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Jews

Jews (Hebrew: יְהוּדִים, ISO 259-2: Yehudim, Israeli pronunciation: [jehuˈdim]) or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group[10] and nation[11][12] originating from the Israelites[13][14][15] and Hebrews[16][17] of historical Israel and Judah. Jewish ethnicity, nationhood, and religion are strongly interrelated,[18][19] as Judaism is the ethnic religion of the Jewish people, although its observance varies from strict to none.[20][21]

Jews
יְהוּדִים‬‎ (Yehudim)
The Star of David, a common symbol of the Jewish people
Total population
14.6–17.8 million

Enlarged population (includes full or partial Jewish ancestry):
20.7 million[1]

(2022, est.)
Regions with significant populations
 Israel (incl. occupied territories)6,558,000–6,958,000[1]
 United States5,700,000–10,000,000[1]
 France453,000–600,000[1]
 Canada391,000–550,000[1]
 United Kingdom290,000–370,000[1]
 Argentina180,000–330,000[1]
 Russia172,000–440,000[1]
 Germany116,000–225,000[1]
 Australia113,000–140,000[1]
 Brazil93,000–150,000[1]
 South Africa69,000–80,000[1]
 Ukraine50,000–140,000[1]
 Hungary47,000–100,000[1]
 Mexico40,000–50,000[1]
 Netherlands30,000–52,000[1]
 Belgium29,000–40,000[1]
 Italy28,000–41,000[1]
 Switzerland19,000–25,000[1]
 Chile18,000–26,000[1]
 Uruguay17,000–25,000[1]
 Turkey15,000–21,000[1]
 Sweden15,000–25,000[1]
Languages
  • Predominantly spoken:[2]
  • Historical:
  • Sacred:
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups

Jews originated as an ethnic and religious group in the Middle East during the second millennium BCE,[9] in a part of the Levant known as the Land of Israel.[22] The Merneptah Stele of ancient Egypt appears to confirm the existence of a people of Israel somewhere in Canaan as far back as the 13th century BCE (Late Bronze Age).[23][24] The Israelites, as an outgrowth of the Canaanite population,[25] consolidated their hold in the region with the emergence of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah. Some consider that these Canaan-sedentary Israelites melded with incoming nomadic groups known as the "Hebrews".[26] The experience of life in the Jewish diaspora, from the Babylonian captivity and exile (though few sources mention this period in detail[27]) to the Roman occupation and exile, and the historical relations between Jews and their homeland in the Levant thereafter became a major feature of Jewish history, identity, culture, and memory.[28]

In the following millennia, Jewish diaspora communities coalesced into three major ethnic subdivisions according to where their ancestors settled: the Ashkenazim (Central and Eastern Europe), the Sephardim (initially in the Iberian Peninsula), and the Mizrahim (Middle East and North Africa).[29][30] Prior to World War II, the global Jewish population reached a peak of 16.7 million,[31] representing around 0.7 percent of the world population at that time. During World War II, approximately 6 million Jews throughout Europe were systematically murdered by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust.[32][33] Since then, the population has slowly risen again, and as of 2018, was estimated to be at 14.6–17.8 million by the Berman Jewish DataBank,[1] comprising less than 0.2 percent of the total world population.[34][note 1] The modern State of Israel is the only country where Jews form a majority of the population.

Jews have significantly influenced and contributed to human progress in many fields, both historically and in modern times, including in science and technology,[36] philosophy,[37] ethics,[38] literature,[36] politics,[36] business,[36] art, music, comedy, theatre,[39] cinema, architecture,[36] food, medicine,[40][41] and religion. Jews wrote the Bible,[42][43] founded Christianity,[44] and had an indirect but profound influence on Islam.[45] In these ways, Jews have also played a significant role in the development of Western culture.[46][47]

Name and etymology

The English word "Jew" continues Middle English Gyw, Iewe. These terms were loaned via the Old French giu, which itself evolved from the earlier juieu, which in turn derived from judieu/iudieu which through elision had dropped the letter "d" from the Medieval Latin Iudaeus, which, like the New Testament Greek term Ioudaios, meant both "Jew" and "Judean" / "of Judea".[48] The Greek term was a loan from Aramaic *yahūdāy, corresponding to Hebrew יְהוּדִי Yehudi, originally the term for the people of the kingdom of Judah. According to the Hebrew Bible, the name of both the tribe of Judah and the kingdom of Judah derive from Judah, the fourth son of Jacob.[49] Genesis 29:35 and 49:8 connect the name "Judah" with the verb yada, meaning "praise", but scholars generally agree that the name of both the patriarch and the kingdom instead have a geographic origin—possibly referring to the gorges and ravines of the region.[50]

The Hebrew word for "Jew" is יְהוּדִי Yehudi, with the plural יְהוּדִים Yehudim.[51] Endonyms in other Jewish languages include the Ladino ג׳ודיו Djudio (plural ג׳ודיוס, Djudios) and the Yiddish ייִד Yid (plural ייִדן Yidn).

The etymological equivalent is in use in other languages, e.g., يَهُودِيّ yahūdī (sg.), al-yahūd (pl.), in Arabic, "Jude" in German, "judeu" in Portuguese, "Juif" (m.)/"Juive" (f.) in French, "jøde" in Danish and Norwegian, "judío/a" in Spanish, "jood" in Dutch, "żyd" in Polish etc., but derivations of the word "Hebrew" are also in use to describe a Jew, e.g., in Italian (Ebreo), in Persian ("Ebri/Ebrani" (Persian: عبری/عبرانی)) and Russian (Еврей, Yevrey).[52] The German word "Jude" is pronounced [ˈjuːdə], the corresponding adjective "jüdisch" [ˈjyːdɪʃ] (Jewish) is the origin of the word "Yiddish".[53]

According to The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, fourth edition (2000),

It is widely recognized that the attributive use of the noun Jew, in phrases such as Jew lawyer or Jew ethics, is both vulgar and highly offensive. In such contexts Jewish is the only acceptable possibility. Some people, however, have become so wary of this construction that they have extended the stigma to any use of Jew as a noun, a practice that carries risks of its own. In a sentence such as There are now several Jews on the council, which is unobjectionable, the substitution of a circumlocution like Jewish people or persons of Jewish background may in itself cause offense for seeming to imply that Jew has a negative connotation when used as a noun.[54]

Identity

 
Map of Canaan

Judaism shares some of the characteristics of a nation,[11][55][12][56][57][58] an ethnicity,[10] a religion, and a culture,[59][60][61] making the definition of who is a Jew vary slightly depending on whether a religious or national approach to identity is used.[62][better source needed] Generally, in modern secular usage, Jews include three groups: people who were born to a Jewish family regardless of whether or not they follow the religion, those who have some Jewish ancestral background or lineage (sometimes including those who do not have strictly matrilineal descent), and people without any Jewish ancestral background or lineage who have formally converted to Judaism and therefore are followers of the religion.[63]

Historical definitions of Jewish identity have traditionally been based on halakhic definitions of matrilineal descent, and halakhic conversions. These definitions of who is a Jew date back to the codification of the Oral Torah into the Babylonian Talmud, around 200 CE. Interpretations by Jewish sages of sections of the Tanakh – such as Deuteronomy 7:1-5, which forbade intermarriage between Jews' Israelite ancestors and seven non-Israelite nations: "for that [i.e. giving your daughters to their sons or taking their daughters for your sons,] would turn away your children from following me, to serve other gods" [25][failed verification] – are used as a warning against intermarriage between Jews and gentiles. Leviticus 24:10 says that the son in a marriage between a Hebrew woman and an Egyptian man is "of the community of Israel." This is complemented by Ezra 10:2–3, where Israelites returning from Babylon vow to put aside their gentile wives and their children.[64][65] A popular theory is that the rape of Jewish women in captivity brought about the law of Jewish identity being inherited through the maternal line, although scholars challenge this theory citing the Talmudic establishment of the law from the pre-exile period.[66] Another argument is that the rabbis changed the law of patrilineal descent to matrilineal descent due to the widespread rape of Jewish women by Roman soldiers.[67] Since the anti-religious Haskalah movement of the late 18th and 19th centuries, halakhic interpretations of Jewish identity have been challenged.[68]

According to historian Shaye J. D. Cohen, the status of the offspring of mixed marriages was determined patrilineally in the Bible. He brings two likely explanations for the change in Mishnaic times: first, the Mishnah may have been applying the same logic to mixed marriages as it had applied to other mixtures (Kil'ayim). Thus, a mixed marriage is forbidden as is the union of a horse and a donkey, and in both unions the offspring are judged matrilineally.[69] Second, the Tannaim may have been influenced by Roman law, which dictated that when a parent could not contract a legal marriage, offspring would follow the mother.[69] Rabbi Rivon Krygier follows a similar reasoning, arguing that Jewish descent had formerly passed through the patrilineal descent and the law of matrilineal descent had its roots in the Roman legal system.[66]

Origins

 
Egyptian depiction of the visit of Western Asiatics in colorful garments, labeled as Aamu. The painting is from the tomb of a 12th dynasty official Khnumhotep II at Beni Hasan, and dated to c. 1900 BCE. Their nearest Biblical contemporaries were the earliest of Hebrews, such as Abraham and Joseph.[70][71][72][73]
 
Depiction of King Jehu, tenth king of the northern Kingdom of Israel, on the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III, 841–840 BCE.[74] This is "the only portrayal we have in ancient Near Eastern art of an Israelite or Judaean monarch".[75]

A factual reconstruction for the origin of the Jews is a difficult and complex endeavor. It requires examining at least 3,000 years of ancient human history using documents in vast quantities and variety, written in at least ten Near Eastern languages. As archaeological discovery relies upon researchers and scholars from diverse disciplines, the goal is to interpret all of the factual data, focusing on the most consistent theory. The prehistory and ethnogenesis of the Jews are closely intertwined with archaeology, biology, and historical textual records, as well as religious literature and mythology. The ethnic stock to which Jews originally trace their ancestry was a confederation of Iron Age Semitic-speaking tribes known as the Israelites that inhabited a part of Canaan during the tribal and monarchic periods.[76] Modern Jews are named after and also descended from the southern Israelite Kingdom of Judah.[77][78][79][80][81][82]

According to the Hebrew Bible narrative, Jewish ancestry is traced back to the Biblical patriarchs such as Abraham, his son Isaac, Isaac's son Jacob, and the Biblical matriarchs Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, and Rachel, who lived in Canaan. The Twelve Tribes are described as descending from the twelve sons of Jacob. Jacob and his family migrated to Ancient Egypt after being invited to live with Jacob's son Joseph by the Pharaoh himself. The patriarchs' descendants were later enslaved until the Exodus led by Moses, after which the Israelites conquered Canaan under Moses' successor Joshua, went through the period of the Biblical judges after the death of Joshua, then through the mediation of Samuel became subject to a king, Saul, who was succeeded by David and then Solomon, after whom the United Monarchy ended and was split into a separate Kingdom of Israel and a Kingdom of Judah. The Kingdom of Judah is described as comprising the Tribe of Judah, the Tribe of Benjamin, partially the Tribe of Levi, and later adding remnants of other tribes who migrated there from the Kingdom of Israel.[83][84] Modern Jews claim lineage from those tribes since the ten northern tribes were lost following Assyrian captivity.[85]

Modern archaeology and the current historical view has largely discarded the historicity of this narrative.[86] It has been reframed as constituting the Israelites' inspiring national myth narrative. The Israelites and their culture, according to the modern archaeological and historical account, did not overtake the region by force, but instead branched out of the Canaanite peoples and culture through the development of a distinct monolatristic—and later monotheistic—religion of Yahwism centered on Yahweh, one of the gods of the Canaanite pantheon. The growth of Yahweh-centric belief, along with a number of cultic practices, gradually gave rise to a distinct Israelite ethnic group, setting them apart from other Canaanites.[87][88][89]

The Israelites become visible in the historical record as a people between 1200 and 1000 BCE.[90] It is not certain if a period like that of the Biblical judges occurred[91][92][93][94][95] nor if there was ever a United Monarchy.[96][97][98][99] There is well accepted archeological evidence referring to "Israel" in the Merneptah Stele, which dates to about 1200 BCE,[23][24] and the Canaanites are archeologically attested in the Middle Bronze Age.[100][101] There is debate about the earliest existence of the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah and their extent and power, but historians agree that a Kingdom of Israel existed by c. 900 BCE[97]: 169–95 [98][99] and that a Kingdom of Judah existed by c. 700 BCE.[102] It is widely accepted that the Kingdom of Israel was destroyed around 720 BCE, when it was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian Empire.[83]

History

The term Jew originated from the Roman "Judean" and denoted someone from the southern kingdom of Judah.[103] The shift of ethnonym from "Israelites" to "Jews" (inhabitant of Judah), although not contained in the Torah, is made explicit in the Book of Esther (4th century BCE),[104] a book in the Ketuvim, the third section of the Jewish Tanakh. In 587 BCE Nebuchadnezzar II, King of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, besieged Jerusalem, destroyed the First Temple and deported the most prominent citizens of Judah.[105]

