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Religion in Israel

Religion in Israel is manifested primarily in Judaism, the ethnic religion of the Jewish people. The State of Israel declares itself as a "Jewish and democratic state" and is the only country in the world with a Jewish-majority population (see Jewish state).[2] Other faiths in the country include Islam (predominantly Sunni), Christianity (mostly Melkite and Orthodox) and the religion of the Druze people. Religion plays a central role in national and civil life, and almost all Israeli citizens are automatically registered as members of the state's 14 official religious communities, which exercise control over several matters of personal status, especially marriage. These recognized communities are Orthodox Judaism (administered by the Chief Rabbinate), Islam, the Druze faith, the Catholic Church (including the Latin Church, Armenian Catholic Church, Maronite Church, Melkite Greek Catholic Church, Syriac Catholic Church, and Chaldean Catholic Church), Greek Orthodox Church, Syriac Orthodox Church, Armenian Apostolic Church, Anglicanism, and the Baháʼí Faith.[3]

Religion in Israel (2016)[1]

  JudaismHiloni (33.1%)
  Judaism–Masorti (24.3%)
  Judaism–Dati (8.8%)
  Judaism–Haredi (7.3%)
  Islam (18.1%)
  Christianity (1.9%)
  Druze (1.6%)
  Others and unclassified (4.8%)

The religious affiliation of the Israeli population as of 2022 was 73.6% Jewish, 18.1% Muslim, 1.9% Christian, and 1.6% Druze. The remaining 4.8% included faiths such as Samaritanism and Baháʼí, as well as "religiously unclassified".[4] While Jewish Israelis are all technically under the jurisdiction of the state Orthodox rabbinate,[5] personal attitudes vary immensely, from extreme Orthodoxy to irreligion and atheism.

Jews in Israel mainly classify themselves along a fourfold axis, from least to most observant, hiloni (lit.'secular'); masorti (lit.'traditional'); dati (lit.'religious' or 'orthodox', including religious zionist); and haredi (lit.'ultra-religious' or 'ultra-orthodox').[6][7]

Israeli law guarantees considerable privileges and freedom to practice for the recognized communities,[8][9] but, in tandem, does not necessarily do so for other faiths. The Pew Research Center has identified Israel as one of the countries that place "high restrictions" on the free exercise of religion[10] and there have been limits placed on non-Orthodox Jewish religious movements, which are unrecognized.[11][12] Pew ranked Israel as fifth globally in terms of "inter-religious tension and violence".[13]

Religious self-definition

 
Moroccan Jewish immigrants arriving in Israel under the Law of Return, 1954

A Gallup survey in 2015 determined that 65% of Israelis say they are either "not religious" or "convinced atheists", while 30% say they are "religious". Israel is in the middle of the international religiosity scale, between Thailand, the world's most religious country, and China, the least religious.[14]

As of 1999, 65% of Israeli Jews believed in God,[15] and 85% participated in a Passover seder.[16] A survey conducted in 2009 showed that 80% of Israeli Jews believed in God, with 46% of them self-reporting as secular.[17] Israelis' majority (2/3) tend not to align themselves with Jewish religious movements (such as Reform Judaism or Conservative Judaism), but instead tend to define their religious affiliation by degree of their religious practice.[18]

As of 2009, 42% of Israeli Jews defined themselves as "secular"; on the other opposite, 8% defined themselves as haredi (ultra-orthodox); an additional 12% as "religious"; 13% as "traditional (religious)"; and 25% as "traditional (non-religious)".[19]

In 2022, 45% of Israel Jews self-identified as "secular"; 10% as haredi (ultra-orthodox); 33% as masorti (lit.'traditional'); and 12% as dati (lit.'religious' or 'orthodox', including religious zionist).

Of the Arab Israelis, as of 2008, 82.7% were Muslims, 8.4% were Druze, and 8.3% were Christians.[4] Just over 80% of Christians are Arabs, and the majority of the remaining are immigrants from the former Soviet Union who immigrated with a Jewish relative. About 81% of Christian births are to Arab women.[20]

Among the Arab population, a 2010 research showed that 8% defined themselves as very religious, 47% as religious, 27% as not very religious, and 18% as not religious.[21]

Religious groups

Judaism

Most citizens in the State of Israel are Jewish.[22] As of 2022, Jews made up 73.6% percent of the population.[23]

Secular-traditional spectrum

 
Cyclists ride down the deserted Ayalon Highway in the city of Tel Aviv on Yom Kippur

In 2007, a poll by the Israeli Democracy Institute found that 27% of Israeli Jews say that they keep the Sabbath, while 53% said they do not keep it at all. The poll also found that 50% of the respondents would give up shopping on the Sabbath as long as public transportation were kept running and leisure activities continued to be permitted; however, only 38% believed that such a compromise would reduce the tensions between the secular and religious communities.[24]

Because the terms "secular" (hiloni) and "traditional" (masorti) are not strictly defined,[25][26] published estimates of the percentage of Israeli Jews who are considered "traditional" range from 32%[27] to 55%.[28] A Gallup survey in 2015 determined that 65% of Israelis say they are either "not religious" or "convinced atheists", while 30% say they are "religious". Israel is in the middle of the international religiosity scale, between Thailand, the world's most religious country, and China, the least religious.[14] The Israeli Democracy Index commissioned in 2013 by the Israel Democracy Institute regarding religious affiliation with religious movements of Israeli Jews found that 3.9 percent of respondents felt attached to Reform (Progressive) Judaism, 3.2 percent to Conservative Judaism, and 26.5 percent to Orthodox Judaism. The other two thirds of respondents said they felt no connection to any denomination, or declined to respond.[18] However, it does not mean, that the secular/hiloni Israelis are without other forms of spirituality.[29][30]

There is also a growing baal teshuva (Jewish returners) movement, involved with all Jewish denominations, of secular Israelis rejecting their previously secular lifestyles and choosing to become religiously observant, with many educational programs and yeshivas for them.[citation needed] An example is Aish HaTorah, which received open encouragement from some sectors within the Israeli establishment.

At the same time, there is also a significant movement in the opposite direction toward a secular lifestyle. There is some debate which trend is stronger at present. Recent polls show that ranks of secular Jewish minority in Israel continued to drop in 2009. Currently, the secular make up only 42%.[31]

Orthodox spectrum

 
"Tehillim neged Tilim" (transl. 'Psalms against missiles') Hebrew slogan initially coined during the First Gulf War in response to Iraqi rocket attacks on Israel in 1991, and turned into a popular slogan-sticker ever since, especially among the Israeli Religious Zionism and Haredi Judaism communities

The spectrum covered by "Orthodox" in the diaspora exists in Israel, again with some important variations.

 
IDF soldier, Asael Lubotzky prays with tefillin

What would be called "Orthodox" in the diaspora includes what is commonly called dati ("religious") or Haredi ("ultra-Orthodox") in Israel.[6][32] The former term includes what is called Religious Zionism or the "National Religious" community (and also Modern Orthodox in US terms), as well as what has become known over the past decade or so as Hardal (Haredi-Leumi, i. e., "ultra-Orthodox nationalist"), which combines a largely Haredi lifestyle with a nationalist (i. e., pro-Zionist) ideology.

 
Haredi Jews in Jerusalem, 2004

Haredi applies to a populace that can be roughly divided into three separate groups, except mentioned Hardal, along both ethnic and ideological lines: (1) "Lithuanian/Lita'im" Haredim of Ashkenazic (i. e., "Germanic" — European) origin, predominantly, adherents of non-Hasidic traditional Orthodoxy, a.k.a. Misnagdim; (2) Hasidic Haredim of Ashkenazic (mostly of Eastern European) origin; and (3) Sephardi Haredim (including mizrahi).

Ultra-Orthodox sector is relatively young and numbered in 2020 more than 1,1 million (14 percent of total population).[33]

Non-Orthodox denominations of Judaism

 
Israeli Conservative women rabbis
 
WoW Torah Reading in Jerusalem with Anat Hoffman (right) looking on, 2012

Conservative, Reform (the Israel Movement for Reform and Progressive Judaism), Reconstructionist, Humanistic Judaism (the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism) and other new non-Orthodox Jewish religious movements are represented among Israeli Jews.[34][35][36][5][37] According to The Israel Democracy Institute, as of 2013, approximately 7 percent of Israel's Jewish population "identified" with Reform and Conservative Judaism,[18] a study by Pew Research Center showed 5% did,[32] while a Midgam survey showed that one third "especially identified with Progressive Judaism", almost as many as those who especially identify with Orthodox Judaism. Only a few authors, like Elliot Nelson Dorff, consider the Israeli social group masortim (traditionalists) to be one and the same with the Western Conservative (masorti) movement,[38] it produces understanding Conservative Judaism as a major denomination in Israel, associated with a large social sector.

The Chief Rabbinate strongly opposes the Reform and Conservative movements,[37] saying they are "uprooting Judaism", that they cause assimilation and that they have “no connection” to authentic Judaism.[39] The chief rabbinate's view does not reflect the majority viewpoint of Israeli Jews, however. A survey of Israeli Jews published in May 2016 showed that 72 percent of respondents said they disagreed with the Haredi assertions that Reform Jews are not really Jewish. The survey also showed that a third of Israeli Jews "identify" with progressive (Reform or Conservative) Judaism and almost two thirds agree that Reform Judaism should have equal rights in Israel with Orthodox Judaism.[40] The report was organized by the Israel Movement for Reform and Progressive Judaism ahead of its 52nd biennial conference.

Secular–religious status quo

The religious status quo, agreed to by David Ben-Gurion with the Orthodox parties at the time of Israel's formation in 1948, is an agreement on the role that Judaism would play in Israel's government and the judicial system. The agreement was based upon a letter sent by Ben-Gurion to Agudat Israel dated 19 June 1947.[41] Under this agreement, which still operates in most respects today:[25]

  • The Chief Rabbinate has authority over kashrut, Shabbat, Jewish burial and personal status issues, such as marriage, divorce, and conversions.
  • Streets in Haredi neighborhoods are closed to traffic on the Jewish Sabbath.
  • There is no public transport on the Jewish Sabbath, and most businesses are closed. However, there is public transport in Haifa, since Haifa had a large Arab population at the time of the British Mandate.
  • Restaurants who wish to advertise themselves as kosher must be certified by the Chief Rabbinate.
  • Importation of non-kosher foods is prohibited. Despite this prohibition, a few pork farms supply establishments selling white meat, due to demand therefore among specific population sectors, particularly the Russian immigrants of the 1990s. Despite the status quo, the Supreme Court ruled in 2004 that local governments are not allowed to ban the sale of pork, although this had previously been a common by-law.

Nevertheless, some breaches of the status quo have become prevalent, such as several suburban malls remaining open during the Sabbath. Though this is contrary to the law, the government largely turns a blind eye.

While the state of Israel enables freedom of religion for all of its citizens, it does not enable civil marriage. The state forbids and disapproves of any civil marriages or non-religious divorces performed amongst within the country. Because of this, some Israelis choose to marry outside of Israel. Many parts of the "status quo" have been challenged by secular Israelis regarding the Chief Rabbinate's strict control over Jewish weddings, Jewish divorce proceedings, conversions, and the question of who is a Jew for the purposes of immigration.

The Ministry of Education manages the secular and Orthodox school networks of various faiths in parallel, with a limited degree of independence and a common core curriculum.

In recent years, perceived frustration with the status quo among the secular population has strengthened parties such as Shinui, which advocate separation of religion and state, without much success so far.

