishuv ha-Yashan) were the Jewish communities of the southern Syrian provinces (Palestine) in the Ottoman period, up to the onset of Zionist aliyah and the consolidation of the New Yishuv by the end of World War I. As opposed to the later Zionist aliyah and the New Yishuv, which came into being with the First Aliyah (of 1882) and was more based on a socialist and/or secular ideology emphasizing labor and self-sufficiency, the Old Yishuv, whose members had continuously resided in or had come to Eretz Yisrael in the earlier centuries, were largely ultra-orthodox Jews dependent on external donations (Halukka) for living. The Old Yishuv developed after a period of severe decline in Jewish communities of the Southern Levant during the early Middle Ages, and was composed of three clusters. The oldest group consisted of Jews, the Sephardic Jewish communities in Galilee and the Musta'arabim, for example, of the early Ottoman and late Mamluk periods, who had deep ancestral roots in Palestine. A second group was composed of Ashkenazi and Hassidic Jews who had emigrated from Europe in the 18th and early 19th centuries. A third wave was constituted by Yishuv members who arrived in the late 19th century. The Old Yishuv was thus generally divided into two independent communities – the Sephardim (including Musta'arabim), mainly constituting the remains of Jewish communities of Galilee and the four Jewish holy cities, which had flourished in the 16th and 17th centuries; and the Ashkenazim, who began making their return primarily since the 18th century.The 'Old Yishuv' term was coined by members of the 'New Yishuv' in the late 19th century to distinguish themselves from the economically dependent and generally earlier Jewish communities, who mainly resided in the four holy cities of Judaism, and unlike the New Yishuv, had not embraced land ownership and agriculture. Apart from the Old Yishuv centres in the four holy cities of Judaism, namely Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias and Safed, smaller communities also existed in Jaffa, Haifa, Peki'in, Acre, Nablus and Shfaram. Petah Tikva, although established in 1878 by the Old Yishuv, nevertheless was also supported by the arriving Zionists. Rishon LeZion, the first settlement founded by the Hovevei Zion in 1882, could be considered the true beginning of the New Yishuv.
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