According to the Book of Ezra, the Persian Cyrus the Great ended the Babylonian exile in 538 BCE,[106] the year after he captured Babylon.[107] The exile ended with the return under Zerubbabel the Prince (so-called because he was a descendant of the royal line of David) and Joshua the Priest (a descendant of the line of the former High Priests of the Temple) and their construction of the Second Temple in the period 521–516 BCE.[106] The Cyrus Cylinder, an ancient tablet on which is written a declaration in the name of Cyrus referring to restoration of temples and repatriation of exiled peoples, has often been taken as corroboration of the authenticity of the biblical decrees attributed to Cyrus,[108] but other scholars point out that the cylinder's text is specific to Babylon and Mesopotamia and makes no mention of Judah or Jerusalem.[108] Professor Lester L. Grabbe asserted that the "alleged decree of Cyrus" regarding Judah, "cannot be considered authentic", but that there was a "general policy of allowing deportees to return and to re-establish cult sites". He also stated that archaeology suggests that the return was a "trickle" taking place over decades, rather than a single event.[109] By the 4th century BCE, the majority of Jews lived outside the land of Israel.[110]

As part of the Persian Empire, the former Kingdom of Judah became the province of Judah (Yehud Medinata)[111] with different borders, covering a smaller territory.[109] The population of the province was greatly reduced from that of the kingdom, archaeological surveys showing a population of around 30,000 people in the 5th to 4th centuries BCE.[97]: 308  The region was under control of the Achaemenids until the fall of their empire in c. 333 BCE to Alexander the Great. Jews were also politically independent during the Hasmonean dynasty spanning from 110 to 63 BCE and to some degree under the Herodian dynasty from 37 BCE to 6 CE.[112]

Genetic studies on Jews show that most Jews worldwide bear a common genetic heritage which originates in the Middle East, and that they share certain genetic traits with other Gentile peoples of the Fertile Crescent.[113][114][115] The genetic composition of different Jewish groups shows that Jews share a common gene pool dating back four millennia, as a marker of their common ancestral origin.[116] Despite their long-term separation, Jewish communities maintained their unique commonalities, propensities, and sensibilities in culture, tradition, and language.[117]

Babylon and Rome

After the destruction of the Second Temple, Judaism lost much of its sectarian nature.[118]: 69 

Without a Temple, Greek-speaking Jews no longer looked to Jerusalem in the way they had before. Judaism separated into a linguistically Greek and a Hebrew / Aramaic sphere.[119]: 8–11  The theology and religious texts of each community were distinctively different.[119]: 11–13  Hellenized Judaism never developed yeshivas to study the Oral Law. Rabbinic Judaism (centered in the Land of Israel and Babylon) almost entirely ignores the Hellenized Diaspora in its writings.[119]: 13–14  Hellenized Judaism eventually disappeared as its practitioners assimilated into Greco-Roman culture, leaving a strong Rabbinic eastern Diaspora with large centers of learning in Babylon.[119]: 14–16 

By the first century, the Jewish community in Babylonia, to which Jews were exiled after the Babylonian conquest as well as after the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 CE, already held a speedily growing[120] population of an estimated one million Jews, which increased to an estimated two million[121] between the years 200 CE and 500 CE, both by natural growth and by immigration of more Jews from the Land of Israel, making up about one-sixth of the world Jewish population at that era.[121] The 13th-century author Bar Hebraeus gave a figure of 6,944,000 Jews in the Roman world; Salo Wittmayer Baron considered the figure convincing.[122] The figure of seven million within and one million outside the Roman world in the mid-first century became widely accepted, including by Louis Feldman.

However, contemporary scholars now accept that Bar Hebraeus based his figure on a census of total Roman citizens, the figure of 6,944,000 being recorded in Eusebius' Chronicon.[123][124] Louis Feldman, previously an active supporter of the figure, now states that he and Baron were mistaken.[125]: 185  Feldman's views on active Jewish missionizing have also changed. While viewing classical Judaism as being receptive to converts, especially from the second century BCE through the first century CE, he points to a lack of either missionizing tracts or records of the names of rabbis who sought converts as evidence for the lack of active Jewish missionizing.[125]: 205–06  Feldman maintains that conversion to Judaism was common and the Jewish population was large both within the Land of Israel and in the Diaspora.[125]: 183–203, 206  Other historians believe that conversion during the Roman era was limited in number and did not account for much of the Jewish population growth, due to various factors such as the illegality of male conversion to Judaism in the Roman world from the mid-second century. Another factor that made conversion difficult in the Roman world was the halakhic requirement of circumcision, a requirement that proselytizing Christianity quickly dropped. The Fiscus Judaicus, a tax imposed on Jews in 70 CE and relaxed to exclude Christians in 96 CE, also limited Judaism's appeal.[126]

Diaspora

 
Map of the Jewish diaspora.
  Israel
  + 1,000,000
  + 100,000
  + 10,000
  + 1,000

Following the Roman conquest of Judea and the siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE, hundreds of thousands of Jews were taken as slaves to Rome, where they later immigrated to other European lands. The Jews who immigrated to Iberia and North Africa comprise the Sephardic Jews, while those who immigrated to the Rhineland and France comprise the Ashkenazi Jews. Additionally both before and after the Roman conquest of Judea many Jews lived in Persia and Babylon as well as other Middle eastern countries, these Jews comprise the Mizrachi Jews.[127] In Francia, Jews like Isaac Judaeus and Armentarius occupied prominent social and economic positions, as opposed to in Spain, where Jews were persecuted under Visigoth rule. In Babylon, from the 7th to 11th centuries the Pumbedita and Sura academies lead the Arab and to an extant the entire Jewish world. The deans and students of said academies defined the Geonic period in Jewish history.[128] Following this period were the Rishonim who lived from the 11th to 15th centuries, it was during this time that the Ashkenazi Jews began experiencing extreme persecution in France and especially the Rhineland, which resulted in mass immigration to Poland and Lithuania. Meanwhile, Sephardic Jews experienced a golden age under Muslim rule, however following the Reconquista and subsequent Alhambra decree in 1492, most of the Spanish Jewish population immigrated to North Africa and the Ottoman Empire. However some Jews chose to remain and pretended to practice Catholicism. These Jews would form the members of Crypto-Judaism.[129]

Culture

Religion

The Jewish people and the religion of Judaism are strongly interrelated. Converts to Judaism typically have a status within the Jewish ethnos equal to those born into it.[130] However, several converts to Judaism, as well as ex-Jews, have claimed that converts are treated as second-class Jews by many born Jews.[131] Conversion is not encouraged by mainstream Judaism, and it is considered a difficult task. A significant portion of conversions are undertaken by children of mixed marriages, or would-be or current spouses of Jews.[132]

The Hebrew Bible, a religious interpretation of the traditions and early history of the Jews, established the first of the Abrahamic religions, which are now practiced by 54 percent of the world. Judaism guides its adherents in both practice and belief, and has been called not only a religion, but also a "way of life,"[133] which has made drawing a clear distinction between Judaism, Jewish culture, and Jewish identity rather difficult. Throughout history, in eras and places as diverse as the ancient Hellenic world,[134] in Europe before and after The Age of Enlightenment (see Haskalah),[135] in Islamic Spain and Portugal,[136] in North Africa and the Middle East,[136] India,[137] China,[138] or the contemporary United States[139] and Israel,[140] cultural phenomena have developed that are in some sense characteristically Jewish without being at all specifically religious. Some factors in this come from within Judaism, others from the interaction of Jews or specific communities of Jews with their surroundings, and still others from the inner social and cultural dynamics of the community, as opposed to from the religion itself. This phenomenon has led to considerably different Jewish cultures unique to their own communities.[141]

Languages

Hebrew is the liturgical language of Judaism (termed lashon ha-kodesh, "the holy tongue"), the language in which most of the Hebrew scriptures (Tanakh) were composed, and the daily speech of the Jewish people for centuries. By the 5th century BCE, Aramaic, a closely related tongue, joined Hebrew as the spoken language in Judea.[142] By the 3rd century BCE, some Jews of the diaspora were speaking Greek.[143] Others, such as in the Jewish communities of Asoristan, known to Jews as Babylonia, were speaking Hebrew and Aramaic, the languages of the Babylonian Talmud. Dialects of these same languages were also used by the Jews of Syria Palaestina at that time.[citation needed]

For centuries, Jews worldwide have spoken the local or dominant languages of the regions they migrated to, often developing distinctive dialectal forms or branches that became independent languages. Yiddish is the Judaeo-German language developed by Ashkenazi Jews who migrated to Central Europe. Ladino is the Judaeo-Spanish language developed by Sephardic Jews who migrated to the Iberian peninsula. Due to many factors, including the impact of the Holocaust on European Jewry, the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries, and widespread emigration from other Jewish communities around the world, ancient and distinct Jewish languages of several communities, including Judaeo-Georgian, Judaeo-Arabic, Judaeo-Berber, Krymchak, Judaeo-Malayalam and many others, have largely fallen out of use.[2]

 
Tombstone of the Maharal in the Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague. The tombstones are inscribed in Hebrew.

For over sixteen centuries Hebrew was used almost exclusively as a liturgical language, and as the language in which most books had been written on Judaism, with a few speaking only Hebrew on the Sabbath.[144] Hebrew was revived as a spoken language by Eliezer ben Yehuda, who arrived in Palestine in 1881. It had not been used as a mother tongue since Tannaic times.[142] Modern Hebrew is designated as the "State language" of Israel.[145]

Despite efforts to revive Hebrew as the national language of the Jewish people, knowledge of the language is not commonly possessed by Jews worldwide and English has emerged as the lingua franca of the Jewish diaspora.[146][147][148][149][150] Although many Jews once had sufficient knowledge of Hebrew to study the classic literature, and Jewish languages like Yiddish and Ladino were commonly used as recently as the early 20th century, most Jews lack such knowledge today and English has by and large superseded most Jewish vernaculars. The three most commonly spoken languages among Jews today are Hebrew, English, and Russian. Some Romance languages, particularly French and Spanish, are also widely used.[2] Yiddish has been spoken by more Jews in history than any other language,[151] but it is far less used today following the Holocaust and the adoption of Modern Hebrew by the Zionist movement and the State of Israel. In some places, the mother language of the Jewish community differs from that of the general population or the dominant group. For example, in Quebec, the Ashkenazic majority has adopted English, while the Sephardic minority uses French as its primary language.[152][153][154] Similarly, South African Jews adopted English rather than Afrikaans.[155] Due to both Czarist and Soviet policies,[156][157] Russian has superseded Yiddish as the language of Russian Jews, but these policies have also affected neighboring communities.[158] Today, Russian is the first language for many Jewish communities in a number of Post-Soviet states, such as Ukraine[159][160][161][162] and Uzbekistan,[163][better source needed] as well as for Ashkenazic Jews in Azerbaijan,[164][165] Georgia,[166] and Tajikistan.[167][168] Although communities in North Africa today are small and dwindling, Jews there had shifted from a multilingual group to a monolingual one (or nearly so), speaking French in Algeria,[169] Morocco,[164] and the city of Tunis,[170][171] while most North Africans continue to use Arabic or Berber as their mother tongue.[citation needed]

Leadership

There is no single governing body for the Jewish community, nor a single authority with responsibility for religious doctrine.[172] Instead, a variety of secular and religious institutions at the local, national, and international levels lead various parts of the Jewish community on a variety of issues.[173] Today, many countries have a Chief Rabbi who serves as a representative of that country's Jewry. Although many Hassidic Jews follow a certain hereditary Hasidic dynasty, there is no one commonly accepted leader of all Hasidic Jews. Many Jews believe that the Messiah will act a unifying leader for Jews and the entire world.[174]

Theories on ancient Jewish national identity

 
Bible manuscript in Hebrew, 14th century. Hebrew language and alphabet were the cornerstones of the Jewish national identity in antiquity.

A number of modern scholars of nationalism support the existence of Jewish national identity in antiquity. One of them is David Goodblatt,[175] who generally believes in the existence of nationalism before the modern period. In his view, the Bible, the parabiblical literature and the Jewish national history provide the base for a Jewish collective identity. Although many of the ancient Jews were illiterate (as were their neighbors), their national narrative was reinforced through public readings, a common practice in the ancient eastern Mediterranean area. The Hebrew language also constructed and preserved national identity. Although it was not spoken by most of the Jews after the 5th century BCE, Goodblatt contends that:[176][177]

the mere presence of the language in spoken or written form could invoke the concept of a Jewish national identity. Even if one knew no Hebrew or was illiterate, one could recognize that a group of signs was in Hebrew script. … It was the language of the Israelite ancestors, the national literature, and the national religion. As such it was inseparable from the national identity. Indeed its mere presence in visual or aural medium could invoke that identity.