Today the secular Israeli Jews claim that they aren't religious and don't observe Jewish law, and that Israel as a democratic modern country should not force the observance thereof upon its citizens against their will. The Orthodox Israeli Jews claim that the separation between state and religion will contribute to the end of Israel's Jewish identity.[25]

Signs of the first challenge to the status quo came in 1977, with the fall of the Labor government that had been in power since independence, and the formation of a right-wing coalition under Menachem Begin. Right-wing Revisionist Zionism had always been more acceptable to the Orthodox parties, since it did not share the same history of anti-religious rhetoric that marked socialist Zionism. Furthermore, Begin needed the Haredi members of the Knesset (Israel's unicameral parliament) to form his coalition, and offered more power and benefits to their community than what they had been accustomed to receiving, including a lifting of the numerical limit on military exemptions for those engaged in full-time Torah study.[citation needed]

On the other hand, secular Israelis began questioning whether a "status quo" based on the conditions of the 1940s and 1950s was still relevant in the 1980s and 1990s, and reckoned that they had cultural and institutional support to enable them to change it regardless of its relevance. They challenged Orthodox control of personal affairs such as marriage and divorce, resented the lack of entertainment and transportation options on the Jewish Sabbath (then the country's only day of rest), and questioned whether the burden of military service was being shared equitably,[25] since the 400 scholars who originally benefited from the exemption, had grown to 50,000[citation needed]. Finally, the Progressive and Conservative communities, though still small, began to exert themselves as an alternative to the Haredi control of religious issues. No one was happy with the "status quo"; the Orthodox used their newfound political force to attempt to extend religious control, and the non-Orthodox sought to reduce or even eliminate it.[37][40]

Chief Rabbinate

 
Great Synagogue in Jerusalem, which serves as the seat of the Chief Rabbinate

It was during the British Mandate of Palestine that the British administration established an official dual Ashkenazi-Sephardi "Chief Rabbinate" (rabbanut harashit) that was exclusively Orthodox, as part of an effort to consolidate and organize Jewish life based on its own model in Britain, which encouraged strict loyalty to the British crown, and in order to attempt to influence the religious life of the Jews in Palestine in a similar fashion.[citation needed] In 1921, Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook (1864–1935) was chosen as the first Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi and Rabbi Jacob Meir as the first Sephardi Chief Rabbi (Rishon LeTzion). Rabbi Kook was a leading light of the religious Zionist movement, and was acknowledged by all as a great rabbi of his generation. He believed that the work of secular Jews toward creating an eventual Jewish state in Eretz Yisrael was part of a divine plan for the settlement of the land of Israel. The return to Israel was in Kook's view not merely a political phenomenon to save Jews from persecution, but an event of extraordinary historical and theological significance.[citation needed]

 
The Western Wall is under the supervision of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel

Prior to the 1917 British conquest of Palestine, the Ottomans had recognized the leading rabbis of the Old Yishuv as the official leaders of the small Jewish community that for many centuries consisted mostly of the devoutly Orthodox Jews from Eastern Europe as well as those from the Levant who had made aliyah to the Holy Land, primarily for religious reasons. The European immigrants had unified themselves in an organization initially known as the Vaad Ha'ir, which later changed its name to Edah HaChareidis. The Turks viewed the local rabbis of Palestine as extensions of their own Orthodox Hakham Bashis ("[Turkish] Chief Rabbi/s") who were loyal to the Sultan.[citation needed]

Thus the centrality of an Orthodox dominated Chief Rabbinate became part of the new state of Israel as well when it was established in 1948.[citation needed]Based in its central offices at Heichal Shlomo in Jerusalem the Israeli Chief rabbinate has continued to wield exclusive control over all the Jewish religious aspects of the secular state of Israel. Through a complex system of "advice and consent" from a variety of senior rabbis and influential politicians, each Israeli city and town also gets to elect its own local Orthodox Chief Rabbi who is looked up to by substantial regional and even national religious and even non-religious Israeli Jews.[citation needed]

Through a national network of Batei Din ("religious courts"), each headed only by approved Orthodox Av Beit Din judges, as well as a network of "Religious Councils" that are part of each municipality, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate retains exclusive control and has the final say in the state about virtually all matters pertaining to conversion to Judaism, the Kosher certification of foods, the status of Jewish marriages and divorces, and monitoring and acting when called upon to supervise the observance of some laws relating to Shabbat observance, Passover (particularly when issues concerning the sale or ownership of Chametz come up), the observance of the Sabbatical year and the Jubilee year in the agricultural sphere.[citation needed]

The Israel Defense Forces also relies on the Chief Rabbinate's approval for its own Jewish chaplains who are exclusively Orthodox. The IDF has a number of units that cater to the unique religious requirements of the Religious Zionist yeshiva students through the Hesder program of combined alternating military service and yeshiva studies over several years.[citation needed]

A poll conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute in April and May 2014 of which institutions were most and least trusted by Israeli citizens showed that Israelis have little trust in the religious establishment. When asked which public institutions they most trusted, the Chief Rabbinate at 29% was one of the least trusted.[42]

Karaite Judaism

 
Karaite Synagogue in Ashdod

The Karaites are an ancient Jewish community that practices a form of Judaism distinct from Rabbinical Judaism, dating ostensibly to between the 7th and 9th centuries based on textual evidence,[43][44][45] though they claim a tradition at least as old as other forms of Judaism with some tracing their origins to the Masoretes and the Sadducees. Once making up a significant proportion[clarification needed] of the Jewish population,[46] they are now an extreme minority compared to Rabbinical Judaism. Nearly the entirety of their population, between 30,000 and 50,000, currently live in Israel,[47] and reside mainly in Ramla, Ashdod and Beer-Sheva. There are an estimated 10,000 additional Karaites living elsewhere around the world, mainly in the United States, Turkey,[47] Poland,[48] and elsewhere in Europe.

Conversion process

On 7 December 2016, the chief rabbis of Israel issued a new policy requiring that foreign Jewish converts be recognized in Israel, and vowed to release criteria required for recognizing rabbis who perform such conversions.[49] Previously, such conversions were not required to be recognized.[49] However, within one week the chief rabbis had retracted their earlier promise and instead appointed members to a joint committee of five rabbis who would formulate the conversion criteria.[50]

Samaritans

Israel is home to the only significant populations of Samaritans in the world. They are adherents of Samaritanism—an Abrahamic religion similar to Judaism.[51][52] As of 1 November 2007, there were 712 Samaritans.[53] The community lives almost exclusively in Kiryat Luza on Mount Gerizim and in Holon. Their traditional religious leader is the Samaritan High Priest, currently Aabed-El ben Asher ben Matzliach. Ancestrally, they claim descent from a group of Israelite inhabitants from the tribes of Joseph (divided between the two "half tribes" of Ephraim and Manasseh), and the priestly tribe of Levi.[54] Despite being counted separately in the census, for the purposes of citizenship, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate has classified them as Jews according to law.[55]

Christianity

Most Christians living permanently in Israel are Arabs, or have come from other countries to live and work mainly in churches or monasteries, which have long and enduring histories in the land.[citation needed] Ten churches are officially recognized under Israel's confessional system, which provides for the self-regulation of status issues, such as marriage and divorce. These are the Catholic Church (including the Latin Church, Armenian Catholic Church, Maronite Church, Melkite Greek Catholic Church, Syriac Catholic Church, and Chaldean Catholic Church), Eastern Orthodox Church (particularly the Greek Orthodox Church), the Syriac Orthodox Church, and Anglicans.[56]

Christian Arabs are one of the most educated groups in Israel. Maariv has described the Christian-Arab sector as "the most successful in the education system",[57] since Christian Arabs fared the best in terms of education in comparison to any other group receiving an education in Israel.[58] Arab Christians were also the vanguard in terms of eligibility for higher education,[58] and they have attained bachelor's and academic degrees at higher rates than Jews, Druze or Muslims in Israel.[58]

According to historical and traditional sources, Jesus lived in the Land of Israel, and died and was buried on the site of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, making the land a Holy Land for Christianity. However, few Christians now live in the area, compared to Muslims and Jews. This is because Islam displaced Christianity in almost all of the Middle East, and the rise of modern Zionism and the establishment of the State of Israel has seen millions of Jews migrate to Israel. Recently, the Christian population in Israel has increased with the immigration of foreign workers from a number of countries, and the immigration of accompanying non-Jewish spouses in mixed marriages. Numerous churches have opened in Tel Aviv.[59]

Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches

Most Christians in Israel belong primarily to branches of the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic Churches that oversee a variety of church buildings, monasteries, seminaries, and religious institutions all over the land, particularly in Jerusalem.[citation needed]

Protestants

Protestant Christians account for less than one percent of Israeli citizens, but foreign evangelical Protestants are a prominent source of political support for the State of Israel (see Christian Zionism).[60] Each year hundreds of thousands of Protestant Christians come as tourists to see Israel.[61]

Messianic Judaism

 
The Messianic Seal of Jerusalem, a symbol of Messianic Judaism

Messianic Judaism is a religious movement that arose within Evangelical Protestantism and incorporates elements of Judaism with the tenets of Christianity. They worship God the Father as one with Trinity. They worship Jesus, whom they call "Yeshua". Messianic Jews believe that Jesus is the Messiah.[62][63] They emphasise that Jesus was a Jew, as were his early followers. Most adherents in Israel reject traditional Christianity and its symbols, in favour of celebrating Jewish festivals. Although followers of Messianic Judaism are not considered Jews under Israel's Law of Return,[64] there are an estimated 10,000–20,000 adherents in the State of Israel, both Jews and other non-Arab Israelis, many of them recent immigrants from the former Soviet Union.[65][66] In Jerusalem, there are twelve Messianic congregations[67][failed verification]. This is growing religious group in Israel, according to both its proponents and critics.[66][68] In Israel Jewish Christians themselves, go by the name Meshiykhiyyim (from Messiah, as found in the Franz Delitzsch Hebrew New Testament) rather than the traditional Talmudic name for Christians Notzrim (from Nazarene).[69][70]

Islam

 
Ramadan decorations in Jerusalem

Jerusalem is a city of major religious significance for Muslims worldwide. After capturing the Old City of Jerusalem in 1967, Israel found itself in control of Mount Moriah, which was the site of both Jewish temples and Islam's third holiest site, after those in Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia: The Haram al Sharif (Temple Mount) from which Muslims believe that Mohammad ascended to Heaven. This mountain, which has the Dome of the Rock and the adjacent Jami Al-Aqsa on it, is the third-holiest site in Islam (and the holiest in Judaism). Since 1967, the Israeli government has granted authority to a Waqf to administer the area. Rumors that the Israeli government are seeking to demolish the Muslim sites have angered Muslims. These beliefs are possibly related to excavations that have been taking place close to the Temple Mount, with the intention of gathering archeological remnants of the first and second temple period,[71][72] as well as the stance of some rabbis and activists who call for its destruction to replace it with the Third Temple.[73]

Most Muslims in Israel are Sunni Arabs with a small minority of Ahmadi Arabs.[74] From 1516 to 1917, the Sunni Ottoman Turks ruled the areas that now include Israel. Their rulership reinforced and ensured the centrality and importance of Islam as the dominant religion in the region. The conquest of Palestine by the British in 1917 and the subsequent Balfour Declaration opened the gates for the arrival of large numbers of Jews in Palestine who began to tip the scales in favor of Judaism with the passing of each decade. However, the British transferred the symbolic Islamic governance of the land to the Hashemites based in Jordan, and not to the House of Saud. The Hashemites thus became the official guardians of the Islamic holy places of Jerusalem and the areas around it, particularly strong when Jordan controlled the West Bank (1948–1967).

In 1922 the British had created the Supreme Muslim Council in the British Mandate of Palestine and appointed Amin al-Husayni (1895–1974) as the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. The council was disbanded by Jordan in 1951.[citation needed] Israeli Muslims are free to teach Islam to their children in their own schools, and there are a number of Islamic universities and colleges in Israel and the territories. Islamic law remains the law for concerns relating to, for example, marriage, divorce, inheritance and other family matters relating to Muslims, without the need for formal recognition arrangements of the kind extended to the main Christian churches. Similarly Ottoman law, in the form of the Mecelle, for a long time remained the basis of large parts of Israeli law, for example concerning land ownership.[75]

Ahmadiyya

Ahmadiyya is a small Islamic sect in Israel. The history of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Israel begins with a tour of the Middle East in 1924 made by the second caliph of the Community Mirza Basheer-ud-Din Mahmood Ahmad and a number of missionaries. However, the Community was first established in the region in 1928, in what was then the British Mandate of Palestine. The first converts to the movement belonged to the Odeh tribe who originated from Ni'lin, a small village near Jerusalem. In the 1950s they settled in Kababir, a former village which was later absorbed by the city of Haifa.[76] The neighbourhood's first mosque was built in 1931, and a larger one, called the Mahmood Mosque, in the 1980s. Israel is the only country in the Middle East where Ahmadi Muslims can openly practice their Islamic faith. As such, Kababir, a neighbourhood on Mount Carmel in Haifa, Israel, acts as the Middle Eastern headquarters of the Community.[77][78] It is unknown how many Israeli Ahmadis there are, although it is estimated there are about 2,200 Ahmadis in Kababir.[79]

Druze

 
Druze man in Peki'in

Israel is home to about 143,000 Druze who follow their own gnostic religion.[80] Self described as "Ahl al-Tawhid", and "al-Muwaḥḥidūn" (meaning "People of Oneness", and "Unitarians", respectively), the Druze live mainly in the Northern District, southern Haifa District, and northern occupied Golan Heights.[81] Since 1957, the Israeli government has also designated the Druze a distinct ethnic community, at the request of the community's leaders. Until his death in 1993, the Druze community in Israel was led by Shaykh Amin Tarif, a charismatic figure regarded by many within the Druze community internationally as the preeminent religious leader of his time.[82] Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam, Druze do not identify as Muslims,[83][84][85][86][87] and they do not accept the five pillars of Islam.[88]

Baháʼí Faith

 
View towards the Shrine of the Báb from the upper Terraces on Mount Carmel, Haifa
 
The Baháʼí Arc from the International Archives building

The Baháʼí Faith has its administrative and spiritual centre in Haifa on land it has owned since Bahá'u'lláh's imprisonment in Acre in the early 1870s by the Ottoman Empire.[citation needed] The progress of these properties in construction projects was welcomed by the mayor of Haifa Amram Mitzna (1993–2003).[89] As far back as 1969 a presence of Baháʼís was noted mostly centered around Haifa in Israeli publications.[90] Several newspapers in Israel since then have noted the presence of Baháʼís in the Haifa area of some 6-700 volunteers with no salaries, getting only living allowances and housing,[91][92] and that if an Israeli citizen were to wish to convert they would be told that "the religion does not seek or accept converts in the State of Israel"[92][93] and that if they persist it is a personal matter between them and God and not a matter of joining a community of believers.[92] Baháʼís generally practice a "staunch political quietism"[89] and "do not engage in any missionary activity in Israel".[89] Even Baháʼís from outside Israel are instructed to not "teach" the religion to citizens of Israel.[94] The religion's situation in Israel was specified in an agreement signed in 1987 by then Vice-Premier and Foreign Minister, Shimon Peres as a "recognized religious community in Israel", that the "holiest places of the Baháʼí Faith, … are located in Israel, and confirms that the Universal House of Justice is the Trustee of the Baháʼí International Community over the Holy Places of the Baháʼí Faith in Israel and over the Bahá’í endowments in Israel".[95] Baháʼís from other countries, wishing to visit Israel, are required to seek written permission from the Universal House of Justice prior to their visit for Baháʼí pilgrimage.[96]

Hinduism

The small Hindu community in Israel is mostly made up of representatives of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. In 2002, most of the devotees lived in Katzir-Harish.[97]

Neopaganism

Although the exact number of adherents are unknown (one old estimate was 150 total), primarily due to societal stigma and persecution, a growing number of young Israelis are secretly reviving the pre-Judaic polytheistic worship of ancient Canaanite gods known as Semitic neopaganism. Additionally, others worship in different neopagan traditions such as Celtic, Norse, and Wiccan.[98]

African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem

Sanctity of certain sites

Jerusalem

 
The Western Wall and Dome of the Rock, on top of the Temple Mount

Jerusalem plays an important role in three monotheistic religionsJudaism, Christianity, and Islam — and Haifa and Acre play a role in a fourth, Baháʼí. Mount Gerizim is a holy site to what can be considered a fifth, Samaritanism. The 2000 Statistical Yearbook of Jerusalem lists 1204 synagogues, 158 churches, and 73 mosques within the city.[99] Despite efforts to maintain peaceful religious coexistence, some sites, such as the Temple Mount, have been a continuous source of friction and controversy. Jerusalem has been sacred to the Jews since the 10th century BC. The Western Wall, a remnant of the Second Temple, is a holy site for Jews, second only to the Temple Mount itself.[100]

Christianity reveres Jerusalem not only for its role in the Old Testament but also for its significance in the life of Jesus. The land currently occupied by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is considered one of the top candidates for Golgotha and thus has been a Christian pilgrimage site for the past two thousand years.[101][102] In 1889, the Ottoman Empire allowed the Catholic Church to re-establish its hierarchy in Palestine. Other ancient churches, such as the Greek, Armenian, Syrian, and Coptic churches are also well represented in Jerusalem.[103]

Jerusalem is the third-holiest city in Islam, after Mecca and Medina.[104][105] The Temple Mount is known to Muslims as the Masjid Al-Aqsa, derived from the name mentioned in the Quran, and is topped by two Islamic landmarks intended to commemorate the event — Jami Al-Aqsa, and the Dome of the Rock, which stands over the Foundation Stone, from which Muslims believe Muhammad ascended to Heaven.[106]

Other sites

As for the importance of Haifa and Acre in Baháʼí Faith, it is related to Bahá'u'lláh, who was imprisoned in Acre and spent his final years there.

Mount Gerizim is the holiest site to Samaritans, who used it as the site of their temple.

Religious relations

Within the Jewish community

The State of Israel generally respects freedom of religion. Freedom House reports: "Freedom of religion is respected. Each community has jurisdiction over its own members in matters of marriage, burial, and divorce."

Religious tensions exist between Jewish haredi and non-haredi Israeli Jews. Haredi Israeli males devote their young adulthood to full-time Talmudic studies and therefore generally get exemptions from military service in the Israel Defense Forces. Many leaders of haredi Judaism encourage these students to apply for exemptions from the mandatory army service, ostensibly to protect them from the secularizing influence of the Israeli army. Over the years, the number of exemptions has grown to about 10% of conscriptable manpower. Many secular Israelis consider these exemptions to be a systematic shirking of their patriotic duty by a large segment of society.[citation needed]

Haredi Israelis are represented by haredi political parties, which like all smaller parties in a system of proportional representation may tend to wield disproportionate political power at the point when government coalitions need to be negotiated following national elections. As of June 2008, the two main Haredi parties in the Knesset are Shas, representing Sephardi and Mizrahi interests, and United Torah Judaism, an alliance of Degel HaTorah (Lithuanian Haredi) and Agudath Yisrael. The Shinui party was created as a backlash to the perceived influence of the haredi parties, and to represent the interests of secular Jews that supposedly were not seen to by the other non-religious parties.[citation needed]

Tension also exists between the Orthodox establishment and the Conservative and Reform movements. Only Orthodox Judaism is officially recognized in Israel (though conversions conducted by Conservative and Reform clergy outside of Israel may be accepted for the purposes of the Law of Return). As a result, Conservative and Reform synagogues receive minimal government funding and support. Conservative and Reform rabbis cannot officiate at religious ceremonies and any marriages, divorces, and conversions they perform are not considered valid. Conservative and Reform Jews have been prohibited from holding services at the Western Wall on the grounds that they violate Orthodox norms regarding participation of women.[citation needed]

Tensions exist surrounding Mehadrin bus lines, a type of bus line in Israel which mostly runs in and/or between major Haredi population centers, in which gender segregation are applied. Non-Haredi female passengers have complained of being harassed and forced to sit at the back of the bus.[107] In a ruling of January 2011, the Israeli High Court of Justice stated the unlawfulness of gender segregation and abolished the "mehadrin" public buses. However, the court rule allowed the continuation of the gender segregation in public buses on a strictly voluntary basis for a one-year experimental period.[108]

Between Jews and Christians

Messianic Jews who are members of Messianic congregations are among the most active missionary movements in Israel. Their proselytising has faced demonstrations and intermittent protests by the Haredi anti-missionary group Yad LeAchim, which infiltrates those movements, as well as other proselytising groups such as Hare Krishna, and maintains extensive records on their activities. Attempts by Messianic Jews to evangelize other Jews are seen by many religious Jews as incitement to "avodah zarah" (foreign worship or idolatry). Over the years there have been several arson attempts of messianic congregations.[109] There have also been attacks on Messianic Jews and hundreds of New Testaments distributed in Or Yehuda were burned.[110] While missionary activity itself is not illegal in Israel, it is illegal to offer money or other material inducements. Legislation banning missionary work outright has been attempted in the past.[111]

Some Orthodox Jewish communities in Israel have come under scrutiny for the negative stereotyping and scapegoating of Christian minorities in the region, including violent acts against Christian missionaries and communities.[112] A frequent complaint of Christian clergy in Israel is being spat at by Jews, often haredi yeshiva students.[113] The Anti-Defamation League has called on the chief Rabbis to speak out against interfaith assaults.[114]

Israel has been accused of obstructing Christian worship by Palestinian Christians by withholding entry permits at times of religious significance to the community.[115] The Israel Nature and Parks Authority has also been accused of encroaching on Christian holy sites.[116] In January 2023, with the rise of the political far-right and religious Zionist parties, emboldened Jewish extremists took to vandalizing Christian grave sites.[117]

Marriage and divorce

Currently, Israel issues marriage licenses if performed under an official religious authority (whether it be Orthodox Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Druze, etc.) only between a man and a woman of the same religion. Civil marriages were officially sanctioned only if performed abroad, but 2010 changes in Israeli law allow secular marriage in Israel for people that have proven to lack any religion also.[118][119] This is a major issue among secular groups, as well as adherents to non-Orthodox streams of Judaism. There is fear that civil marriage will divide the Jewish people in Israel between those who can marry Jews and those who cannot, leading to concerns over retaining the character of the Jewish state.

Relative sizes of the religious communities in Israel

     Jewish,      Muslim,      Christian,      Druze,      Other.
Until 1995, figures for Christians also included Others.[120]

The census results are in thousands.[121][122][23][123]

Year Druze % Christian % Muslims % Jews % Total
1948 ... ... ... 758.7 ...
1950 15.0 1.09 36.0 2.63 116.1 8.47 1,203.0 87.80 1,370.1
1960 23.3 1.08 49.6 2.31 166.3 7.73 1,911.3 88.88 2,150.4
1970 35.9 1.19 75.5 2.50 328.6 10.87 2,582.0 85.44 3,022.1
1980 50.7 1.29 89.9 2.29 498.3 12.71 3,282.7 83.71 3,921.7
1990 82.6 1.71 114.7 2.38 677.7 14.05 3,946.7 81.85 4,821.7
2000 103.8 1.63 135.1 2.12 970.0 15.23 4,955.4 77.80 6,369.3
2010 127.5 1.66 153.4 1.99 1,320.5 17.16 5,802.4 75.40 7,695.1
2011 129.8 1.66 155.1 1.98 1,354.3 17.28 5,907.5 75.38 7,836.6
2012 131.5 1.65 158.4 1.98 1,387.5 17.38 5,999.6 75.14 7,984.5
2013 133.4 1.64 160.9 1.98 1,420.3 17.46 6,104.5 75.04 8,134.5
2014 135.4 1.63 163.5 1.97 1,453.8 17.52 6,219.2 74.96 8,296.9
2015 137.3 1.62 165.9 1.96 1,488.0 17.58 6,334.5 74.84 8,463.4
2016 139.3 1.61 168.3 1.95 1,524.0 17.66 6,446.1 74.71 8,628.6
2017 141.2 1.60 171.9 1.95 1,561.7 17.75 6,554.5 74.50 8,797.9
2018 143.2 1.60 174.4 1.95 1,598.4 17.82 6,664.4 74.32 8,967.6
2019 145.1 1.59 177.2 1.94 1,635.8 17.90 6,773.2 74.10 9,140.5
2020 146.8 1.58 179.5 1.93 1,671.3 17.99 6,873.9 73.99 9,289.8