It is believed that Jewish nationalist sentiment in antiquity was encouraged because under foreign rule (Persians, Greeks, Romans) Jews were able to claim that they were an ancient nation. This claim was based on the preservation and reverence of their scriptures, the Hebrew language, the Temple and priesthood, and other traditions of their ancestors.[178]

Demographics

Ethnic divisions

 
Sephardi Jewish couple from Sarajevo in traditional clothing. Photo taken in 1900.
 
Yemenite Jew blows shofar, 1947

Within the world's Jewish population there are distinct ethnic divisions, most of which are primarily the result of geographic branching from an originating Israelite population, and subsequent independent evolutions. An array of Jewish communities was established by Jewish settlers in various places around the Old World, often at great distances from one another, resulting in effective and often long-term isolation. During the millennia of the Jewish diaspora the communities would develop under the influence of their local environments: political, cultural, natural, and populational. Today, manifestations of these differences among the Jews can be observed in Jewish cultural expressions of each community, including Jewish linguistic diversity, culinary preferences, liturgical practices, religious interpretations, as well as degrees and sources of genetic admixture.[179]

Jews are often identified as belonging to one of two major groups: the Ashkenazim and the Sephardim. Ashkenazim, or "Germanics" (Ashkenaz meaning "Germany" in Hebrew), are so named denoting their German Jewish cultural and geographical origins, while Sephardim, or "Hispanics" (Sefarad meaning "Spain/Hispania" or "Iberia" in Hebrew), are so named denoting their Spanish/Portuguese Jewish cultural and geographic origins. The more common term in Israel for many of those broadly called Sephardim, is Mizrahim (lit. "Easterners", Mizrach being "East" in Hebrew), that is, in reference to the diverse collection of Middle Eastern and North African Jews who are often, as a group, referred to collectively as Sephardim (together with Sephardim proper) for liturgical reasons, although Mizrahi Jewish groups and Sephardi Jews proper are ethnically distinct.[180]

Smaller groups include, but are not restricted to, Indian Jews such as the Bene Israel, Bnei Menashe, Cochin Jews, and Bene Ephraim; the Romaniotes of Greece; the Italian Jews ("Italkim" or "Bené Roma"); the Teimanim from Yemen; various African Jews, including most numerously the Beta Israel of Ethiopia; and Chinese Jews, most notably the Kaifeng Jews, as well as various other distinct but now almost extinct communities.[181]

The divisions between all these groups are approximate and their boundaries are not always clear. The Mizrahim for example, are a heterogeneous collection of North African, Central Asian, Caucasian, and Middle Eastern Jewish communities that are no closer related to each other than they are to any of the earlier mentioned Jewish groups. In modern usage, however, the Mizrahim are sometimes termed Sephardi due to similar styles of liturgy, despite independent development from Sephardim proper. Thus, among Mizrahim there are Egyptian Jews, Iraqi Jews, Lebanese Jews, Kurdish Jews, Moroccan Jews, Libyan Jews, Syrian Jews, Bukharian Jews, Mountain Jews, Georgian Jews, Iranian Jews, Afghan Jews, and various others. The Teimanim from Yemen are sometimes included, although their style of liturgy is unique and they differ in respect to the admixture found among them to that found in Mizrahim. In addition, there is a differentiation made between Sephardi migrants who established themselves in the Middle East and North Africa after the expulsion of the Jews from Spain and Portugal in the 1490s and the pre-existing Jewish communities in those regions.[181]

Ashkenazi Jews represent the bulk of modern Jewry, with at least 70 percent of Jews worldwide (and up to 90 percent prior to World War II and the Holocaust). As a result of their emigration from Europe, Ashkenazim also represent the overwhelming majority of Jews in the New World continents, in countries such as the United States, Canada, Argentina, Australia, and Brazil. In France, the immigration of Jews from Algeria (Sephardim) has led them to outnumber the Ashkenazim.[181] Only in Israel is the Jewish population representative of all groups, a melting pot independent of each group's proportion within the overall world Jewish population.[182]

Genetic studies

Y DNA studies tend to imply a small number of founders in an old population whose members parted and followed different migration paths.[183] In most Jewish populations, these male line ancestors appear to have been mainly Middle Eastern. For example, Ashkenazi Jews share more common paternal lineages with other Jewish and Middle Eastern groups than with non-Jewish populations in areas where Jews lived in Eastern Europe, Germany, and the French Rhine Valley. This is consistent with Jewish traditions in placing most Jewish paternal origins in the region of the Middle East.[184][185]

Conversely, the maternal lineages of Jewish populations, studied by looking at mitochondrial DNA, are generally more heterogeneous.[186] Scholars such as Harry Ostrer and Raphael Falk believe this indicates that many Jewish males found new mates from European and other communities in the places where they migrated in the diaspora after fleeing ancient Israel.[187] In contrast, Behar has found evidence that about 40 percent of Ashkenazi Jews originate maternally from just four female founders, who were of Middle Eastern origin. The populations of Sephardi and Mizrahi Jewish communities "showed no evidence for a narrow founder effect."[186] Subsequent studies carried out by Feder et al. confirmed the large portion of non-local maternal origin among Ashkenazi Jews. Reflecting on their findings related to the maternal origin of Ashkenazi Jews, the authors conclude "Clearly, the differences between Jews and non-Jews are far larger than those observed among the Jewish communities. Hence, differences between the Jewish communities can be overlooked when non-Jews are included in the comparisons."[9][188][189] A study showed that 7% of Ashkenazi Jews have the haplogroup G2c, which is mainly found in Pashtuns and on lower scales all major Jewish groups, Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese.[190][191]

Studies of autosomal DNA, which look at the entire DNA mixture, have become increasingly important as the technology develops. They show that Jewish populations have tended to form relatively closely related groups in independent communities, with most in a community sharing significant ancestry in common.[192] For Jewish populations of the diaspora, the genetic composition of Ashkenazi, Sephardic, and Mizrahi Jewish populations show a predominant amount of shared Middle Eastern ancestry. According to Behar, the most parsimonious explanation for this shared Middle Eastern ancestry is that it is "consistent with the historical formulation of the Jewish people as descending from ancient Hebrew and Israelite residents of the Levant" and "the dispersion of the people of ancient Israel throughout the Old World".[193] North African, Italian and others of Iberian origin show variable frequencies of admixture with non-Jewish historical host populations among the maternal lines. In the case of Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews (in particular Moroccan Jews), who are closely related, the source of non-Jewish admixture is mainly Southern European, while Mizrahi Jews show evidence of admixture with other Middle Eastern populations. Behar et al. have remarked on a close relationship between Ashkenazi Jews and modern Italians.[193][194] A 2001 study found that Jews were more closely related to groups of the Fertile Crescent (Kurds, Turks, and Armenians) than to their Arab neighbors, whose genetic signature was found in geographic patterns reflective of Islamic conquests.[184][195]

The studies also show that Sephardic Bnei Anusim (descendants of the "anusim" who were forced to convert to Catholicism), which comprise up to 19.8 percent of the population of today's Iberia (Spain and Portugal) and at least 10 percent of the population of Ibero-America (Hispanic America and Brazil), have Sephardic Jewish ancestry within the last few centuries. The Bene Israel and Cochin Jews of India, Beta Israel of Ethiopia, and a portion of the Lemba people of Southern Africa, despite more closely resembling the local populations of their native countries, have also been thought to have some more remote ancient Jewish ancestry.[196][193][197][189] Views on the Lemba have changed and genetic Y-DNA analyses in the 2000s have established a partially Middle-Eastern origin for a portion of the male Lemba population but have been unable to narrow this down further.[198][199]

Population centers

 
New York City is home to 1.1 million Jews, making it the largest Jewish community outside of Israel.

Although historically, Jews have been found all over the world, in the decades since World War II and the establishment of Israel, they have increasingly concentrated in a small number of countries.[200][201] In 2013, the United States and Israel were collectively home to more than 80 percent of the global Jewish population, each country having approximately 41 percent of the world's Jews.[202]

According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics there were 13,421,000 Jews worldwide in 2009, roughly 0.19 percent of the world's population at the time.[203]

According to the 2007 estimates of The Jewish People Policy Planning Institute, the world's Jewish population is 13.2 million.[204] Adherents.com cites figures ranging from 12 to 18 million.[205] These statistics incorporate both practicing Jews affiliated with synagogues and the Jewish community, and approximately 4.5 million unaffiliated and secular Jews.[citation needed]

According to Sergio Della Pergola, a demographer of the Jewish population, in 2015 there were about 6.3 million Jews in Israel, 5.7 million in the United States, and 2.3 million in the rest of the world.[206]

Israel

 
Jewish people in Jerusalem, Israel

Israel, the Jewish nation-state, is the only country in which Jews make up a majority of the citizens.[207] Israel was established as an independent democratic and Jewish state on 14 May 1948.[208] Of the 120 members in its parliament, the Knesset,[209] as of 2016, 14 members of the Knesset are Arab citizens of Israel (not including the Druze), most representing Arab political parties. One of Israel's Supreme Court judges is also an Arab citizen of Israel.[210]

Between 1948 and 1958, the Jewish population rose from 800,000 to two million.[211] Currently, Jews account for 75.4 percent of the Israeli population, or 6 million people.[212][213] The early years of the State of Israel were marked by the mass immigration of Holocaust survivors in the aftermath of the Holocaust and Jews fleeing Arab lands.[214] Israel also has a large population of Ethiopian Jews, many of whom were airlifted to Israel in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[215][better source needed] Between 1974 and 1979 nearly 227,258 immigrants arrived in Israel, about half being from the Soviet Union.[216] This period also saw an increase in immigration to Israel from Western Europe, Latin America, and North America.[217]

A trickle of immigrants from other communities has also arrived, including Indian Jews and others, as well as some descendants of Ashkenazi Holocaust survivors who had settled in countries such as the United States, Argentina, Australia, Chile, and South Africa. Some Jews have emigrated from Israel elsewhere, because of economic problems or disillusionment with political conditions and the continuing Arab–Israeli conflict. Jewish Israeli emigrants are known as yordim.[218]

Diaspora (outside Israel)

 
In this Rosh Hashana greeting card from the early 1900s, Russian Jews, packs in hand, gaze at the American relatives beckoning them to the United States. Over two million Jews fled the pogroms of the Russian Empire to the safety of the U.S. between 1881 and 1924.[219]
 
A menorah dominating the main square in Birobidzhan. An estimated 70,000 Jews live in Siberia.[220]

The waves of immigration to the United States and elsewhere at the turn of the 19th century, the founding of Zionism and later events, including pogroms in Imperial Russia (mostly within the Pale of Settlement in present-day Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus and eastern Poland), the massacre of European Jewry during the Holocaust, and the founding of the state of Israel, with the subsequent Jewish exodus from Arab lands, all resulted in substantial shifts in the population centers of world Jewry by the end of the 20th century.[221]

More than half of the Jews live in the Diaspora (see Population table). Currently, the largest Jewish community outside Israel, and either the largest or second-largest Jewish community in the world, is located in the United States, with 5.2 million to 6.4 million Jews by various estimates. Elsewhere in the Americas, there are also large Jewish populations in Canada (315,000), Argentina (180,000–300,000), and Brazil (196,000–600,000), and smaller populations in Mexico, Uruguay, Venezuela, Chile, Colombia and several other countries (see History of the Jews in Latin America).[222] According to a 2010 Pew Research Center study, about 470,000 people of Jewish heritage live in Latin-America and the Caribbean.[223] Demographers disagree on whether the United States has a larger Jewish population than Israel, with many maintaining that Israel surpassed the United States in Jewish population during the 2000s, while others maintain that the United States still has the largest Jewish population in the world. Currently, a major national Jewish population survey is planned to ascertain whether or not Israel has overtaken the United States in Jewish population.[224]

 
The Jewish Zionist Youth Movement in Tallinn, Estonia on 1 September 1933.