In 2011, non-Arab Christians, estimated to number 25,000, were counted as "Jews and others".[124]

See also

References

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Notes

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  • Liebman, Charles S. (1993). "Jewish Fundamentalism and the Israeli Polity". In Marty, Martin E.; Appleby, R. Scott (eds.). Fundamentalisms and the State: Remaking Polities, Economies, and Militance. The Fundamentalism Project, 3. Chicago, Il; London: University of Chicago Press. pp. 68–87. ISBN 0-226-50883-8.
  • Liebman, Charles S. (1997). Religion, Democracy, and Israeli Society. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 90-5702-012-2.
  • Charles S. Liebman (1998). . Judaism, Fall.
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  • Mazie, Steven V. (2006). Israel's Higher Law: Religion and Liberal Democracy in the Jewish State. Lexington Books.
  • Melton, J. Gordon; Baumann, Martin, eds. (2010). "Israel". Religions of the world: a comprehensive encyclopedia of beliefs and practices. Vol. 4 (2nd ed.). Santa Barbara, Ca; Denver, Co; Oxford: ABC-Clio. ISBN 978-1-59884-203-6.
  • Mor, Menachem; Reiterer, Friedrich V.; Winkler, Waltraud, eds. (2010). Samaritans: Past and Present: Current Studies. Studia Samaritana, 5 & Studia Judaica, 53. Berlin: De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-019497-5.
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External links

  • The Israel Project: Religious Freedom in Israel: A Fundamental Guarantee
  • Israel: Religion and Society
  • Pluralism: Synagogue and the State of Israel

religion, israel, manifested, primarily, judaism, ethnic, religion, jewish, people, state, israel, declares, itself, jewish, democratic, state, only, country, world, with, jewish, majority, population, jewish, state, other, faiths, country, include, islam, pre. Religion in Israel is manifested primarily in Judaism the ethnic religion of the Jewish people The State of Israel declares itself as a Jewish and democratic state and is the only country in the world with a Jewish majority population see Jewish state 2 Other faiths in the country include Islam predominantly Sunni Christianity mostly Melkite and Orthodox and the religion of the Druze people Religion plays a central role in national and civil life and almost all Israeli citizens are automatically registered as members of the state s 14 official religious communities which exercise control over several matters of personal status especially marriage These recognized communities are Orthodox Judaism administered by the Chief Rabbinate Islam the Druze faith the Catholic Church including the Latin Church Armenian Catholic Church Maronite Church Melkite Greek Catholic Church Syriac Catholic Church and Chaldean Catholic Church Greek Orthodox Church Syriac Orthodox Church Armenian Apostolic Church Anglicanism and the Bahaʼi Faith 3 Religion in Israel 2016 1 Judaism Hiloni 33 1 Judaism Masorti 24 3 Judaism Dati 8 8 Judaism Haredi 7 3 Islam 18 1 Christianity 1 9 Druze 1 6 Others and unclassified 4 8 The religious affiliation of the Israeli population as of 2022 was 73 6 Jewish 18 1 Muslim 1 9 Christian and 1 6 Druze The remaining 4 8 included faiths such as Samaritanism and Bahaʼi as well as religiously unclassified 4 While Jewish Israelis are all technically under the jurisdiction of the state Orthodox rabbinate 5 personal attitudes vary immensely from extreme Orthodoxy to irreligion and atheism Jews in Israel mainly classify themselves along a fourfold axis from least to most observant hiloni lit secular masorti lit traditional dati lit religious or orthodox including religious zionist and haredi lit ultra religious or ultra orthodox 6 7 Israeli law guarantees considerable privileges and freedom to practice for the recognized communities 8 9 but in tandem does not necessarily do so for other faiths The Pew Research Center has identified Israel as one of the countries that place high restrictions on the free exercise of religion 10 and there have been limits placed on non Orthodox Jewish religious movements which are unrecognized 11 12 Pew ranked Israel as fifth globally in terms of inter religious tension and violence 13 Contents 1 Religious self definition 2 Religious groups 2 1 Judaism 2 1 1 Secular traditional spectrum 2 1 2 Orthodox spectrum 2 1 3 Non Orthodox denominations of Judaism 2 1 4 Secular religious status quo 2 1 5 Chief Rabbinate 2 1 6 Karaite Judaism 2 1 7 Conversion process 2 2 Samaritans 2 3 Christianity 2 3 1 Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches 2 3 2 Protestants 2 3 3 Messianic Judaism 2 4 Islam 2 4 1 Ahmadiyya 2 5 Druze 2 6 Bahaʼi Faith 2 7 Hinduism 2 8 Neopaganism 2 9 African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem 3 Sanctity of certain sites 3 1 Jerusalem 3 2 Other sites 4 Religious relations 4 1 Within the Jewish community 4 2 Between Jews and Christians 5 Marriage and divorce 6 Relative sizes of the religious communities in Israel 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 9 Bibliography 10 External linksReligious self definition nbsp Moroccan Jewish immigrants arriving in Israel under the Law of Return 1954A Gallup survey in 2015 determined that 65 of Israelis say they are either not religious or convinced atheists while 30 say they are religious Israel is in the middle of the international religiosity scale between Thailand the world s most religious country and China the least religious 14 As of 1999 update 65 of Israeli Jews believed in God 15 and 85 participated in a Passover seder 16 A survey conducted in 2009 showed that 80 of Israeli Jews believed in God with 46 of them self reporting as secular 17 Israelis majority 2 3 tend not to align themselves with Jewish religious movements such as Reform Judaism or Conservative Judaism but instead tend to define their religious affiliation by degree of their religious practice 18 As of 2009 update 42 of Israeli Jews defined themselves as secular on the other opposite 8 defined themselves as haredi ultra orthodox an additional 12 as religious 13 as traditional religious and 25 as traditional non religious 19 In 2022 45 of Israel Jews self identified as secular 10 as haredi ultra orthodox 33 as masorti lit traditional and 12 as dati lit religious or orthodox including religious zionist Of the Arab Israelis as of 2008 82 7 were Muslims 8 4 were Druze and 8 3 were Christians 4 Just over 80 of Christians are Arabs and the majority of the remaining are immigrants from the former Soviet Union who immigrated with a Jewish relative About 81 of Christian births are to Arab women 20 Among the Arab population a 2010 research showed that 8 defined themselves as very religious 47 as religious 27 as not very religious and 18 as not religious 21 Religious groupsJudaism Main article Israeli Jews Most citizens in the State of Israel are Jewish 22 As of 2022 Jews made up 73 6 percent of the population 23 Secular traditional spectrum Main articles Hiloni Masortim and Shomer Masoret nbsp Cyclists ride down the deserted Ayalon Highway in the city of Tel Aviv on Yom KippurIn 2007 a poll by the Israeli Democracy Institute found that 27 of Israeli Jews say that they keep the Sabbath while 53 said they do not keep it at all The poll also found that 50 of the respondents would give up shopping on the Sabbath as long as public transportation were kept running and leisure activities continued to be permitted however only 38 believed that such a compromise would reduce the tensions between the secular and religious communities 24 Because the terms secular hiloni and traditional masorti are not strictly defined 25 26 published estimates of the percentage of Israeli Jews who are considered traditional range from 32 27 to 55 28 A Gallup survey in 2015 determined that 65 of Israelis say they are either not religious or convinced atheists while 30 say they are religious Israel is in the middle of the international religiosity scale between Thailand the world s most religious country and China the least religious 14 The Israeli Democracy Index commissioned in 2013 by the Israel Democracy Institute regarding religious affiliation with religious movements of Israeli Jews found that 3 9 percent of respondents felt attached to Reform Progressive Judaism 3 2 percent to Conservative Judaism and 26 5 percent to Orthodox Judaism The other two thirds of respondents said they felt no connection to any denomination or declined to respond 18 However it does not mean that the secular hiloni Israelis are without other forms of spirituality 29 30 There is also a growing baal teshuva Jewish returners movement involved with all Jewish denominations of secular Israelis rejecting their previously secular lifestyles and choosing to become religiously observant with many educational programs and yeshivas for them citation needed An example is Aish HaTorah which received open encouragement from some sectors within the Israeli establishment At the same time there is also a significant movement in the opposite direction toward a secular lifestyle There is some debate which trend is stronger at present Recent polls show that ranks of secular Jewish minority in Israel continued to drop in 2009 Currently the secular make up only 42 31 Orthodox spectrum Main articles Religious Zionism Hardal and Haredi See also Yeshiva Israel nbsp Tehillim neged Tilim transl Psalms against missiles Hebrew slogan initially coined during the First Gulf War in response to Iraqi rocket attacks on Israel in 1991 and turned into a popular slogan sticker ever since especially among the Israeli Religious Zionism and Haredi Judaism communitiesThe spectrum covered by Orthodox in the diaspora exists in Israel again with some important variations nbsp IDF soldier Asael Lubotzky prays with tefillinWhat would be called Orthodox in the diaspora includes what is commonly called dati religious or Haredi ultra Orthodox in Israel 6 32 The former term includes what is called Religious Zionism or the National Religious community and also Modern Orthodox in US terms as well as what has become known over the past decade or so as Hardal Haredi Leumi i e ultra Orthodox nationalist which combines a largely Haredi lifestyle with a nationalist i e pro Zionist ideology nbsp Haredi Jews in Jerusalem 2004Haredi applies to a populace that can be roughly divided into three separate groups except mentioned Hardal along both ethnic and ideological lines 1 Lithuanian Lita im Haredim of Ashkenazic i e Germanic European origin predominantly adherents of non Hasidic traditional Orthodoxy a k a Misnagdim 2 Hasidic Haredim of Ashkenazic mostly of Eastern European origin and 3 Sephardi Haredim including mizrahi Ultra Orthodox sector is relatively young and numbered in 2020 more than 1 1 million 14 percent of total population 33 Non Orthodox denominations of Judaism nbsp Israeli Conservative women rabbis nbsp WoW Torah Reading in Jerusalem with Anat Hoffman right looking on 2012Conservative Reform the Israel Movement for Reform and Progressive Judaism Reconstructionist Humanistic Judaism the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism and other new non Orthodox Jewish religious movements are represented among Israeli Jews 34 35 36 5 37 According to The Israel Democracy Institute as of 2013 approximately 7 percent of Israel s Jewish population identified with Reform and Conservative Judaism 18 a study by Pew Research Center showed 5 did 32 while a Midgam survey showed that one third especially identified with Progressive Judaism almost as many as those who especially identify with Orthodox Judaism Only a few authors like Elliot Nelson Dorff consider the Israeli social group masortim traditionalists to be one and the same with the Western Conservative masorti movement 38 it produces understanding Conservative Judaism as a major denomination in Israel associated with a large social sector The Chief Rabbinate strongly opposes the Reform and Conservative movements 37 saying they are uprooting Judaism that they cause assimilation and that they have no connection to authentic Judaism 39 The chief rabbinate s view does not reflect the majority viewpoint of Israeli Jews however A survey of Israeli Jews published in May 2016 showed that 72 percent of respondents said they disagreed with the Haredi assertions that Reform Jews are not really Jewish The survey also showed that a third of Israeli Jews identify with progressive Reform or Conservative Judaism and almost two thirds agree that Reform Judaism should have equal rights in Israel with Orthodox Judaism 40 The report was organized by the Israel Movement for Reform and Progressive Judaism ahead of its 52nd biennial conference Secular religious status quo Main article Status quo Israel The religious status quo agreed to by David Ben Gurion with the Orthodox parties at the time of Israel s formation in 1948 is an agreement on the role that Judaism would play in Israel s government and the judicial system The agreement was based upon a letter sent by Ben Gurion to Agudat Israel dated 19 June 1947 41 Under this agreement which still operates in most respects today 25 The Chief Rabbinate has authority over kashrut Shabbat Jewish burial and personal status issues such as marriage divorce and conversions Streets in Haredi neighborhoods are closed to traffic on the Jewish Sabbath There is no public transport on the Jewish Sabbath and most businesses are closed However there is public transport in Haifa since Haifa had a large Arab population at the time of the British Mandate Restaurants who wish to advertise themselves as kosher must be certified by the Chief Rabbinate Importation of non kosher foods is prohibited Despite this prohibition a few pork farms supply establishments selling white meat due to demand therefore among specific population sectors particularly the Russian immigrants of the 1990s Despite the status quo the Supreme Court ruled in 2004 that local governments are not allowed to ban the sale of pork although this had previously been a common by law Nevertheless some breaches of the status quo have become prevalent such as several suburban malls remaining open during the Sabbath Though this is contrary to the law the government largely turns a blind eye While the state of Israel enables freedom of religion for all of its citizens it does not enable civil marriage The state forbids and disapproves of any civil marriages or non religious divorces performed amongst within the country Because of this some Israelis choose to marry outside of Israel Many parts of the status quo have been challenged by secular Israelis regarding the Chief Rabbinate s strict control over Jewish weddings Jewish divorce proceedings conversions and the question of who is a Jew for the purposes of immigration The Ministry of Education manages the secular and Orthodox school networks of various faiths in parallel with a limited degree of independence and a common core curriculum In recent years perceived frustration with the status quo among the secular population has strengthened parties such as Shinui which advocate separation of religion and state without much success so far Today the secular Israeli Jews claim that they aren t religious and don t observe Jewish law and that Israel as a democratic modern country should not force the observance thereof upon its citizens against their will The Orthodox Israeli Jews claim that the separation between state and religion will contribute to the end of Israel s Jewish identity 25 Signs of the first challenge to the status quo came in 1977 with the fall of the Labor government that had been in power since independence and the formation of a right wing coalition under Menachem Begin Right wing Revisionist Zionism had always been more acceptable to the Orthodox parties since it did not share the same history of anti religious rhetoric that marked socialist Zionism Furthermore Begin needed the Haredi members of the Knesset Israel s unicameral parliament to form his coalition and offered more power and benefits to their community than what they had been accustomed to receiving including a lifting of the numerical limit on military exemptions for those engaged in full time Torah study citation needed On the other hand secular Israelis began questioning whether a status quo based on the conditions of the 1940s and 1950s was still relevant in the 1980s and 1990s and reckoned that they had cultural and institutional support to enable them to change it regardless of its relevance They challenged Orthodox control of personal affairs such as marriage and divorce resented the lack of entertainment and transportation options on the Jewish Sabbath then the country s only day of rest and questioned whether the burden of military service was being shared equitably 25 since the 400 scholars who originally benefited from the exemption had grown to 50 000 citation needed Finally the Progressive and Conservative communities though still small began to exert themselves as an alternative to the Haredi control of religious issues No one was happy with the status quo the Orthodox used their newfound political force to attempt to extend religious control and the non Orthodox sought to reduce or even eliminate it 37 40 Chief Rabbinate nbsp Great Synagogue in Jerusalem which serves as the seat of the Chief RabbinateMain article Chief Rabbinate of IsraelIt was during the British Mandate of Palestine that the British administration established an official dual Ashkenazi Sephardi Chief Rabbinate rabbanut harashit that was exclusively Orthodox as part of an effort to consolidate and organize Jewish life based on its own model in Britain which encouraged strict loyalty to the British crown and in order to attempt to influence the religious life of the Jews in Palestine in a similar fashion citation needed In 1921 Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook 1864 1935 was chosen as the first Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi and Rabbi Jacob Meir as the first Sephardi Chief Rabbi Rishon LeTzion