Western Europe's largest Jewish community, and the third-largest Jewish community in the world, can be found in France, home to between 483,000 and 500,000 Jews, the majority of whom are immigrants or refugees from North African countries such as Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia (or their descendants).[225] The United Kingdom has a Jewish community of 292,000. In Eastern Europe, the exact figures are difficult to establish. The number of Jews in Russia varies widely according to whether a source uses census data (which requires a person to choose a single nationality among choices that include "Russian" and "Jewish") or eligibility for immigration to Israel (which requires that a person have one or more Jewish grandparents). According to the latter criteria, the heads of the Russian Jewish community assert that up to 1.5 million Russians are eligible for aliyah.[226][227] In Germany, the 102,000 Jews registered with the Jewish community are a slowly declining population,[228] despite the immigration of tens of thousands of Jews from the former Soviet Union since the fall of the Berlin Wall.[229] Thousands of Israelis also live in Germany, either permanently or temporarily, for economic reasons.[230]

Prior to 1948, approximately 800,000 Jews were living in lands which now make up the Arab world (excluding Israel). Of these, just under two-thirds lived in the French-controlled Maghreb region, 15 to 20 percent in the Kingdom of Iraq, approximately 10 percent in the Kingdom of Egypt and approximately 7 percent in the Kingdom of Yemen. A further 200,000 lived in Pahlavi Iran and the Republic of Turkey. Today, around 26,000 Jews live in Arab countries[231] and around 30,000 in Iran and Turkey. A small-scale exodus had begun in many countries in the early decades of the 20th century, although the only substantial aliyah came from Yemen and Syria.[232] The exodus from Arab and Muslim countries took place primarily from 1948. The first large-scale exoduses took place in the late 1940s and early 1950s, primarily in Iraq, Yemen and Libya, with up to 90 percent of these communities leaving within a few years. The peak of the exodus from Egypt occurred in 1956. The exodus in the Maghreb countries peaked in the 1960s. Lebanon was the only Arab country to see a temporary increase in its Jewish population during this period, due to an influx of refugees from other Arab countries, although by the mid-1970s the Jewish community of Lebanon had also dwindled. In the aftermath of the exodus wave from Arab states, an additional migration of Iranian Jews peaked in the 1980s when around 80 percent of Iranian Jews left the country.[citation needed]

Outside Europe, the Americas, the Middle East, and the rest of Asia, there are significant Jewish populations in Australia (112,500) and South Africa (70,000).[31] There is also a 6,800-strong community in New Zealand.[233]

Demographic changes

Assimilation

Since at least the time of the Ancient Greeks, a proportion of Jews have assimilated into the wider non-Jewish society around them, by either choice or force, ceasing to practice Judaism and losing their Jewish identity.[234] Assimilation took place in all areas, and during all time periods,[234] with some Jewish communities, for example the Kaifeng Jews of China, disappearing entirely.[235] The advent of the Jewish Enlightenment of the 18th century (see Haskalah) and the subsequent emancipation of the Jewish populations of Europe and America in the 19th century, accelerated the situation, encouraging Jews to increasingly participate in, and become part of, secular society. The result has been a growing trend of assimilation, as Jews marry non-Jewish spouses and stop participating in the Jewish community.[236]

Rates of interreligious marriage vary widely: In the United States, it is just under 50 percent,[237] in the United Kingdom, around 53 percent; in France; around 30 percent,[238] and in Australia and Mexico, as low as 10 percent.[239] In the United States, only about a third of children from intermarriages affiliate with Jewish religious practice.[240] The result is that most countries in the Diaspora have steady or slightly declining religiously Jewish populations as Jews continue to assimilate into the countries in which they live.[citation needed]

War and persecution

 
The Roman Emperor Nero sends Vespasian with an army to destroy the Jews, 69 CE.

The Jewish people and Judaism have experienced various persecutions throughout Jewish history. During Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages the Roman Empire (in its later phases known as the Byzantine Empire) repeatedly repressed the Jewish population, first by ejecting them from their homelands during the pagan Roman era and later by officially establishing them as second-class citizens during the Christian Roman era.[241][242]

According to James Carroll, "Jews accounted for 10% of the total population of the Roman Empire. By that ratio, if other factors had not intervened, there would be 200 million Jews in the world today, instead of something like 13 million."[243]

Later in medieval Western Europe, further persecutions of Jews by Christians occurred, notably during the Crusades—when Jews all over Germany were massacred—and a series of expulsions from the Kingdom of England, Germany, France, and, in the largest expulsion of all, Spain and Portugal after the Reconquista (the Catholic Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula), where both unbaptized Sephardic Jews and the ruling Muslim Moors were expelled.[244][245]

In the Papal States, which existed until 1870, Jews were required to live only in specified neighborhoods called ghettos.[246]

 
World War I poster showing a soldier cutting the bonds from a Jewish man, who says, "You have cut my bonds and set me free—now let me help you set others free!"

Islam and Judaism have a complex relationship. Traditionally Jews and Christians living in Muslim lands, known as dhimmis, were allowed to practice their religions and administer their internal affairs, but they were subject to certain conditions.[247] They had to pay the jizya (a per capita tax imposed on free adult non-Muslim males) to the Islamic state.[247] Dhimmis had an inferior status under Islamic rule. They had several social and legal disabilities such as prohibitions against bearing arms or giving testimony in courts in cases involving Muslims.[248] Many of the disabilities were highly symbolic. The one described by Bernard Lewis as "most degrading"[249] was the requirement of distinctive clothing, not found in the Quran or hadith but invented in early medieval Baghdad; its enforcement was highly erratic.[249] On the other hand, Jews rarely faced martyrdom or exile, or forced compulsion to change their religion, and they were mostly free in their choice of residence and profession.[250]

Notable exceptions include the massacre of Jews and forcible conversion of some Jews by the rulers of the Almohad dynasty in Al-Andalus in the 12th century,[251] as well as in Islamic Persia,[252] and the forced confinement of Moroccan Jews to walled quarters known as mellahs beginning from the 15th century and especially in the early 19th century.[253] In modern times, it has become commonplace for standard antisemitic themes to be conflated with anti-Zionist publications and pronouncements of Islamic movements such as Hezbollah and Hamas, in the pronouncements of various agencies of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and even in the newspapers and other publications of Turkish Refah Partisi."[254][better source needed]

Throughout history, many rulers, empires and nations have oppressed their Jewish populations or sought to eliminate them entirely. Methods employed ranged from expulsion to outright genocide; within nations, often the threat of these extreme methods was sufficient to silence dissent. The history of antisemitism includes the First Crusade which resulted in the massacre of Jews;[244] the Spanish Inquisition (led by Tomás de Torquemada) and the Portuguese Inquisition, with their persecution and autos-da-fé against the New Christians and Marrano Jews;[255] the Bohdan Chmielnicki Cossack massacres in Ukraine;[256] the Pogroms backed by the Russian Tsars;[257] as well as expulsions from Spain, Portugal, England, France, Germany, and other countries in which the Jews had settled.[245] According to a 2008 study published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, 19.8 percent of the modern Iberian population has Sephardic Jewish ancestry,[258] indicating that the number of conversos may have been much higher than originally thought.[259][260]

 
Jews in Minsk, 1941. Before World War II, some 40 percent of the population was Jewish. By the time the Red Army retook the city on 3 July 1944, there were only a few Jewish survivors.

The persecution reached a peak in Nazi Germany's Final Solution, which led to the Holocaust and the slaughter of approximately 6 million Jews.[261] Of the world's 16 million Jews in 1939, almost 40% were murdered in the Holocaust.[262] The Holocaust—the state-led systematic persecution and genocide of European Jews (and certain communities of North African Jews in European controlled North Africa) and other minority groups of Europe during World War II by Germany and its collaborators—remains the most notable modern-day persecution of Jews.[263] The persecution and genocide were accomplished in stages. Legislation to remove the Jews from civil society was enacted years before the outbreak of World War II.[264] Concentration camps were established in which inmates were used as slave labour until they died of exhaustion or disease.[265] Where the Third Reich conquered new territory in Eastern Europe, specialized units called Einsatzgruppen murdered Jews and political opponents in mass shootings.[266] Jews and Roma were crammed into ghettos before being transported hundreds of kilometres by freight train to extermination camps where, if they survived the journey, the majority of them were murdered in gas chambers.[267] Virtually every arm of Germany's bureaucracy was involved in the logistics of the mass murder, turning the country into what one Holocaust scholar has called "a genocidal nation."[268]

Migrations

 
Expulsions of Jews in Europe from 1100 to 1600

Throughout Jewish history, Jews have repeatedly been directly or indirectly expelled from both their original homeland, the Land of Israel, and many of the areas in which they have settled. This experience as refugees has shaped Jewish identity and religious practice in many ways, and is thus a major element of Jewish history.[269] The patriarch Abraham is described as a migrant to the land of Canaan from Ur of the Chaldees[270] after an attempt on his life by King Nimrod.[271] His descendants, the Children of Israel, in the Biblical story (whose historicity is uncertain) undertook the Exodus (meaning "departure" or "exit" in Greek) from ancient Egypt, as recorded in the Book of Exodus.[272]

 
Etching of the expulsion of the Jews from Frankfurt in 1614. The text says: "1380 persons old and young were counted at the exit of the gate".
 
Jews fleeing pogroms, 1882

Centuries later, Assyrian policy was to deport and displace conquered peoples, and it is estimated some 4,500,000 among captive populations suffered this dislocation over three centuries of Assyrian rule.[273] With regard to Israel, Tiglath-Pileser III claims he deported 80% of the population of Lower Galilee, some 13,520 people.[274] Some 27,000 Israelites, 20 to 25% of the population of the Kingdom of Israel, were described as being deported by Sargon II, and were replaced by other deported populations and sent into permanent exile by Assyria, initially to the Upper Mesopotamian provinces of the Assyrian Empire.[275][276] Between 10,000 and 80,000 people from the Kingdom of Judah were similarly exiled by Babylonia,[273] but these people were then returned to Judea by Cyrus the Great of the Persian Achaemenid Empire.[277]

Many Jews were exiled again by the Roman Empire.[278] The 2,000 year dispersion of the Jewish diaspora beginning under the Roman Empire,[citation needed] as Jews were spread throughout the Roman world and, driven from land to land,[citation needed] settled wherever they could live freely enough to practice their religion. Over the course of the diaspora the center of Jewish life moved from Babylonia[279] to the Iberian Peninsula[280] to Poland[281] to the United States[282] and, as a result of Zionism, back to Israel.[283]

There were also many expulsions of Jews during the Middle Ages and Enlightenment in Europe, including: 1290, 16,000 Jews were expelled from England, see the (Statute of Jewry); in 1396, 100,000 from France; in 1421, thousands were expelled from Austria. Many of these Jews settled in East-Central Europe, especially Poland.[284] Following the Spanish Inquisition in 1492, the Spanish population of around 200,000 Sephardic Jews were expelled by the Spanish crown and Catholic church, followed by expulsions in 1493 in Sicily (37,000 Jews) and Portugal in 1496. The expelled Jews fled mainly to the Ottoman Empire, the Netherlands, and North Africa, others migrating to Southern Europe and the Middle East.[285]

During the 19th century, France's policies of equal citizenship regardless of religion led to the immigration of Jews (especially from Eastern and Central Europe).[286] This contributed to the arrival of millions of Jews in the New World. Over two million Eastern European Jews arrived in the United States from 1880 to 1925.[287]

In summary, the pogroms in Eastern Europe,[257] the rise of modern antisemitism,[288] the Holocaust,[289] as well as the rise of Arab nationalism,[290] all served to fuel the movements and migrations of huge segments of Jewry from land to land and continent to continent until they arrived back in large numbers at their original historical homeland in Israel.[283]

In the latest phase of migrations, the Islamic Revolution of Iran caused many Iranian Jews to flee Iran. Most found refuge in the US (particularly Los Angeles, California, and Long Island, New York) and Israel. Smaller communities of Persian Jews exist in Canada and Western Europe.[291] Similarly, when the Soviet Union collapsed, many of the Jews in the affected territory (who had been refuseniks) were suddenly allowed to leave. This produced a wave of migration to Israel in the early 1990s.[218]

Growth

 
Praying at the Western Wall

Israel is the only country with a Jewish population that is consistently growing through natural population growth, although the Jewish populations of other countries, in Europe and North America, have recently increased through immigration. In the Diaspora, in almost every country the Jewish population in general is either declining or steady, but Orthodox and Haredi Jewish communities, whose members often shun birth control for religious reasons, have experienced rapid population growth.[292]

Orthodox and Conservative Judaism discourage proselytism to non-Jews, but many Jewish groups have tried to reach out to the assimilated Jewish communities of the Diaspora in order for them to reconnect to their Jewish roots. Additionally, while in principle Reform Judaism favors seeking new members for the faith, this position has not translated into active proselytism, instead taking the form of an effort to reach out to non-Jewish spouses of intermarried couples.[293]

There is also a trend of Orthodox movements reaching out to secular Jews in order to give them a stronger Jewish identity so there is less chance of intermarriage. As a result of the efforts by these and other Jewish groups over the past 25 years, there has been a trend (known as the Baal teshuva movement) for secular Jews to become more religiously observant, though the demographic implications of the trend are unknown.[294] Additionally, there is also a growing rate of conversion to Jews by Choice of gentiles who make the decision to head in the direction of becoming Jews.[295]