Rabbi Kook was a leading light of the religious Zionist movement and was acknowledged by all as a great rabbi of his generation He believed that the work of secular Jews toward creating an eventual Jewish state in Eretz Yisrael was part of a divine plan for the settlement of the land of Israel The return to Israel was in Kook s view not merely a political phenomenon to save Jews from persecution but an event of extraordinary historical and theological significance citation needed nbsp The Western Wall is under the supervision of the Chief Rabbinate of IsraelPrior to the 1917 British conquest of Palestine the Ottomans had recognized the leading rabbis of the Old Yishuv as the official leaders of the small Jewish community that for many centuries consisted mostly of the devoutly Orthodox Jews from Eastern Europe as well as those from the Levant who had made aliyah to the Holy Land primarily for religious reasons The European immigrants had unified themselves in an organization initially known as the Vaad Ha ir which later changed its name to Edah HaChareidis The Turks viewed the local rabbis of Palestine as extensions of their own Orthodox Hakham Bashis Turkish Chief Rabbi s who were loyal to the Sultan citation needed Thus the centrality of an Orthodox dominated Chief Rabbinate became part of the new state of Israel as well when it was established in 1948 citation needed Based in its central offices at Heichal Shlomo in Jerusalem the Israeli Chief rabbinate has continued to wield exclusive control over all the Jewish religious aspects of the secular state of Israel Through a complex system of advice and consent from a variety of senior rabbis and influential politicians each Israeli city and town also gets to elect its own local Orthodox Chief Rabbi who is looked up to by substantial regional and even national religious and even non religious Israeli Jews citation needed Through a national network of Batei Din religious courts each headed only by approved Orthodox Av Beit Din judges as well as a network of Religious Councils that are part of each municipality the Israeli Chief Rabbinate retains exclusive control and has the final say in the state about virtually all matters pertaining to conversion to Judaism the Kosher certification of foods the status of Jewish marriages and divorces and monitoring and acting when called upon to supervise the observance of some laws relating to Shabbat observance Passover particularly when issues concerning the sale or ownership of Chametz come up the observance of the Sabbatical year and the Jubilee year in the agricultural sphere citation needed The Israel Defense Forces also relies on the Chief Rabbinate s approval for its own Jewish chaplains who are exclusively Orthodox The IDF has a number of units that cater to the unique religious requirements of the Religious Zionist yeshiva students through the Hesder program of combined alternating military service and yeshiva studies over several years citation needed A poll conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute in April and May 2014 of which institutions were most and least trusted by Israeli citizens showed that Israelis have little trust in the religious establishment When asked which public institutions they most trusted the Chief Rabbinate at 29 was one of the least trusted 42 Karaite Judaism nbsp Karaite Synagogue in AshdodThe Karaites are an ancient Jewish community that practices a form of Judaism distinct from Rabbinical Judaism dating ostensibly to between the 7th and 9th centuries based on textual evidence 43 44 45 though they claim a tradition at least as old as other forms of Judaism with some tracing their origins to the Masoretes and the Sadducees Once making up a significant proportion clarification needed of the Jewish population 46 they are now an extreme minority compared to Rabbinical Judaism Nearly the entirety of their population between 30 000 and 50 000 currently live in Israel 47 and reside mainly in Ramla Ashdod and Beer Sheva There are an estimated 10 000 additional Karaites living elsewhere around the world mainly in the United States Turkey 47 Poland 48 and elsewhere in Europe Conversion process On 7 December 2016 the chief rabbis of Israel issued a new policy requiring that foreign Jewish converts be recognized in Israel and vowed to release criteria required for recognizing rabbis who perform such conversions 49 Previously such conversions were not required to be recognized 49 However within one week the chief rabbis had retracted their earlier promise and instead appointed members to a joint committee of five rabbis who would formulate the conversion criteria 50 Samaritans Further information Samaritanism and Samaritans Israel is home to the only significant populations of Samaritans in the world They are adherents of Samaritanism an Abrahamic religion similar to Judaism 51 52 As of 1 November 2007 there were 712 Samaritans 53 The community lives almost exclusively in Kiryat Luza on Mount Gerizim and in Holon Their traditional religious leader is the Samaritan High Priest currently Aabed El ben Asher ben Matzliach Ancestrally they claim descent from a group of Israelite inhabitants from the tribes of Joseph divided between the two half tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh and the priestly tribe of Levi 54 Despite being counted separately in the census for the purposes of citizenship the Israeli Chief Rabbinate has classified them as Jews according to law 55 Christianity Main article Christianity in Israel Most Christians living permanently in Israel are Arabs or have come from other countries to live and work mainly in churches or monasteries which have long and enduring histories in the land citation needed Ten churches are officially recognized under Israel s confessional system which provides for the self regulation of status issues such as marriage and divorce These are the Catholic Church including the Latin Church Armenian Catholic Church Maronite Church Melkite Greek Catholic Church Syriac Catholic Church and Chaldean Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church particularly the Greek Orthodox Church the Syriac Orthodox Church and Anglicans 56 Christian Arabs are one of the most educated groups in Israel Maariv has described the Christian Arab sector as the most successful in the education system 57 since Christian Arabs fared the best in terms of education in comparison to any other group receiving an education in Israel 58 Arab Christians were also the vanguard in terms of eligibility for higher education 58 and they have attained bachelor s and academic degrees at higher rates than Jews Druze or Muslims in Israel 58 According to historical and traditional sources Jesus lived in the Land of Israel and died and was buried on the site of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem making the land a Holy Land for Christianity However few Christians now live in the area compared to Muslims and Jews This is because Islam displaced Christianity in almost all of the Middle East and the rise of modern Zionism and the establishment of the State of Israel has seen millions of Jews migrate to Israel Recently the Christian population in Israel has increased with the immigration of foreign workers from a number of countries and the immigration of accompanying non Jewish spouses in mixed marriages Numerous churches have opened in Tel Aviv 59 Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches Most Christians in Israel belong primarily to branches of the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic Churches that oversee a variety of church buildings monasteries seminaries and religious institutions all over the land particularly in Jerusalem citation needed Protestants Protestant Christians account for less than one percent of Israeli citizens but foreign evangelical Protestants are a prominent source of political support for the State of Israel see Christian Zionism 60 Each year hundreds of thousands of Protestant Christians come as tourists to see Israel 61 Messianic Judaism nbsp The Messianic Seal of Jerusalem a symbol of Messianic JudaismMain article Messianic Judaism Messianic Judaism is a religious movement that arose within Evangelical Protestantism and incorporates elements of Judaism with the tenets of Christianity They worship God the Father as one with Trinity They worship Jesus whom they call Yeshua Messianic Jews believe that Jesus is the Messiah 62 63 They emphasise that Jesus was a Jew as were his early followers Most adherents in Israel reject traditional Christianity and its symbols in favour of celebrating Jewish festivals Although followers of Messianic Judaism are not considered Jews under Israel s Law of Return 64 there are an estimated 10 000 20 000 adherents in the State of Israel both Jews and other non Arab Israelis many of them recent immigrants from the former Soviet Union 65 66 In Jerusalem there are twelve Messianic congregations 67 failed verification This is growing religious group in Israel according to both its proponents and critics 66 68 In Israel Jewish Christians themselves go by the name Meshiykhiyyim from Messiah as found in the Franz Delitzsch Hebrew New Testament rather than the traditional Talmudic name for Christians Notzrim from Nazarene 69 70 Islam Main article Islam in Israel nbsp Ramadan decorations in JerusalemJerusalem is a city of major religious significance for Muslims worldwide After capturing the Old City of Jerusalem in 1967 Israel found itself in control of Mount Moriah which was the site of both Jewish temples and Islam s third holiest site after those in Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia The Haram al Sharif Temple Mount from which Muslims believe that Mohammad ascended to Heaven This mountain which has the Dome of the Rock and the adjacent Jami Al Aqsa on it is the third holiest site in Islam and the holiest in Judaism Since 1967 the Israeli government has granted authority to a Waqf to administer the area Rumors that the Israeli government are seeking to demolish the Muslim sites have angered Muslims These beliefs are possibly related to excavations that have been taking place close to the Temple Mount with the intention of gathering archeological remnants of the first and second temple period 71 72 as well as the stance of some rabbis and activists who call for its destruction to replace it with the Third Temple 73 Most Muslims in Israel are Sunni Arabs with a small minority of Ahmadi Arabs 74 From 1516 to 1917 the Sunni Ottoman Turks ruled the areas that now include Israel Their rulership reinforced and ensured the centrality and importance of Islam as the dominant religion in the region The conquest of Palestine by the British in 1917 and the subsequent Balfour Declaration opened the gates for the arrival of large numbers of Jews in Palestine who began to tip the scales in favor of Judaism with the passing of each decade However the British transferred the symbolic Islamic governance of the land to the Hashemites based in Jordan and not to the House of Saud The Hashemites thus became the official guardians of the Islamic holy places of Jerusalem and the areas around it particularly strong when Jordan controlled the West Bank 1948 1967 In 1922 the British had created the Supreme Muslim Council in the British Mandate of Palestine and appointed Amin al Husayni 1895 1974 as the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem The council was disbanded by Jordan in 1951 citation needed Israeli Muslims are free to teach Islam to their children in their own schools and there are a number of Islamic universities and colleges in Israel and the territories Islamic law remains the law for concerns relating to for example marriage divorce inheritance and other family matters relating to Muslims without the need for formal recognition arrangements of the kind extended to the main Christian churches Similarly Ottoman law in the form of the Mecelle for a long time remained the basis of large parts of Israeli law for example concerning land ownership 75 Ahmadiyya Main article Ahmadiyya in Israel Ahmadiyya is a small Islamic sect in Israel The history of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Israel begins with a tour of the Middle East in 1924 made by the second caliph of the Community Mirza Basheer ud Din Mahmood Ahmad and a number of missionaries However the Community was first established in the region in 1928 in what was then the British Mandate of Palestine The first converts to the movement belonged to the Odeh tribe who originated from Ni lin a small village near Jerusalem In the 1950s they settled in Kababir a former village which was later absorbed by the city of Haifa 76 The neighbourhood s first mosque was built in 1931 and a larger one called the Mahmood Mosque in the 1980s Israel is the only country in the Middle East where Ahmadi Muslims can openly practice their Islamic faith As such Kababir a neighbourhood on Mount Carmel in Haifa Israel acts as the Middle Eastern headquarters of the Community 77 78 It is unknown how many Israeli Ahmadis there are although it is estimated there are about 2 200 Ahmadis in Kababir 79 Druze Main article Druze in Israel nbsp Druze man in Peki inIsrael is home to about 143 000 Druze who follow their own gnostic religion 80 Self described as Ahl al Tawhid and al Muwaḥḥidun meaning People of Oneness and Unitarians respectively the Druze live mainly in the Northern District southern Haifa District and northern occupied Golan Heights 81 Since 1957 the Israeli government has also designated the Druze a distinct ethnic community at the request of the community s leaders Until his death in 1993 the Druze community in Israel was led by Shaykh Amin Tarif a charismatic figure regarded by many within the Druze community internationally as the preeminent religious leader of his time 82 Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam Druze do not identify as Muslims 83 84 85 86 87 and they do not accept the five pillars of Islam 88 Bahaʼi Faith See also Bahaʼi World Centre nbsp View towards the Shrine of the Bab from the upper Terraces on Mount Carmel Haifa nbsp The Bahaʼi Arc from the International Archives buildingThe Bahaʼi Faith has its administrative and spiritual centre in Haifa on land it has owned since Baha u llah s imprisonment in Acre in the early 1870s by the Ottoman Empire citation needed The progress of these properties in construction projects was welcomed by the mayor of Haifa Amram Mitzna 1993 2003 89 As far back as 1969 a presence of Bahaʼis was noted mostly centered around Haifa in Israeli publications 90 Several newspapers in Israel since then have noted the presence of Bahaʼis in the Haifa area of some 6 700 volunteers with no salaries getting only living allowances and housing 91 92 and that if an Israeli citizen were to wish to convert they would be told that the religion does not seek or accept converts in the State of Israel 92 93 and that if they persist it is a personal matter between them and God and not a matter of joining a community of believers 92 Bahaʼis generally practice a staunch political quietism 89 and do not engage in any missionary activity in Israel 89 Even Bahaʼis from outside Israel are instructed to not teach the religion to citizens of Israel 94 The religion s situation in Israel was specified in an agreement signed in 1987 by then Vice Premier and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres as a recognized religious community in Israel that the holiest places of the Bahaʼi Faith are located in Israel and confirms that the Universal House of Justice is the Trustee of the Bahaʼi International Community over the Holy Places of the Bahaʼi Faith in Israel and over the Baha i endowments in Israel 95 Bahaʼis from other countries wishing to visit Israel are required to seek written permission from the Universal House of Justice prior to their visit for Bahaʼi pilgrimage 96 Hinduism Main article Hinduism in Israel The small Hindu community in Israel is mostly made up of representatives of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness In 2002 most of the devotees lived in Katzir Harish 97 Neopaganism Main article Semitic neopaganism Although the exact number of adherents are unknown one old estimate was 150 total primarily due to societal stigma and persecution a growing number of young Israelis are secretly reviving the pre Judaic polytheistic worship of ancient Canaanite gods known as Semitic neopaganism Additionally others worship in different neopagan traditions such as Celtic Norse and Wiccan 98 African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem Main article African Hebrew Israelites of JerusalemSanctity of certain sitesJerusalem See also Religious significance of Jerusalem nbsp The Western Wall and Dome of the Rock on top of the Temple MountJerusalem plays an important role in three monotheistic religions Judaism Christianity and Islam and Haifa and Acre play a role in a fourth Bahaʼi Mount Gerizim is a holy site to what can be considered a fifth Samaritanism The 2000 Statistical Yearbook of Jerusalem lists 1204 synagogues 158 churches and 73 mosques within the city 99 Despite efforts to maintain peaceful religious coexistence some sites such as the Temple Mount have been a continuous source of friction and controversy Jerusalem has been sacred to the Jews since the 10th century BC The Western Wall a remnant of the Second Temple is a holy site for Jews second only to the Temple Mount itself 100 Christianity reveres Jerusalem not only for its role in the Old Testament but also for its significance in the life of Jesus The land currently occupied by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is considered one of the top candidates for Golgotha and thus has been a Christian pilgrimage site for the past two thousand years 101 102 In 1889 the Ottoman Empire allowed the Catholic Church to re establish its hierarchy in Palestine Other ancient churches such as the Greek Armenian Syrian and Coptic churches are also well represented in Jerusalem 103 Jerusalem is the third holiest city in Islam after Mecca and Medina 104 105 The Temple Mount is known to Muslims as the Masjid Al Aqsa derived from the name mentioned in the Quran and is topped by two Islamic landmarks intended to commemorate the event Jami Al Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock which stands over the Foundation Stone from which Muslims believe Muhammad ascended to Heaven 106 Other sites As for the importance of Haifa and Acre in Bahaʼi Faith it is related to Baha u llah who was imprisoned in Acre and spent his final years there Mount Gerizim is the holiest site to Samaritans who used it as the site of their temple Religious relationsMain article Religious relations in Israel Within the Jewish community See also Haredim and Zionism The State of Israel generally respects freedom of religion Freedom House reports Freedom of religion is respected Each community has jurisdiction over its own members in matters of marriage burial and divorce Religious tensions exist between Jewish haredi and non haredi Israeli Jews Haredi Israeli males devote their young adulthood to full time Talmudic studies and therefore generally get exemptions from military service in the Israel Defense Forces Many leaders of haredi Judaism encourage these students to apply for exemptions from the mandatory army service ostensibly to protect them from the secularizing influence of the Israeli army Over the years the number of exemptions has grown to about 10 of conscriptable manpower Many secular Israelis consider these exemptions to be a systematic shirking of their patriotic duty by a large segment of society citation needed Haredi Israelis are represented by haredi political parties which like all smaller parties in a system of proportional representation may tend to wield disproportionate political power at the point when government coalitions need to be negotiated following national elections As of June 2008 update the two main Haredi parties in the Knesset are Shas representing Sephardi and Mizrahi interests and United Torah Judaism an alliance of Degel HaTorah Lithuanian Haredi and Agudath Yisrael The Shinui party was created as a backlash to the perceived influence of the haredi parties and to represent the interests of secular Jews that supposedly were not seen to by the other non religious parties citation needed Tension also exists between the Orthodox establishment and the Conservative and Reform movements Only Orthodox Judaism is officially recognized in Israel though conversions conducted by Conservative and Reform clergy outside of Israel may be accepted for the purposes of the Law of Return As a result Conservative and Reform synagogues receive minimal government funding and support Conservative and Reform rabbis cannot officiate at religious ceremonies and any marriages divorces and conversions they perform are not considered valid Conservative and Reform Jews have been prohibited from holding services at the Western Wall on the grounds that they violate Orthodox norms regarding participation of women citation needed Tensions exist surrounding Mehadrin bus lines a type of bus line in Israel which mostly runs in and or between major Haredi population centers in which gender segregation are applied Non Haredi female passengers have complained of being harassed and forced to sit at the back of the bus 107 In a ruling of January 2011 the Israeli High Court of Justice stated the unlawfulness of gender segregation and abolished the mehadrin public buses However the court rule allowed the continuation of the gender segregation in public buses on a strictly voluntary basis for a one year experimental period 108 Between Jews and Christians Messianic Jews who are members of Messianic congregations are among the most active missionary movements in Israel Their proselytising has faced demonstrations and intermittent protests by the Haredi anti missionary group Yad LeAchim which infiltrates those movements as well as other proselytising groups such as Hare Krishna and maintains extensive records on their activities Attempts by Messianic Jews to evangelize other Jews are seen by many religious Jews as incitement to avodah zarah foreign worship or idolatry Over the years there have been several arson attempts of messianic congregations 109 There have also been attacks on Messianic Jews and hundreds of New Testaments distributed in Or Yehuda were burned 110 While missionary activity itself is not illegal in Israel it is illegal to offer money or other material inducements Legislation banning missionary work outright has been attempted in the past 111 Some Orthodox Jewish communities in Israel have come under scrutiny for the negative stereotyping and scapegoating of Christian minorities in the region including violent acts against Christian missionaries and communities 112 A frequent complaint of Christian clergy in Israel is being spat at by Jews often haredi yeshiva students 113 The Anti Defamation League has called on the chief Rabbis to speak out against interfaith assaults 114 Israel has been accused of obstructing Christian worship by Palestinian Christians by withholding entry permits at times of religious significance to the community 115 The Israel Nature and Parks Authority has also been accused of encroaching on Christian holy sites 116 In January 2023 with the rise of the political far right and religious Zionist parties emboldened Jewish extremists took to vandalizing Christian grave sites 117 Marriage and divorceMain article Marriage in Israel Currently Israel issues marriage licenses if performed under an official religious authority whether it be Orthodox Jewish Christian Muslim Druze etc only between a man and a woman of the same religion Civil marriages were officially sanctioned only if performed abroad but 2010 changes in Israeli law allow secular marriage in Israel for people that have proven to lack any religion also 118 119 This is a major issue among secular groups as well as adherents to non Orthodox streams of Judaism There is fear that civil marriage will divide the Jewish people in Israel between those who can marry Jews and those who cannot leading to concerns over retaining the character of the Jewish state Relative sizes of the religious communities in IsraelReligion in Israelvte Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Jewish Muslim Christian Druze Other Until 1995 figures for Christians also included Others 120 The census results are in thousands 121 122 23 123 Year Druze Christian Muslims Jews Total1948 758 7 1950 15 0 1 09 36 0 2 63 116 1 8 47 1 203 0 87 80 1 370 11960 23 3 1 08 49 6 2 31 166 3 7 73 1 911 3 88 88 2 150 41970 35 9 1 19 75 5 2 50 328 6 10 87 2 582 0 85 44 3 022 11980 50 7 1 29 89 9 2 29 498 3 12 71 3 282 7 83 71 3 921 71990 82 6 1 71 114 7 2 38 677 7 14 05 3 946 7 81 85 4 821 72000 103 8 1 63 135 1 2 12 970 0 15 23 4 955 4 77 80 6 369 32010 127 5 1 66 153 4 1 99 1 320 5 17 16 5 802 4 75 40 7 695 12011 129 8 1 66 155 1 1 98 1 354 3 17 28 5 907 5 75 38 7 836 62012 131 5 1 65 158 4 1 98 1 387 5 17 38 5 999 6 75 14 7 984 52013 133 4 1 64 160 9 1 98 1 420 3 17 46 6 104 5 75 04 8 134 52014 135 4 1 63 163 5 1 97 1 453 8 17 52 6 219 2 74 96 8 296 92015 137 3 1 62 165 9 1 96 1 488 0 17 58 6 334 5 74 84 8 463 42016 139 3 1 61 168 3 1 95 1 524 0 17 66 6 446 1 74 71 8 628 62017 141 2 1 60 171 9 1 95 1 561 7 17 75 6 554 5 74 50 8 797 92018 143 2 1 60 174 4 1 95 1 598 4 17 82 6 664 4 74 32 8 967 62019 145 1 1 59 177 2 1 94 1 635 8 17 90 6 773 2 74 10 9 140 52020 146 8 1 58 179 5 1 93 1 671 3 17 99 6 873 9 73 99 9 289 8In 2011 non Arab Christians estimated to number 25 000 were counted as Jews and others 124 See also nbsp Israel portal nbsp Religion portalDemographics of Israel Culture of Israel Hesder Jewish denominations Palestinian Christians Sherut Leumi Status quo Israel Tal committeeReferences Israel s Religiously Divided Society Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project 8 March 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2020 Beit Hallahmi 2011 p 385 Sheetrit Shimon 20 August 2001 Freedom of Religion in Israel Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs Archived from the original on 6 February 2013 Retrieved 26 October 2008 a b Table 2 1 Population by Religion and Population As of may 2011 estimate the population was 76 0 Jewish Group Statistical Abstract of Israel 2006 No 57 Israel Central Bureau of Statistics 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 14 September 2012 a b Karesh amp Hurvitz 2005 p 237 a b Beit Hallahmi 2011 p 386 Kedem Peri 2017 1995 Demensions of Jewish Religiosity In Deshen Shlomo Liebman Charles S Shokeid Moshe eds Israeli Judaism The Sociology of Religion in Israel Studies of Israeli Society 7 Reprint ed London New York Routledge pp 33 62 ISBN 978 1 56000 178 2 People Religious Freedom mfa gov il Retrieved 27 April 2021 Basic Law Human Dignity and Liberty Global Restrictions on Religion Full report PDF The Pew Forum on Religion amp Public Life December 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2013 U S Department of State 2012 Report on International Religious Freedom Israel and The Occupied Territories May 20 2013 ISRAEL 2017 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT U S Department of Justice Retrieved 27 April 2021 Israel Has Almost as Many Religious Restrictions as Iran Pew Report Finds Haaretz JTA and Ben Sales July 17 2019 a b Who are the most religious people in the world Haaretz 14 April 2015 A Portrait of Israeli Jewry Beliefs Observances and Values among Israeli Jews 2000 PDF The Israel Democracy Institute and The AVI CHAI Foundation 2002 p 8 Archived from the original PDF on 30 June 2007 Retrieved 28 January 2008 Ib p 11 Hasson Nir 27 January 2012 Survey Record Number of Israeli Jews Believe in God Haaretz a b c Yair Ettinger 11 June 2013 Poll 7 1 Percent of Israeli Jews Define Themselves as Reform or Conservative Haaretz Retrieved 26 June 2023 Dror Cohen Shlomit 12 September 2010 Media Releases לקט נתונים מתוך הסקר החברתי 2009 שמירה על המסורת היהודית ושינויים במידת הדתיות לאורך החיים בקרב האוכלוסייה היהודית בישראל Social Survey 2009 Observance of Jewish Tradition and Changes in Religiosity of the Jewish Population in Israel Central Bureau of Statistics in Hebrew Archived from the original on 16 November 2018 Moti Bassok 25 December 2007 Central Bureau of Statistics 2 1 of state s population is Christian HAARETZ com Retrieved 29 January 2008 Israel 2010 42 of Jews are secular Ynetnews 18 May 2010 Population by Population Group PDF Monthly Bulletin of Statistics Israel Central Bureau of Statistics 31 December 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 17 February 2014 a b Israel s Independence Day 2019 PDF Report Israel Central Bureau of Statistics 6 May 2019 Retrieved 7 May 2019 Sabbath Poll Dateline World Jewry World Jewish Congress September 2007 a b c d Liebman Charles S ed 1990 Religious and Secular Conflict and Accommodation between Jews in Israel New York Keter Publ House ISBN 0962372315 Cohen Asher Susser Bernard 2000 Israel and the Politics of Jewish Identity The Secular Religious Impasse Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801863455 Freedom of Religion BICOM Archived from the original on 21 December 2005 Retrieved 14 October 2005 Daniel J Elazar How Religious are Israeli Jews Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs Retrieved 28 January 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Ezrachi Elan 2004 The Quest for Spirituality among Secular Israelis In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 315 330 Ferziger Adam S March 2008 Religion for the Secular The New Israeli Rabbinate Journal of Modern Jewish Studies 7 1 67 90 Shtull Trauring Asaf 17 May 2010 Poll Shows Ranks of Secular Jewish Minority in Israel Continued to Drop in 2009 Haaretz a b Lipka Michael 15 March 2016 Unlike U S few Jews in Israel identify as Reform or Conservative Pew Research Center Ultra Orthodox Jewish Community in Israel Facts and Figures 2022 Jewish Virtual Library A Project of AICE Retrieved 27 June 2023 Tabory Ephraim 2004 1990 Reform and Conservative Judaism in Israel In Goldscheider Calvin Neusner Jacob eds Social Foundations of Judaism Reprint ed Eugene Or Wipf and Stock Publ pp 240 258 ISBN 1 59244 943 3 Tabory Ephraim 2004 The Israel Reform and Conservative Movements and the Marker for the Liberal Judaism In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 285 314 Deshen Shlomo Liebman Charles S Shokeid Moshe eds 2017 1995 Americans in the Israeli Reform and Conservative Denominations Israeli Judaism The Sociology of Religion in Israel Studies of Israeli Society 7 Reprint ed London New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 56000 178 2 a b c Beit Hallahmi 2011 p 387 Berlin Adele ed 2011 The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion 2nd ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 350 ISBN 978 0 19 975927 9 Jeremy Sharon Sam Sokol 25 February 2016 Chief Rabbinate in fierce attack on Reform Conservative movements Jerusalem Post Retrieved 27 April 2016 a b Survey Majority of Israeli Jews support equality for Reform movement JTA 27 May 2016 The Status Quo Letter DOC Archived 16 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Hebrew English translation in Israel in the Middle East Documents and Readings on Society Politics and Foreign Relations Pre 1948 to the Present editors Itamar Rabinovich and Jehuda Reinharz ISBN 978 0 87451 962 4 Tamar Pileggi Jews and Arabs proud to be Israeli distrust government Poll conducted before war shows marked rise in support for state among Arabs religious establishment scores low on trust 4 Jan 2015 The Times of Israel http www timesofisrael com jews and arabs proud to be israeli distrust government Mourad El Kodsi The Karaite Jews of Egypt 1987 Ash Shubban Al Qarra in 4 2 June 1937 p 8 Oesterley W O E amp Box G H 1920 A Short Survey of the Literature of Rabbinical and Mediaeval Judaism Burt Franklin New York A J Jacobs The Year of Living Biblically p 69 a b Isabel Kershner New Generation of Jewish Sect Takes Up Struggle to Protect Place in Modern Israel The New York Times 4 September 2013 Charakterystyka mniejszosci narodowych i etnicznych w Polsce in Polish Warsaw Ministerstwo Spraw Wewnetrznych Polish Interior Ministry Retrieved 7 April 2012 a b Maltz Judy 8 December 2016 Israel to Publish Criteria for Recognizing Rabbis Who Perform Conversions Abroad Haaretz Rabbinate forms conversion vetting panel raising hackles anew Pummer 1987 Mor Reiterer amp Winkler 2010 Developed Community A B The Samaritan News Bi Weekly Magazine 1 November 2007 David Noel Freedman The Anchor Bible Dictionary 5 941 New York Doubleday 1996 c1992 Sela 1994 pp 255 267 Freedom of Religion in Israel www jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 