Contributions

Jews have made many contributions to humanity in a broad and diverse range of fields, including the sciences, arts, politics, and business.[296] For example, over 20 percent[297][298][299][300][301][302] of Nobel Prize laureates have been of Jewish descent, with multiple winners in each category.[303]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ The exact world Jewish population, however, is difficult to measure. In addition to issues with census methodology, disputes among proponents of halakhic, secular, political, and ancestral identification factors regarding who is a Jew may affect the figure considerably depending on the source.[35]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Dashefsky, Arnold; Della Pergola, Sergio; Sheskin, Ira, eds. (2018). World Jewish Population (PDF) (Report). Berman Jewish DataBank. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b c . Beth Hatefutsoth. Archived from the original on 26 March 2009. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  3. ^ Kiaris, Hippokratis (2012). Genes, Polymorphisms and the Making of Societies: How Genetic Behavioral Traits Influence Human Cultures. Universal Publishers. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-61233-093-8.
  4. ^ a b c Shen, Peidong; Lavi, Tal; Kivisild, Toomas; Chou, Vivian; Sengun, Deniz; Gefel, Dov; Shpirer, Issac; Woolf, Eilon; Hillel, Jossi; Feldman, Marcus W.; Oefner, Peter J. (September 2004). "Reconstruction of patrilineages and matrilineages of Samaritans and other Israeli populations from Y-Chromosome and mitochondrial DNA sequence Variation". Human Mutation. 24 (3): 248–260. doi:10.1002/humu.20077. PMID 15300852. S2CID 1571356.
  5. ^ a b Ridolfo, Jim (2015). Digital Samaritans: Rhetorical Delivery and Engagement in the Digital Humanities. University of Michigan Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-472-07280-4.
  6. ^ Wade, Nicholas (9 June 2010). "Studies Show Jews' Genetic Similarity". The New York Times.
  7. ^ Nebel, Almut; Filon, Dvora; Weiss, Deborah A.; Weale, Michael; Faerman, Marina; Oppenheim, Ariella; Thomas, Mark G. (December 2000). "High-resolution Y chromosome haplotypes of Israeli and Palestinian Arabs reveal geographic substructure and substantial overlap with haplotypes of Jews". Human Genetics. 107 (6): 630–641. doi:10.1007/s004390000426. PMID 11153918. S2CID 8136092.
  8. ^ a b "Jews Are the Genetic Brothers of Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese". Sciencedaily.com. 9 May 2000. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  9. ^ a b c Atzmon, Gil; Hao, Li; Pe'er, Itsik; Velez, Christopher; Pearlman, Alexander; Palamara, Pier Francesco; Morrow, Bernice; Friedman, Eitan; Oddoux, Carole; Burns, Edward; Ostrer, Harry (June 2010). "Abraham's Children in the Genome Era: Major Jewish Diaspora Populations Comprise Distinct Genetic Clusters with Shared Middle Eastern Ancestry". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 86 (6): 850–859. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2010.04.015. PMC 3032072. PMID 20560205.
  10. ^ a b
    • Ethnic minorities in English law. Books.google.co.uk. Retrieved on 23 December 2010.
    • Edgar Litt (1961). "Jewish Ethno-Religious Involvement and Political Liberalism". Social Forces. 39 (4): 328–32. doi:10.2307/2573430. JSTOR 2573430.
    • Craig R. Prentiss (2003). Religion and the Creation of Race and Ethnicity: An Introduction. NYU Press. pp. 85–. ISBN 978-0-8147-6700-9.
    • The Avraham Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Eli Lederhendler Stephen S. Wise Professor of American Jewish History and Institutions (2001). Studies in Contemporary Jewry : Volume XVII: Who Owns Judaism? Public Religion and Private Faith in America and Israel: Volume XVII: Who Owns Judaism? Public Religion and Private Faith in America and Israel. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-0-19-534896-5.
    • Ernest Krausz; Gitta Tulea. Jewish Survival: The Identity Problem at the Close of the Twentieth Century; [... International Workshop at Bar-Ilan University on the 18th and 19th of March, 1997]. Transaction Publishers. pp. 90–. ISBN 978-1-4128-2689-1.
    • John A. Shoup III (2011). Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 133. ISBN 978-1-59884-363-7.
    • Tet-Lim N. Yee (2005). Jews, Gentiles and Ethnic Reconciliation: Paul's Jewish identity and Ephesians. Cambridge University Press. pp. 102–. ISBN 978-1-139-44411-8.
  11. ^ a b M. Nicholson (2002). International Relations: A Concise Introduction. NYU Press. pp. 19–. ISBN 978-0-8147-5822-9. "The Jews are a nation and were so before there was a Jewish state of Israel"
  12. ^ a b Alan Dowty (1998). The Jewish State: A Century Later, Updated With a New Preface. University of California Press. pp. 3–. ISBN 978-0-520-92706-3. "Jews are a people, a nation (in the original sense of the word), an ethnos"
  13. ^ Raymond P. Scheindlin (1998). A Short History of the Jewish People: From Legendary Times to Modern Statehood. Oxford University Press. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-0-19-513941-9. Israelite origins and kingdom: "The first act in the long drama of Jewish history is the age of the Israelites"
  14. ^ Facts On File, Incorporated (2009). Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East. Infobase Publishing. pp. 337–. ISBN 978-1-4381-2676-0."The people of the Kingdom of Israel and the ethnic and religious group known as the Jewish people that descended from them have been subjected to a number of forced migrations in their history"
  15. ^ Harry Ostrer MD (2012). Legacy: A Genetic History of the Jewish People. Oxford University Press. pp. 26–. ISBN 978-0-19-997638-6.
  16. ^ "Jew | History, Beliefs, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 20 August 2022. In the broader sense of the term, a Jew is any person belonging to the worldwide group that constitutes, through descent or conversion, a continuation of the ancient Jewish people, who were themselves descendants of the Hebrews of the Old Testament.
  17. ^ "Hebrew | people | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  18. ^ Eli Lederhendler (2001). Studies in Contemporary Jewry: Volume XVII: Who Owns Judaism? Public Religion and Private Faith in America and Israel. Oxford University Press. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-0-19-534896-5. "Historically, the religious and ethnic dimensions of Jewish identity have been closely interwoven. In fact, so closely bound are they, that the traditional Jewish lexicon hardly distinguishes between the two concepts. Jewish religious practice, by definition, was observed exclusively by the Jewish people, and notions of Jewish peoplehood, nation, and community were suffused with faith in the Jewish God, the practice of Jewish (religious) law and the study of ancient religious texts"
  19. ^ Tet-Lim N. Yee (2005). Jews, Gentiles and Ethnic Reconciliation: Paul's Jewish identity and Ephesians. Cambridge University Press. pp. 102–. ISBN 978-1-139-44411-8. "This identification in the Jewish attitude between the ethnic group and religious identity is so close that the reception into this religion of members not belonging to its ethnic group has become impossible."
  20. ^ Ernest Krausz; Gitta Tulea (1997). Jewish Survival: The Identity Problem at the Close of the Twentieth Century; [... International Workshop at Bar-Ilan University on the 18th and 19th of March, 1997]. Transaction Publishers. pp. 90–. ISBN 978-1-4128-2689-1. "A person born Jewish who refutes Judaism may continue to assert a Jewish identity, and if he or she does not convert to another religion, even religious Jews will recognize the person as a Jew"
  21. ^ "A Portrait of Jewish Americans". Pew Research Center. 1 October 2013. But the survey also suggests that Jewish identity is changing in America, where one-in-five Jews (22%) now describe themselves as having no religion.
  22. ^ "Facts About Israel: History". GxMSDev.
  23. ^ a b Noll, K. L. (7 December 2012). Canaan and Israel in Antiquity: A Textbook on History and Religion: Second Edition. A&C Black. ISBN 978-0-567-44117-1.
  24. ^ a b Thompson, Thomas L. (1 January 2000). Early History of the Israelite People: From the Written & Archaeological Sources. BRILL. pp. 137ff. ISBN 978-90-04-11943-7. They are rather a very specific group among the population of Palestine which bears a name that occurs here for the first time that at a much later stage in Palestine's history bears a substantially different signification.
  25. ^ a b John Day (2005), In Search of Pre-Exilic Israel, Bloomsbury Publishing, pp. 47.5 [48] 'In this sense, the emergence of ancient Israel is viewed not as the cause of the demise of Canaanite culture but as its upshot'.
  26. ^ Day, pp. 31–33, p. 57, n. 33.
  27. ^ Albertz, Rainer (2003). Israel in Exile: The History and Literature of the Sixth Century B.C.E. Society of Biblical Lit. pp. 45ff. ISBN 978-1-58983-055-4. Since the exilic era constitutes a gaping hole in the historical narrative of the Bible, historical reconstruction of this era faces almost insurmountable difficulties. Like the premonarchic period and the late Persian period, the exilic period, though set in the bright light of Ancient Near Eastern history, remains historically obscure. Since there are very few Israelite sources, the only recourse is to try to cast some light on this darkness from the history of the surrounding empires under whose dominion Israel came in this period.
  28. ^
    • Marvin Perry (2012). Western Civilization: A Brief History, Volume I: To 1789. Cengage Learning. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-111-83720-4.
    • Botticini, Maristella; Eckstein, Zvi (1 September 2007). "From Farmers to Merchants, Conversions and Diaspora: Human Capital and Jewish History". Journal of the European Economic Association. 5 (5): 885–926. doi:10.1162/JEEA.2007.5.5.885. "The death toll of the Great Revolt against the Roman empire amounted to about 600,000 Jews, whereas the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 caused the death of about 500,000 Jews. Massacres account for roughly 40 percent of the decrease of the Jewish population in Palestine. Moreover, some Jews migrated to Babylon after these revolts because of the worse economic conditions. After accounting for massacres and migrations, there is an additional 30 to 40 percent of the decrease in the Jewish population in Palestine (about 1–1.3 million Jews) to be explained" (p. 19).
    • Boyarin, Daniel, and Jonathan Boyarin. 2003. Diaspora: Generation and the Ground of Jewish Diaspora. p. 714 "...it is crucial to recognize that the Jewish conception of the Land of Israel is similar to the discourse of the Land of many (if not nearly all) "indigenous" peoples of the world. Somehow the Jews have managed to retain a sense of being rooted somewhere in the world through twenty centuries of exile from that someplace (organic metaphors are not out of place in this discourse, for they are used within the tradition itself). It is profoundly disturbing to hear Jewish attachment to the Land decried as regressive in the same discursive situations in which the attachment of native Americans or Australians to their particular rocks, trees, and deserts is celebrated as an organic connection to the Earth that "we" have lost" p. 714.
    • Cohen, Robin (1997), Global Diasporas: An Introduction. p. 24 London: UCL Press. "...although the word Babylon often connotes captivity and oppression, a rereading of the Babylonian period of exile can thus be shown to demonstrate the development of a new creative energy in a challenging, pluralistic context outside the natal homeland. When the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in AD 70, it was Babylon that remained as the nerve- and brain-centre for Jewish life and thought...the crushing of the revolt of the Judaeans against the Romans and the destruction of the Second Temple by the Roman general Titus in AD 70 precisely confirmed the catastrophic tradition. Once again, Jews had been unable to sustain a national homeland and were scattered to the far corners of the world" (p. 24).
    • Johnson, Paul A History of the Jews "The Bar Kochba Revolt," (HarperPerennial, 1987) pp. 158–61: Paul Johnson analyzes Cassius Dio's Roman History: Epitome of Book LXIX para. 13–14 (Dio's passage cited separately) among other sources: "Even if Dio's figures are somewhat exaggerated, the casualties amongst the population and the destruction inflicted on the country would have been considerable. According to Jerome, many Jews were also sold into slavery, so many, indeed, that the price of Jewish slaves at the slave market in Hebron sank drastically to a level no greater than that for a horse. The economic structure of the country was largely destroyed. The entire spiritual and economic life of the Palestinian Jews moved to Galilee. Jerusalem was now turned into a Roman colony with the official name Colonia Aelia Capitolina (Aelia after Hadrian's family name: P. Aelius Hadrianus; Capitolina after Jupiter Capitolinus). The Jews were forbidden on pain of death to set foot in the new Roman city. Aelia thus became a completely pagan city, no doubt with the corresponding public buildings and temples... We can...be certain that a statue of Hadrian was erected in the centre of Aelia, and this was tantamount in itself to a desecration of Jewish Jerusalem." p. 159.
    • Cassius Dio's Roman History: Epitome of Book LXIX para. 13–14: "13 At first the Romans took no account of them. Soon, however, all Judaea had been stirred up, and the Jews everywhere were showing signs of disturbance, were gathering together, and giving evidence of great hostility to the Romans, partly by secret and partly by overt acts; 2 many outside nations, too, were joining them through eagerness for gain, and the whole earth, one might almost say, was being stirred up over the matter. Then, indeed, Hadrian sent against them his best generals. First of these was Julius Severus, who was dispatched from Britain, where he was governor, against the Jews. 3 Severus did not venture to attack his opponents in the open at any one point, in view of their numbers and their desperation, but by intercepting small groups, thanks to the number of his soldiers and his under-officers, and by depriving them of food and shutting them up, he was able, rather slowly, to be sure, but with comparatively little danger, to crush, exhaust and exterminate them. Very few of them in fact survived. Fifty of their most important outposts and nine hundred and eighty-five of their most famous villages were razed to the ground. Five hundred and eighty thousand men were slain in the various raids and battles, and the number of those that perished by famine, disease and fire was past finding out. 2 Thus nearly the whole of Judaea was made desolate, a result of which the people had had forewarning before the war. For the tomb of Solomon, which the Jews regard as an object of veneration, fell to pieces of itself and collapsed, and many wolves and hyenas rushed howling into their cities. 3 Many Romans, moreover, perished in this war. Therefore Hadrian in writing to the senate did not employ the opening phrase commonly affected by the emperors, 'If you and our children are in health, it is well; I and the legions are in health'" (para. 13–14).
    • Safran, William (2005). "The Jewish Diaspora in a Comparative and Theoretical Perspective". Israel Studies. 10 (1): 36–60. doi:10.2979/ISR.2005.10.1.36. JSTOR 30245753. S2CID 144379115. Project MUSE 180371. "...diaspora referred to a very specific case—that of the exile of the Jews from the Holy Land and their dispersal throughout several parts of the globe. Diaspora [galut] connoted deracination, legal disabilities, oppression, and an often painful adjustment to a hostland whose hospitality was unreliable and ephemeral. It also connoted the existence on foreign soil of an expatriate community that considered its presence to be transitory. Meanwhile, it developed a set of institutions, social patterns, and ethnonational and/or religious symbols that held it together. These included the language, religion, values, social norms, and narratives of the homeland. Gradually, this community adjusted to the hostland environment and became itself a center of cultural creation. All the while, however, it continued to cultivate the idea of return to the homeland." (p. 36).
    • Sheffer, Gabriel (2005). "Is the Jewish Diaspora Unique? Reflections on the Diaspora's Current Situation". Israel Studies. 10 (1): 1–35. doi:10.2979/ISR.2005.10.1.1. JSTOR 30245752. S2CID 143958201. Project MUSE 180374. "...the Jewish nation, which from its very earliest days believed and claimed that it was the "chosen people," and hence unique. This attitude has further been buttressed by the equally traditional view, which is held not only by the Jews themselves, about the exceptional historical age of this diaspora, its singular traumatic experiences its singular ability to survive pogroms, exiles, and Holocaust, as well as its "special relations" with its ancient homeland, culminating in 1948 with the nation-state that the Jewish nation has established there... First, like many other members of established diasporas, the vast majority of Jews no longer regard themselves as being in Galut [exile] in their host countries.…Perceptually, as well as actually, Jews permanently reside in host countries of their own free will, as a result of inertia, or as a result of problematic conditions prevailing in other hostlands, or in Israel. It means that the basic perception of many Jews about their existential situation in their hostlands has changed. Consequently, there is both a much greater self- and collective-legitimatization to refrain from making serious plans concerning "return" or actually "making Aliyah" [to emigrate, or "go up"] to Israel. This is one of the results of their wider, yet still rather problematic and sometimes painful acceptance by the societies and political systems in their host countries. It means that they, and to an extent their hosts, do not regard Jewish life within the framework of diasporic formations in these hostlands as something that they should be ashamed of, hide from others, or alter by returning to the old homeland" (p. 4).
    • Davies, William David; Finkelstein, Louis; Katz, Steven T. (1984). The Cambridge History of Judaism: Volume 4, The Late Roman-Rabbinic Period. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-77248-8. Although Dio's figure of 985 as the number of villages destroyed during the war seems hyperbolic, all Judaean villages, without exception, excavated thus far were razed following the Bar Kochba Revolt. This evidence supports the impression of total regional destruction following the war. Historical sources note the vast number of captives sold into slavery in Palestine and shipped abroad. ... The Judaean Jewish community never recovered from the Bar Kochba war. In its wake, Jews no longer formed the majority in Palestine, and the Jewish center moved to the Galilee. Jews were also subjected to a series of religious edicts promulgated by Hadrian that were designed to uproot the nationalistic elements with the Judaean Jewish community, these proclamations remained in effect until Hadrian's death in 138. An additional, more lasting punitive measure taken by the Romans involved expunging Judaea from the provincial name, changing it from Provincia Judaea to Provincia Syria Palestina. Although such name changes occurred elsewhere, never before or after was a nation's name expunged as the result of rebellion.
    • Dalit Rom-Shiloni, Exclusive Inclusivity: Identity Conflicts Between the Exiles and the People who Remained (6th–5th Centuries BCE), A&C Black, 2013 p. xv n.3: 'it is argued that biblical texts of the Neo-Babylonian and the early Persian periods show a fierce adversarial relationship(s) between the Judean groups. We find no expressions of sympathy to the deported community for its dislocation, no empathic expressions towards the People Who Remained under Babylonian subjugation in Judah. The opposite is apparent: hostile, denigrating, and denunciating language characterizes the relationships between resident and exiled Judeans throughout the sixth and fifth centuries.' (p. xvii)
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  79. ^ * "In the broader sense of the term, a Jew is any person belonging to the worldwide group that constitutes, through descent or conversion, a continuation of the ancient Jewish people, who were themselves the descendants of the Hebrews of the Old Testament."
    • "The Jewish people as a whole, initially called Hebrews (ʿIvrim), were known as Israelites (Yisreʾelim) from the time of their entrance into the Holy Land to the end of the Babylonian Exile (538 BC)."
    Jew at Encyclopædia Britannica
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  300. ^ Ted Falcon; David Blatner (2001). "28". Judaism for dummies. John Wiley & Sons. Similarly, because Jews make up less than a quarter of one percent of the world's population, it's surprising that over 20 percent of Nobel prizes have been awarded to Jews or people of Jewish descent.
  301. ^ Lawrence E. Harrison (2008). The Central Liberal Truth: How Politics Can Change a Culture and Save It. Oxford University Press. p. 102. That achievement is symbolized by the fact that 15 to 20 percent of Nobel Prizes have been won by Jews, who represent two tenths of one percent of the world's population.
  302. ^ Jonathan B. Krasner; Jonathan D. Sarna (2006). The History of the Jewish People: Ancient Israel to 1880s America. Behrman House, Inc. p. 1. These accomplishments account for 20 percent of the Nobel Prizes awarded since 1901. What a feat for a people who make up only .2 percent of the world's population!
  303. ^ "Jewish Nobel Prize Winners". Jinfo.org. Retrieved 16 March 2016. At least 194 Jews and people of half- or three-quarters-Jewish ancestry have been awarded the Nobel Prize, accounting for 22% of all individual recipients worldwide between 1901 and 2015, and constituting 36% of all US recipients during the same period. In the scientific research fields of Chemistry, Economics, Physics, and Physiology/Medicine, the corresponding world and US percentages are 26% and 38%, respectively. Among women laureates in the four research fields, the Jewish percentages (world and US) are 33% and 50%, respectively. Of organizations awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, 22% were founded principally by Jews or by people of half-Jewish descent. Since the turn of the century (i.e., since the year 2000), Jews have been awarded 25% of all Nobel Prizes and 28% of those in the scientific research fields.