16 May 2017 חדשות בארץ nrg המגזר הערבי נוצרי הכי מצליח במערכת a b c Druckman Yaron 23 December 2012 Christians in Israel Strong in education Ynetnews Adriana Kemp amp Rebeca Raijman Christian Zionists in the Holy Land Evangelical Churches Labor Migrants and the Jewish State Identities Global Studies in Power and Culture 10 3 295 318 Zylstra Sarah Israeli Christians Think and Do Almost the Opposite of American Evangelicals Christianity Today Retrieved 24 February 2018 Christian tourism to Israel mfa gov il Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs Retrieved 24 February 2018 Steiner Rudolf George E Berkley 1997 Jews Branden Books p 129 ISBN 978 0 8283 2027 6 A more rapidly growing organization is the Messianic Jewish Alliance of America whose congregations assemble on Friday evening and Saturday morning recite Hebrew prayers and sometimes wear talliot prayer shawls They worship Jesus whom they call Yeshua Melton J Gordon ed 2005 Messianic Judaism Encyclopedia of Protestantism Encyclopedia of World Religions New York Facts On File p 373 ISBN 0 8160 5456 8 Messianic Judaism is a Protestant movement that emerged in the last half of the 20th century among believers who were ethnically Jewish but had adopted an Evangelical Christian faith By the 1960s a new effort to create a culturally Jewish Protestant Christianity emerged among individuals who began to call themselves Messianic Jews Daphna Berman Aliyah with a cat a dog and Jesus WorldWide Religious News citing amp quoting Haaretz 10 June 2006 Archived from the original on 17 January 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Larry Derfner Ksenia Svetlova 29 April 2005 Messianic Jews in Israel claim 10 000 The Jerusalem Post a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Sarah Posner 29 November 2012 Kosher Jesus Messianic Jews in the Holy Land The Atlantic Retrieved 28 June 2023 Messianic perspectives for Today leeds Messianic fellowship Retrieved 28 January 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Israel Channel 2 News 23 February 200 8 April 2007 Retrieved 28 January 2008 9 minute video Hebrew audio English subtitles Avner Falk Franks and Saracens Reality and Fantasy in the Crusades p4 2010 225 Nonetheless the Talmudic Hebrew name as well as the modern Hebrew name for Christians is not meshikhiyim messianic but notsrim people from Nazareth referring to the fact that Jesus came from Nazareth example The Christian Church Jaffa Tel Aviv website article in Hebrew Archived 4 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine יהודים משיחיים יהודים או נוצרים Southern Temple Mount The Destruction of the Temple Mount Antiquities by Mark Ami El www jcpa org J lem posters call for 3rd Temple The Jerusalem Post JPost com Ori Stendel 1996 The Arabs in Israel Sussex Academic Press p 45 ISBN 978 1898723240 Retrieved 2 June 2014 Guberman Shlomo 2000 The Development of the Law in Israel The First 50 Years Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs accessed January 2007 Emanuela C Del Re 3 March 2014 Approaching conflict the Ahmadiyya way The alternative way to conflict resolution of the Ahmadiyya community in Haifa Israel Springer 116 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kababir and Central Carmel Multiculturalism on the Carmel Retrieved 17 February 2015 Visit Haifa Retrieved 17 February 2015 Kababir Israel and You Archived from the original on 30 January 2015 Retrieved 17 February 2015 The Druze population in Israel a collection of data on the occasion of the Prophet Shuaib holiday PDF CBS Israel Israel Central Bureau of Statistics 17 April 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2019 Identity Repertoires among Arabs in Israel Muhammad Amara and Izhak Schnell Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Vol 30 2004 Pace Eric 5 October 1993 Sheik Amin Tarif Arab Druse Leader In Israel Dies at 95 The New York Times Retrieved 29 March 2010 Pintak Lawrence 2019 America amp Islam Soundbites Suicide Bombs and the Road to Donald Trump Bloomsbury Publishing p 86 ISBN 9781788315593 Jonas Margaret 2011 The Templar Spirit The Esoteric Inspiration Rituals and Beliefs of the Knights Templar Temple Lodge Publishing p 83 ISBN 9781906999254 Druze often they are not regarded as being Muslim at all nor do all the Druze consider themselves as Muslim Are the Druze People Arabs or Muslims Deciphering Who They Are Arab America Arab America 8 August 2018 Retrieved 13 April 2020 J Stewart Dona 2008 The Middle East Today Political Geographical and Cultural Perspectives Routledge p 33 ISBN 9781135980795 Most Druze do not consider themselves Muslim Historically they faced much persecution and keep their religious beliefs secrets Yazbeck Haddad Yvonne 2014 The Oxford Handbook of American Islam Oxford University Press p 142 ISBN 9780199862634 While they appear parallel to those of normative Islam in the Druze religion they are different in meaning and interpretation The religion is consider distinct from the Ismaili as well as from other Muslims belief and practice Most Druze consider themselves fully assimilated in American society and do not necessarily identify as Muslims De McLaurin Ronald 1979 The Political Role of Minority Groups in the Middle East Michigan University Press p 114 ISBN 9780030525964 Theologically one would have to conclude that the Druze are not Muslims They do not accept the five pillars of Islam In place of these principles the Druze have instituted the seven precepts noted above a b c Adam Berry 22 September 2004 The Bahaʼi Faith and its relationship to Islam Christianity and Judaism A brief history International Social Science Review ISSN 0278 2308 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Zev Vilnay Karṭa Firm 1969 The new Israel atlas Bible to present day Israel Universities Press p 38 Nechemia Meyers 1995 Peace to all nations Baha is Establish Israel s Second Holy Mountain The World amp I Retrieved 5 March 2015 a b c Donald H Harrison 3 April 1998 The Fourth Faith Jewish Sightseeing Haifa Israel Retrieved 5 March 2015 Universal House of Justice 13 January 2015 Humanitarian Responses to Global Conflicts Letters from the Universal House of Justice Bahai Library com Retrieved 5 March 2015 Teaching the Faith in Israel Bahaʼi Library Online 23 June 1995 Retrieved 6 August 2007 Universal House of Justice 30 April 1987 Regarding the development of the properties of the Baha i World Centre Baha i Reference Library Selected Messages of the Universal House of Justice Baha i International Community Retrieved 25 December 2016 Other visits to the Holy Land Baha i World Centre Archived from the original on 4 January 2011 Retrieved 24 March 2010 Waves of Devotion 30 June 2007 Ilany Ofri 22 March 2009 Paganism Returns to the Holy Land Haaretz Guinn David E 2 October 2006 Protecting Jerusalem s Holy Sites A Strategy for Negotiating a Sacred Peace 1st ed Cambridge University Press p 142 ISBN 978 0 521 86662 0 What is the Western Wall The Kotel Archived from the original on 2 February 2007 Retrieved 6 March 2007 Ray Stephen K October 2002 St John s Gospel A Bible Study Guide and Commentary for Individuals and Groups San Francisco CA Ignatius Press p 340 ISBN 978 0 89870 821 9 O Reilly Sean James O Reilly 30 November 2000 PilgrFile Adventures of the Spirit 1st ed Travelers Tales p 14 ISBN 978 1 885211 56 9 The general consensus is that the Church of the Holy Sepulchre marks the hill called Golgotha and that the site of the Crucifixion and the last five Stations of the Cross are located under its large black domes Preserving Identity in the Holy City Third holiest city in Islam Esposito John L 2 November 2002 What Everyone Needs to Know about Islam Oxford University Press p 157 ISBN 978 0 19 515713 0 The Night Journey made Jerusalem the third holiest city in Islam Brown Leon Carl 15 September 2000 Setting the Stage Islam and Muslims Religion and State The Muslim Approach to Politics Columbia University Press p 11 ISBN 978 0 231 12038 8 The third holiest city of Islam Jerusalem is also very much in the center Hoppe Leslie J August 2000 The Holy City Jerusalem in the Theology of the Old Testament Michael Glazier Books p 14 ISBN 978 0 8146 5081 3 Jerusalem has always enjoyed a prominent place in Islam Jerusalem is often referred to as the third holiest city in Islam Middle East peace plans by Willard A Beling The Aqsa Mosque on the Temple Mount is the third holiest site in Sunni Islam after Mecca and Medina The Early Arab Period 638 1099 Jerusalem Life Throughout the Ages in a Holy City Bar Ilan University Ingeborg Rennert Center for Jerusalem Studies March 1997 Retrieved 24 April 2007 Egged launches 11 mehadrin bus lines Jerusalem Post 1 December 2006 Archived from the original on 6 July 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2011 Izenberg Dan Mandel Jonah 6 January 2011 Court scraps mehadrin buses Jerusalem Post Retrieved 8 March 2011 Elaine Ruth Fletcher 26 June 2000 Orthodox Suspected in Jerusalem Conservative Synagogue Church Attacks beliefnet com Retrieved 28 January 2007 Orthodox Jewish youths burn New Testaments in Or Yehuda HaAretz Associated Press 20 May 2008 Larry Derfner 29 April 2005 A matter of faith The Jerusalem Post Persecution of Christians in Israel The New Inquisition Journal of Palestine Studies Vol 8 No 1 Autumn 1978 pp 135 140 Barkat Amiram 27 June 2009 Christians in Jerusalem want Jews to stop spitting on them Haaretz ADL Calls On Chief Rabbis to Speak Out Against Interfaith Assaults In Old City 17 October 2004 Archived from the original on 29 November 2008 Macintyre Donald 20 April 2019 Gaza Christians wait for permits to visit Jerusalem and Bethlehem at Easter The Observer via The Guardian McKernan Bethan 3 April 2023 Mount of Olives becomes latest target in fight for control of Jerusalem The Guardian Holmes Oliver 5 January 2023 Outcry over footage of men smashing cross at Jerusalem cemetery The Guardian Israeli couple become first to be wed in civil union The Jerusalem Post JPost com Fleet Josh 4 November 2010 Israel To Allow Civil Marriages Huffington Post Population in Israel and in Jerusalem by Religion 1988 2016 PDF Israel Central Bureau of Statistics 4 September 2018 Retrieved 10 May 2019 Statistical Abstract of Israel 2017 Central Bureau of Statistics Statistical Abstract of Israel 2014 No 65 Subject 2 Table No 2 Population Statistical Abstract of Israel 2021 No 72 CBS Juni Mansur 2012 Arab Christians in Israel Facts Figures and Trends Dyar ISBN 978 9950 376 14 4 pp 13 20 NotesBibliographyAran Gideon 2004 1990 From Religious Zionism to Zionist Religion In Goldscheider Calvin Neusner Jacob eds Social Foundations of Judaism Reprint ed Eugene Or Wipf and Stock Publ pp 259 282 ISBN 1 59244 943 3 Beit Hallahmi Benjamin 2011 Jewish Religious Life in State of Israel In Berlin Adele ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion 2nd ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 385 387 ISBN 978 0 19 975927 9 Bilu Yoram 2004 The Sanctification of Space in Israel Civil Religion and Folk Judaism In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 371 393 Cohen Asher Susser Bernard 2000 Israel and the Politics of Jewish Identity The Secular Religious Impasse Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801863455 Deshen Shlomo 2004 1990 The Social Foundation of Israeli Judaism In Goldscheider Calvin Neusner Jacob eds Social Foundations of Judaism Reprint ed Eugene Or Wipf and Stock Publ pp 212 239 ISBN 1 59244 943 3 Deshen Shlomo Liebman Charles S Shokeid Moshe eds 2017 1995 Israeli Judaism The Sociology of Religion in Israel Studies of Israeli Society 7 Reprint ed London New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 56000 178 2 Ezrachi Elan 2004 The Quest for Spirituality among Secular Israelis In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 315 330 Ferziger Adam S March 2008 Religion for the Secular The New Israeli Rabbinate Journal of Modern Jewish Studies 7 1 pp 67 90 Ferziger Adam S 2016 Foreign Ashes in Sovereign Space Cremation and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel 1931 1990 Jewish Studies Quarterly 23 4 pp 290 313 Karesh Sara E Hurvitz Mitchell M 2005 Israel Encyclopedia of Judaism Encyclopedia of World Religions J Gordon Melton Series Editor New York Facts On File p 235 237 ISBN 0 8160 5457 6 Liebman Charles S ed 1990 Religious and Secular Conflict and Accommodation between Jews in Israel New York Keter Publ House ISBN 0962372315 Liebman Charles S 1993 Jewish Fundamentalism and the Israeli Polity In Marty Martin E Appleby R Scott eds Fundamentalisms and the State Remaking Polities Economies and Militance The Fundamentalism Project 3 Chicago Il London University of Chicago Press pp 68 87 ISBN 0 226 50883 8 Liebman Charles S 1997 Religion Democracy and Israeli Society London New York Routledge ISBN 90 5702 012 2 Charles S Liebman 1998 Modern Orthodoxy in Israel Judaism Fall Liebman Charles S Cohen Steven Martin 1990 Two Worlds of Judaism The Israeli and American Experiences New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 9780300047264 Liebman Charles S Don Yehiya Eliezer 1983 Civil Religion in Israel Traditional Judaism and Political Culture in the Jewish State Berkeley Ca University of California Press ISBN 0 520 04817 2 Mazie Steven V 2006 Israel s Higher Law Religion and Liberal Democracy in the Jewish State Lexington Books Melton J Gordon Baumann Martin eds 2010 Israel Religions of the world a comprehensive encyclopedia of beliefs and practices Vol 4 2nd ed Santa Barbara Ca Denver Co Oxford ABC Clio ISBN 978 1 59884 203 6 Mor Menachem Reiterer Friedrich V Winkler Waltraud eds 2010 Samaritans Past and Present Current Studies Studia Samaritana 5 amp Studia Judaica 53 Berlin De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 019497 5 Peled Yoav and Hurit 2018 The Religionization of Israeli Society London New York Routledge Posner Sarah 29 November 2012 Kosher Jesus Messianic Jews in the Holy Land The Atlantic Pummer Reinhard 1987 The Samaritans Leiden E J Brill ISBN 90 04 07891 6 Ravitzky Aviezer 1996 1993 Messianism Zionism and Jewish Religious Radicalism Translated by Michael Swirsky and Jonathan Chipman Chicago Il University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 70577 3 Rosenak Michael 1993 Jewish Fundamentalism in Israeli Education In Marty Martin E Appleby R Scott eds Fundamentalisms and Society Reclaiming the Sciences the Family and Education The Fundamentalism Project 2 Chicago Il London University of Chicago Press pp 374 451 ISBN 0 226 50880 3 Schweid Eliezer 2004 Judaism in Israeli Culture In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 243 264 Sela Shulamit 1994 The Head of the Rabbanite Karaite and Samaritan Jews On the History of a Title Bulletin of the School of Oriental amp African Studies University of London 57 2 255 267 Spector Stephen 2008 Evangelicals and Israel Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195368024 LCCN 2008026681 Tabory Ephraim 2004 1990 Reform and Conservative Judaism in Israel In Goldscheider Calvin Neusner Jacob eds Social Foundations of Judaism Reprint ed Eugene Or Wipf and Stock Publ pp 240 258 ISBN 1 59244 943 3 Tabory Ephraim 2004 The Israel Reform and Conservative Movements and the Marker for the Liberal Judaism In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 285 314 Troen Ilan April 2016 Secular Judaism in Israel Society Vol 53 Issue 2 Waxman Chaim I 1993 Religious Culture and Politics in Israel In Wertheimer Jack ed The Modern Jewish Experience A Reader s Guide New York London NYU Press pp 201 212 ISBN 0 8147 9261 8 Waxman Chaim I ed 1994 Israel as a Religious Reality Orthodox Forum Series Northvale NJ Jason Aronson ISBN 9781568210773 Waxman Chaim I 2004 Religion in the Israeli Public Square In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 221 242 Waxman Chaim I ed 2008 Religious Zionism Post Disengagement Future Directions Orthodox Forum Series New York Michael Scharf Publ Trust Yeshiva University Press ISBN 978 1 60280 022 9 External linksThe Israel Project Religious Freedom in Israel A Fundamental Guarantee Israel Religion and Society Pluralism Synagogue and the State of Israel M Avrum Ehrlich Past Present and Future Developments of Arab Christianity in the Holy Land Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religion in Israel amp oldid 1183255033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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