Further reading

  • Baron, Salo Wittmayer (1952). A Social and Religious History of the Jews, Volume II, Ancient Times, Part II. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America.
  • Carr, David R. (2003) [2000]. "Judaism in Christendom". In Neusner, Jacob; Avery-Peck, Alan J. (eds.). The Blackwell Companion to Judaism. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 1-57718-058-5.
  • Cowling, Geoffrey (2005). Introduction to World Religions. Singapore: First Fortress Press. ISBN 0-8006-3714-3.
  • Dekmejian, R. Hrair (1975). Patterns of Political Leadership: Egypt, Israel, Lebanon. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-87395-291-X.
  • de Lange, Nicholas (2002) [2000]. An Introduction to Judaism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-46073-5.
  • Dosick, Wayne (2007). Living Judaism. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-062179-7.
  • Elazar, Daniel J. (2003) [2000]. "Judaism as a Theopolitical Phenomenon". In Neusner, Jacob; Avery-Peck, Alan J. (eds.). The Blackwell Companion to Judaism. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 1-57718-058-5.
  • Feldman, Louis H. (2006). Judaism and Hellenism Reconsidered. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. ISBN 90-04-14906-6.
  • Gartner, Lloyd P. (2001). History of the Jews in Modern Times. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-289259-2.
  • Goldenberg, Robert (2007). The Origins of Judaism: From Canaan to the Rise of Islam. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84453-6.
  • Goldstein, Joseph (1995). Jewish History in Modern Times. Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 1-898723-06-0.
  • Gould, Allan (1991). What did they think of the Jews?. J. Aronson. ISBN 978-0-87668-751-2.
  • Johnson, Paul (1987). A History of the Jews. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-091533-1.
  • Kaplan, Dana Evan (2003) [2000]. "Reform Judaism". In Neusner, Jacob; Avery-Peck, Alan J. (eds.). The Blackwell Companion to Judaism. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 1-57718-058-5.
  • Katz, Shmuel (1974). Battleground: Fact and Fantasy in Palestine. Taylor Productions. ISBN 0-929093-13-5.
  • Lewis, Bernard (1984). The Jews of Islam. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00807-8
  • Lewis, Bernard (1999). Semites and Anti-Semites: An Inquiry into Conflict and Prejudice. W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-31839-7
  • Littman, David (1979). "Jews Under Muslim Rule: The Case Of Persia". The Wiener Library Bulletin. XXXII (New series 49/50).
  • Neusner, Jacob (1991). Studying Classical Judaism: A Primer. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 
jews, redirects, here, word, word, other, uses, disambiguation, hebrew, הו, ים, yehudim, israeli, pronunciation, jehuˈdim, jewish, people, ethnoreligious, group, nation, originating, from, israelites, hebrews, historical, israel, judah, jewish, ethnicity, nati. Jew redirects here For the word see Jew word For other uses see Jew disambiguation Jews Hebrew י הו ד ים ISO 259 2 Yehudim Israeli pronunciation jehuˈdim or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group 10 and nation 11 12 originating from the Israelites 13 14 15 and Hebrews 16 17 of historical Israel and Judah Jewish ethnicity nationhood and religion are strongly interrelated 18 19 as Judaism is the ethnic religion of the Jewish people although its observance varies from strict to none 20 21 Jewsי הו ד ים Yehudim The Star of David a common symbol of the Jewish peopleTotal population14 6 17 8 millionEnlarged population includes full or partial Jewish ancestry 20 7 million 1 2022 est Regions with significant populations Israel incl occupied territories 6 558 000 6 958 000 1 United States5 700 000 10 000 000 1 France453 000 600 000 1 Canada391 000 550 000 1 United Kingdom290 000 370 000 1 Argentina180 000 330 000 1 Russia172 000 440 000 1 Germany116 000 225 000 1 Australia113 000 140 000 1 Brazil93 000 150 000 1 South Africa69 000 80 000 1 Ukraine50 000 140 000 1 Hungary47 000 100 000 1 Mexico40 000 50 000 1 Netherlands30 000 52 000 1 Belgium29 000 40 000 1 Italy28 000 41 000 1 Switzerland19 000 25 000 1 Chile18 000 26 000 1 Uruguay17 000 25 000 1 Turkey15 000 21 000 1 Sweden15 000 25 000 1 LanguagesPredominantly spoken 2 Modern HebrewEnglishRussianFrenchSpanish Historical YiddishLadinoJudeo Arabicothers Sacred Biblical HebrewBiblical AramaicTalmudic AramaicReligionJudaismRelated ethnic groupsJewish ethnic subdivisions Ashkenazim Sephardim and Mizrahim Semitic speaking peoples such as Samaritans 3 4 5 Arabs 4 6 7 8 Assyrians 9 and Levantines 4 8 5 OthersThis article contains Hebrew text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Hebrew letters Jews originated as an ethnic and religious group in the Middle East during the second millennium BCE 9 in a part of the Levant known as the Land of Israel 22 The Merneptah Stele of ancient Egypt appears to confirm the existence of a people of Israel somewhere in Canaan as far back as the 13th century BCE Late Bronze Age 23 24 The Israelites as an outgrowth of the Canaanite population 25 consolidated their hold in the region with the emergence of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah Some consider that these Canaan sedentary Israelites melded with incoming nomadic groups known as the Hebrews 26 The experience of life in the Jewish diaspora from the Babylonian captivity and exile though few sources mention this period in detail 27 to the Roman occupation and exile and the historical relations between Jews and their homeland in the Levant thereafter became a major feature of Jewish history identity culture and memory 28 In the following millennia Jewish diaspora communities coalesced into three major ethnic subdivisions according to where their ancestors settled the Ashkenazim Central and Eastern Europe the Sephardim initially in the Iberian Peninsula and the Mizrahim Middle East and North Africa 29 30 Prior to World War II the global Jewish population reached a peak of 16 7 million 31 representing around 0 7 percent of the world population at that time During World War II approximately 6 million Jews throughout Europe were systematically murdered by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust 32 33 Since then the population has slowly risen again and as of 2018 update was estimated to be at 14 6 17 8 million by the Berman Jewish DataBank 1 comprising less than 0 2 percent of the total world population 34 note 1 The modern State of Israel is the only country where Jews form a majority of the population Jews have significantly influenced and contributed to human progress in many fields both historically and in modern times including in science and technology 36 philosophy 37 ethics 38 literature 36 politics 36 business 36 art music comedy theatre 39 cinema architecture 36 food medicine 40 41 and religion Jews wrote the Bible 42 43 founded Christianity 44 and had an indirect but profound influence on Islam 45 In these ways Jews have also played a significant role in the development of Western culture 46 47 Contents 1 Name and etymology 2 Identity 3 Origins 4 History 4 1 Babylon and Rome 4 2 Diaspora 5 Culture 5 1 Religion 5 2 Languages 5 3 Leadership 5 4 Theories on ancient Jewish national identity 6 Demographics 6 1 Ethnic divisions 6 2 Genetic studies 6 3 Population centers 6 3 1 Israel 6 3 2 Diaspora outside Israel 6 4 Demographic changes 6 4 1 Assimilation 6 4 2 War and persecution 6 4 3 Migrations 6 4 4 Growth 7 Contributions 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 10 Further reading 11 External linksName and etymologyMain article Jew word For a more comprehensive list see List of Jewish ethnonyms The English word Jew continues Middle English Gyw Iewe These terms were loaned via the Old French giu which itself evolved from the earlier juieu which in turn derived from judieu iudieu which through elision had dropped the letter d from the Medieval Latin Iudaeus which like the New Testament Greek term Ioudaios meant both Jew and Judean of Judea 48 The Greek term was a loan from Aramaic yahuday corresponding to Hebrew י הו ד י Yehudi originally the term for the people of the kingdom of Judah According to the Hebrew Bible the name of both the tribe of Judah and the kingdom of Judah derive from Judah the fourth son of Jacob 49 Genesis 29 35 and 49 8 connect the name Judah with the verb yada meaning praise but scholars generally agree that the name of both the patriarch and the kingdom instead have a geographic origin possibly referring to the gorges and ravines of the region 50 The Hebrew word for Jew is י הו ד י Yehudi with the plural י הו ד ים Yehudim 51 Endonyms in other Jewish languages include the Ladino ג ודיו Djudio plural ג ודיוס Djudios and the Yiddish יי ד Yid plural יי דן Yidn The etymological equivalent is in use in other languages e g ي ه ود ي yahudi sg al yahud pl in Arabic Jude in German judeu in Portuguese Juif m Juive f in French jode in Danish and Norwegian judio a in Spanish jood in Dutch zyd in Polish etc but derivations of the word Hebrew are also in use to describe a Jew e g in Italian Ebreo in Persian Ebri Ebrani Persian عبری عبرانی and Russian Evrej Yevrey 52 The German word Jude is pronounced ˈjuːde the corresponding adjective judisch ˈjyːdɪʃ Jewish is the origin of the word Yiddish 53 According to The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language fourth edition 2000 It is widely recognized that the attributive use of the noun Jew in phrases such as Jew lawyer or Jew ethics is both vulgar and highly offensive In such contexts Jewish is the only acceptable possibility Some people however have become so wary of this construction that they have extended the stigma to any use of Jew as a noun a practice that carries risks of its own In a sentence such as There are now several Jews on the council which is unobjectionable the substitution of a circumlocution like Jewish people or persons of Jewish background may in itself cause offense for seeming to imply that Jew has a negative connotation when used as a noun 54 IdentityMain articles Who is a Jew and Jewish identity Map of Canaan Judaism shares some of the characteristics of a nation 11 55 12 56 57 58 an ethnicity 10 a religion and a culture 59 60 61 making the definition of who is a Jew vary slightly depending on whether a religious or national approach to identity is used 62 better source needed Generally in modern secular usage Jews include three groups people who were born to a Jewish family regardless of whether or not they follow the religion those who have some Jewish ancestral background or lineage sometimes including those who do not have strictly matrilineal descent and people without any Jewish ancestral background or lineage who have formally converted to Judaism and therefore are followers of the religion 63 Historical definitions of Jewish identity have traditionally been based on halakhic definitions of matrilineal descent and halakhic conversions These definitions of who is a Jew date back to the codification of the Oral Torah into the Babylonian Talmud around 200 CE Interpretations by Jewish sages of sections of the Tanakh such as Deuteronomy 7 1 5 which forbade intermarriage between Jews Israelite ancestors and seven non Israelite nations for that i e giving your daughters to their sons or taking their daughters for your sons would turn away your children from following me to serve other gods 25 failed verification are used as a warning against intermarriage between Jews and gentiles Leviticus 24 10 says that the son in a marriage between a Hebrew woman and an Egyptian man is of the community of Israel This is complemented by Ezra 10 2 3 where Israelites returning from Babylon vow to put aside their gentile wives and their children 64 65 A popular theory is that the rape of Jewish women in captivity brought about the law of Jewish identity being inherited through the maternal line although scholars challenge this theory citing the Talmudic establishment of the law from the pre exile period 66 Another argument is that the rabbis changed the law of patrilineal descent to matrilineal descent due to the widespread rape of Jewish women by Roman soldiers 67 Since the anti religious Haskalah movement of the late 18th and 19th centuries halakhic interpretations of Jewish identity have been challenged 68 According to historian Shaye J D Cohen the status of the offspring of mixed marriages was determined patrilineally in the Bible He brings two likely explanations for the change in Mishnaic times first the Mishnah may have been applying the same logic to mixed marriages as it had applied to other mixtures Kil ayim Thus a mixed marriage is forbidden as is the union of a horse and a donkey and in both unions the offspring are judged matrilineally 69 Second the Tannaim may have been influenced by Roman law which dictated that when a parent could not contract a legal marriage offspring would follow the mother 69 Rabbi Rivon Krygier follows a similar reasoning arguing that Jewish descent had formerly passed through the patrilineal descent and the law of matrilineal descent had its roots in the Roman legal system 66 OriginsFurther information Canaan Israelites Yahwism Origins of Judaism and History of ancient Israel and Judah Egyptian depiction of the visit of Western Asiatics in colorful garments labeled as Aamu The painting is from the tomb of a 12th dynasty official Khnumhotep II at Beni Hasan and dated to c 1900 BCE Their nearest Biblical contemporaries were the earliest of Hebrews such as Abraham and Joseph 70 71 72 73 Depiction of King Jehu tenth king of the northern Kingdom of Israel on the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III 841 840 BCE 74 This is the only portrayal we have in ancient Near Eastern art of an Israelite or Judaean monarch 75 A factual reconstruction for the origin of the Jews is a difficult and complex endeavor It requires examining at least 3 000 years of ancient human history using documents in vast quantities and variety written in at least ten Near Eastern languages As archaeological discovery relies upon researchers and scholars from diverse disciplines the goal is to interpret all of the factual data focusing on the most consistent theory The prehistory and ethnogenesis of the Jews are closely intertwined with archaeology biology and historical textual records as well as religious literature and mythology The ethnic stock to which Jews originally trace their ancestry was a confederation of Iron Age Semitic speaking tribes known as the Israelites that inhabited a part of Canaan during the tribal and monarchic periods 76 Modern Jews are named after and also descended from the southern Israelite Kingdom of Judah 77 78 79 80 81 82 According to the Hebrew Bible narrative Jewish ancestry is traced back to the Biblical patriarchs such as Abraham his son Isaac Isaac s son Jacob and the Biblical matriarchs Sarah Rebecca Leah and Rachel who lived in Canaan The Twelve Tribes are described as descending from the twelve sons of Jacob Jacob and his family migrated to Ancient Egypt after being invited to live with Jacob s son Joseph by the Pharaoh himself The patriarchs descendants were later enslaved until the Exodus led by Moses after which the Israelites conquered Canaan under Moses successor Joshua went through the period of the Biblical judges after the death of Joshua then through the mediation of Samuel became subject to a king Saul who was succeeded by David and then Solomon after whom the United Monarchy ended and was split into a separate Kingdom of Israel and a Kingdom of Judah The Kingdom of Judah is described as comprising the Tribe of Judah the Tribe of Benjamin partially the Tribe of Levi and later adding remnants of other tribes who migrated there from the Kingdom of Israel 83 84 Modern Jews claim lineage from those tribes since the ten northern tribes were lost following Assyrian captivity 85 Modern archaeology and the current historical view has largely discarded the historicity of this narrative 86 It has been reframed as constituting the Israelites inspiring national myth narrative The Israelites and their culture according to the modern archaeological and historical account did not overtake the region by force but instead branched out of the Canaanite peoples and culture through the development of a distinct monolatristic and later monotheistic religion of Yahwism centered on Yahweh one of the gods of the Canaanite pantheon The growth of Yahweh centric belief along with a number of cultic practices gradually gave rise to a distinct Israelite ethnic group setting them apart from other Canaanites 87 88 89 The Israelites become visible in the historical record as a people between 1200 and 1000 BCE 90 It is not certain if a period like that of the Biblical judges occurred 91 92 93 94 95 nor if there was ever a United Monarchy 96 97 98 99 There is well accepted archeological evidence referring to Israel in the Merneptah Stele which dates to about 1200 BCE 23 24 and the Canaanites are archeologically attested in the Middle Bronze Age 100 101 There is debate about the earliest existence of the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah and their extent and power but historians agree that a Kingdom of Israel existed by c 900 BCE 97 169 95 98 99 and that a Kingdom of Judah existed by c 700 BCE 102 It is widely accepted that the Kingdom of Israel was destroyed around 720 BCE when it was conquered by the Neo Assyrian Empire 83 HistoryMain article Jewish history For a chronological guide see Timeline of Jewish history The term Jew originated from the Roman Judean and denoted someone from the southern kingdom of Judah 103 The shift of ethnonym from Israelites to Jews inhabitant of Judah although not contained in the Torah is made explicit in the Book of Esther 4th century BCE 104 a book in the Ketuvim the third section of the Jewish Tanakh In 587 BCE Nebuchadnezzar II King of the Neo Babylonian Empire besieged Jerusalem destroyed the First Temple and deported the most prominent citizens of Judah 105 According to the Book of Ezra the Persian Cyrus the Great ended the Babylonian exile in 538 BCE 106 the year after he captured Babylon 107 The exile ended with the return under Zerubbabel the Prince so called because he was a descendant of the royal line of David and Joshua the Priest a descendant of the line of the former High Priests of the Temple and their construction of the Second Temple in the period 521 516 BCE 106 The Cyrus Cylinder an ancient tablet on which is written a declaration in the name of Cyrus referring to restoration of temples and repatriation of exiled peoples has often been taken as corroboration of the authenticity of the biblical decrees attributed to Cyrus 108 but other scholars point out that the cylinder s text is specific to Babylon and Mesopotamia and makes no mention of Judah or Jerusalem 108 Professor Lester L Grabbe asserted that the alleged decree of Cyrus regarding Judah cannot be considered authentic but that there was a general policy of allowing deportees to return and to re establish cult sites He also stated that archaeology suggests that the return was a trickle taking place over decades rather than a single event 109 By the 4th century BCE the majority of Jews lived outside the land of Israel 110 As part of the Persian Empire the former Kingdom of Judah became the province of Judah Yehud Medinata 111 with different borders covering a smaller territory 109 The population of the province was greatly reduced from that of the kingdom archaeological surveys showing a population of around 30 000 people in the 5th to 4th centuries BCE 97 308 The region was under control of the Achaemenids until the fall of their empire in c 333 BCE to Alexander the Great Jews were also politically independent during the Hasmonean dynasty spanning from 110 to 63 BCE and to some degree under the Herodian dynasty from 37 BCE to 6 CE 112 Genetic studies on Jews show that most Jews worldwide bear a common genetic heritage which originates in the Middle East and that they share certain genetic traits with other Gentile peoples of the Fertile Crescent 113 114 115 The genetic composition of different Jewish groups shows that Jews share a common gene pool dating back four millennia as a marker of their common ancestral origin 116 Despite their long term separation Jewish communities maintained their unique commonalities propensities and sensibilities in culture tradition and language 117 Babylon and Rome Further information History of the Jews in the Roman Empire After the destruction of the Second Temple Judaism lost much of its sectarian nature 118 69 Without a Temple Greek speaking Jews no longer looked to Jerusalem in the way they had before Judaism separated into a linguistically Greek and a Hebrew Aramaic sphere 119 8 11 The theology and religious texts of each community were distinctively different 119 11 13 Hellenized Judaism never developed yeshivas to study the Oral Law Rabbinic Judaism centered in the Land of Israel and Babylon almost entirely ignores the Hellenized Diaspora in its writings 119 13 14 Hellenized Judaism eventually disappeared as its practitioners assimilated into Greco Roman culture leaving a strong Rabbinic eastern Diaspora with large centers of learning in Babylon 119 14 16 By the first century the Jewish community in Babylonia to which Jews were exiled after the Babylonian conquest as well as after the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 CE already held a speedily growing 120 population of an estimated one million Jews which increased to an estimated two million 121 between the years 200 CE and 500 CE both by natural growth and by immigration of more Jews from the Land of Israel making up about one sixth of the world Jewish population at that era 121 The 13th century author Bar Hebraeus gave a figure of 6 944 000 Jews in the Roman world Salo Wittmayer Baron considered the figure convincing 122 The figure of seven million within and one million outside the Roman world in the mid first century became widely accepted including by Louis Feldman However contemporary scholars now accept that Bar Hebraeus based his figure on a census of total Roman citizens the figure of 6 944 000 being recorded in Eusebius Chronicon 123 124 Louis Feldman previously an active supporter of the figure now states that he and Baron were mistaken 125 185 Feldman s views on active Jewish missionizing have also changed While viewing classical Judaism as being receptive to converts especially from the second century BCE through the first century CE he points to a lack of either missionizing tracts or records of the names of rabbis who sought converts as evidence for the lack of active Jewish missionizing 125 205 06 Feldman maintains that conversion to Judaism was common and the Jewish population was large both within the Land of Israel and in the Diaspora 125 183 203 206 Other historians believe that conversion during the Roman era was limited in number and did not account for much of the Jewish population growth due to various factors such as the illegality of male conversion to Judaism in the Roman world from the mid second century Another factor that made conversion difficult in the Roman world was the halakhic requirement of circumcision a requirement that proselytizing Christianity quickly dropped The Fiscus Judaicus a tax imposed on Jews in 70 CE and relaxed to exclude Christians in 96 CE also limited Judaism s appeal 126 Diaspora Further information History of the Jews in Europe History of European Jews in the Middle Ages Mizrahi Jews and Sephardi Jews Map of the Jewish diaspora Israel 1 000 000 100 000 10 000 1 000 Following the Roman conquest of Judea and the siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE hundreds of thousands of Jews were taken as slaves to Rome where they later immigrated to other European lands The Jews who immigrated to Iberia and North Africa comprise the Sephardic Jews while those who immigrated to the Rhineland and France comprise the Ashkenazi Jews Additionally both before and after the Roman conquest of Judea many Jews lived in Persia and Babylon as well as other Middle eastern countries these Jews comprise the Mizrachi Jews 127 In Francia Jews like Isaac Judaeus and Armentarius occupied prominent social and economic positions as opposed to in Spain where Jews were persecuted under Visigoth rule In Babylon from the 7th to 11th centuries the Pumbedita and Sura academies lead the Arab and to an extant the entire Jewish world The deans and students of said academies defined the Geonic period in Jewish history 128 Following this period were the Rishonim who lived from the 11th to 15th centuries it was during this time that the Ashkenazi Jews began experiencing extreme persecution in France and especially the Rhineland which resulted in mass immigration to Poland and Lithuania Meanwhile Sephardic Jews experienced a golden age under Muslim rule however following the Reconquista and subsequent Alhambra decree in 1492 most of the Spanish Jewish population immigrated to North Africa and the Ottoman Empire However some Jews chose to remain and pretended to practice Catholicism These Jews would form the members of Crypto Judaism 129 CultureMain article Jewish culture Religion Main article Judaism The Jewish people and the religion of Judaism are strongly interrelated Converts to Judaism typically have a status within the Jewish ethnos equal to those born into it 130 However several converts to Judaism as well as ex Jews have claimed that converts are treated as second class Jews by many born Jews 131 Conversion is not encouraged by mainstream Judaism and it is considered a difficult task A significant portion of conversions are undertaken by children of mixed marriages or would be or current spouses of Jews 132 The Hebrew Bible a religious interpretation of the traditions and early history of the Jews established the first of the Abrahamic religions which are now practiced by 54 percent of the world Judaism guides its adherents in both practice and belief and has been called not only a religion but also a way of life 133 which has made drawing a clear distinction between Judaism Jewish culture and Jewish identity rather difficult Throughout history in eras and places as diverse as the ancient Hellenic world 134 in Europe before and after The Age of Enlightenment see Haskalah 135 in Islamic Spain and Portugal 136 in North Africa and the Middle East 136 India 137 China 138 or the contemporary United States 139 and Israel 140 cultural phenomena have developed that are in some sense characteristically Jewish without being at all specifically religious Some factors in this come from within Judaism others from the interaction of Jews or specific communities of Jews with their surroundings and still others from the inner social and cultural dynamics of the community as opposed to from the religion itself This phenomenon has led to considerably different Jewish cultures unique to their own communities 141 Languages Main article Jewish languages Hebrew is the liturgical language of Judaism termed lashon ha kodesh the holy tongue the language in which most of the Hebrew scriptures Tanakh were composed and the daily speech of the Jewish people for centuries By the 5th century BCE Aramaic a closely related tongue joined Hebrew as the spoken language in Judea 142 By the 3rd century BCE some Jews of the diaspora were speaking Greek 143 Others such as in the Jewish communities of Asoristan known to Jews as Babylonia were speaking Hebrew and Aramaic the languages of the Babylonian Talmud Dialects of these same languages were also used by the Jews of Syria Palaestina at that time citation needed For centuries Jews worldwide have spoken the local or dominant languages of the regions they migrated to often developing distinctive dialectal forms or branches that became independent languages Yiddish is the Judaeo German language developed by Ashkenazi Jews who migrated to Central Europe Ladino is the Judaeo Spanish language developed by Sephardic Jews who migrated to the Iberian peninsula Due to many factors including the impact of the Holocaust on European Jewry the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries and widespread emigration from other Jewish communities around the world ancient and distinct Jewish languages of several communities including Judaeo Georgian Judaeo Arabic Judaeo Berber Krymchak Judaeo Malayalam and many others have largely fallen out of use 2 Tombstone of the Maharal in the Old Jewish Cemetery Prague The tombstones are inscribed in Hebrew For over sixteen centuries Hebrew was used almost exclusively as a liturgical language and as the language in which most books had been written on Judaism with a few speaking only Hebrew on the Sabbath 144 Hebrew was revived as a spoken language by Eliezer ben Yehuda who arrived in Palestine in 1881 It had not been used as a mother tongue since Tannaic times 142 Modern Hebrew is designated as the State language of Israel 145 Despite efforts to revive Hebrew as the national language of the Jewish people knowledge of the language is not commonly possessed by Jews worldwide and English has emerged as the lingua franca of the Jewish diaspora 146 147 148 149 150 Although many Jews once had sufficient knowledge of Hebrew to study the classic literature and Jewish languages like Yiddish and Ladino were commonly used as recently as the early 20th century most Jews lack such knowledge today and English has by and large superseded most Jewish vernaculars The three most commonly spoken languages among Jews today are Hebrew English and Russian Some Romance languages particularly French and Spanish are also widely used 2 Yiddish has been spoken by more Jews in history than any other language 151 but it is far less used today following the Holocaust and the adoption of Modern Hebrew by the Zionist movement and the State of Israel In some places the mother language of the Jewish community differs from that of the general population or the dominant group For example in Quebec the Ashkenazic majority has adopted English while the Sephardic minority uses French as its primary language 152 153 154 Similarly South African Jews adopted English rather than Afrikaans 155 Due to both Czarist and Soviet policies 156 157 Russian has superseded Yiddish as the language of Russian Jews but these policies have also affected neighboring communities 158 Today Russian is the first language for many Jewish communities in a number of Post Soviet states such as Ukraine 159 160 161 162 and Uzbekistan 163 better source needed as well as for Ashkenazic Jews in Azerbaijan 164 165 Georgia 166 and Tajikistan 167 168 Although communities in North Africa today are small and dwindling Jews there had shifted from a multilingual group to a monolingual one or nearly so speaking French in Algeria 169 Morocco 164 and the city of Tunis 170 171 while most North Africans continue to use Arabic or Berber as their mother tongue citation needed Leadership Main article Jewish leadership There is no single governing body for the Jewish community nor a single authority with responsibility for religious doctrine 172 Instead a variety of secular and religious institutions at the local national and international levels lead various parts of the Jewish community on a variety of issues 173 Today many countries have a Chief Rabbi who serves as a representative of that country s Jewry Although many Hassidic Jews follow a certain hereditary Hasidic dynasty there is no one commonly accepted leader of all Hasidic Jews Many Jews believe that the Messiah will act a unifying leader for Jews and the entire world 174 Theories on ancient Jewish national identity Bible manuscript in Hebrew 14th century Hebrew language and alphabet were the cornerstones of the Jewish national identity in antiquity A number of modern scholars of nationalism support the existence of Jewish national identity in antiquity One of them is David Goodblatt 175 who generally believes in the existence of nationalism before the modern period In his view the Bible the parabiblical literature and the Jewish national history provide the base for a Jewish collective identity Although many of the ancient Jews were illiterate as were their neighbors their national narrative was reinforced through public readings a common practice in the ancient eastern Mediterranean area The Hebrew language also constructed and preserved national identity Although it was not spoken by most of the Jews after the 5th century BCE Goodblatt contends that 176 177 the mere presence of the language in spoken or written form could invoke the concept of a Jewish national identity Even if one knew no Hebrew or was illiterate one could recognize that a group of signs was in Hebrew script It was the language of the Israelite ancestors the national literature and the national religion As such it was inseparable from the national identity Indeed its mere presence in visual or aural medium could invoke that identity It is believed that Jewish nationalist sentiment in antiquity was encouraged because under foreign rule Persians Greeks Romans Jews were able to claim that they were an ancient nation This claim was based on the preservation and reverence of their scriptures the Hebrew language the Temple and priesthood and other traditions of their ancestors 178 DemographicsFurther information Jewish population by country Ethnic divisions Main article Jewish ethnic divisions Ashkenazi Jews of late 19th century Eastern Europe portrayed in Jews Praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur 1878 by Maurycy Gottlieb Sephardi Jewish couple from Sarajevo in traditional clothing Photo taken in 1900 Yemenite Jew blows shofar 1947 Within the world s Jewish population there are distinct ethnic divisions most of which are primarily the result of geographic branching from an originating Israelite population and subsequent independent evolutions An array of Jewish communities was established by Jewish settlers in various places around the Old World often at great distances from one another resulting in effective and often long term isolation During the millennia of the Jewish diaspora the communities would develop under the influence of their local environments political cultural natural and populational Today manifestations of these differences among the Jews can be observed in Jewish cultural expressions of each community including Jewish linguistic diversity culinary preferences liturgical practices religious interpretations as well as degrees and sources of genetic admixture 179 Jews are often identified as belonging to one of two major groups the Ashkenazim and the Sephardim Ashkenazim or Germanics Ashkenaz meaning Germany in Hebrew are so named denoting their German Jewish cultural and geographical origins while Sephardim or Hispanics Sefarad meaning Spain Hispania or Iberia in Hebrew are so named denoting their Spanish Portuguese Jewish cultural and geographic origins The more common term in Israel for many of those broadly called Sephardim is Mizrahim lit Easterners Mizrach being East in Hebrew that is in reference to the diverse collection of Middle Eastern and North African Jews who are often as a group referred to collectively as Sephardim together with Sephardim proper for liturgical reasons although Mizrahi Jewish groups and Sephardi Jews proper are ethnically distinct 180 Smaller groups include but are not restricted to Indian Jews such as the Bene Israel Bnei Menashe Cochin Jews and Bene Ephraim the Romaniotes of Greece the Italian Jews Italkim or Bene Roma the Teimanim from Yemen various African Jews including most numerously the Beta Israel of Ethiopia and Chinese Jews most notably the Kaifeng Jews as well as various other distinct but now almost extinct communities 181 The divisions between all these groups are approximate and their boundaries are not always clear The Mizrahim for example are a heterogeneous collection of North African Central Asian Caucasian and Middle Eastern Jewish communities that are no closer related to each other than they are to any of the earlier mentioned Jewish groups In modern usage however the Mizrahim are sometimes termed Sephardi due to similar styles of liturgy despite independent development from Sephardim proper Thus among Mizrahim there are Egyptian Jews Iraqi Jews Lebanese Jews Kurdish Jews Moroccan Jews Libyan Jews Syrian Jews Bukharian Jews Mountain Jews Georgian Jews Iranian Jews Afghan Jews and various others The Teimanim from Yemen are sometimes included although their style of liturgy is unique and they differ in respect to the admixture found among them to that found in Mizrahim In addition there is a differentiation made between Sephardi migrants who established themselves in the Middle East and North Africa after the expulsion of the Jews from Spain and Portugal in the 1490s and the pre existing Jewish communities in those regions 181 Ashkenazi Jews represent the bulk of modern Jewry with at least 70 percent of Jews worldwide and up to 90 percent prior to World War II and the Holocaust As a result of their emigration from Europe Ashkenazim also represent the overwhelming majority of Jews in the New World continents in countries such as the United States Canada Argentina Australia and Brazil In France the immigration of Jews from Algeria Sephardim has led them to outnumber the Ashkenazim 181 Only in Israel is the Jewish population representative of all groups a melting pot independent of each group s proportion within the overall world Jewish population 182 Genetic studies Main article Genetic studies on Jews Y DNA studies tend to imply a small number of founders in an old population whose members parted and followed different migration paths 183 In most Jewish populations these male line ancestors appear to have been mainly Middle Eastern For example Ashkenazi Jews share more common paternal lineages with other Jewish and Middle Eastern groups than with non Jewish populations in areas where Jews lived in Eastern Europe Germany and the French Rhine Valley This is consistent with Jewish traditions in placing most Jewish paternal origins in the region of the Middle East 184 185 Conversely the maternal lineages of Jewish populations studied by looking at mitochondrial DNA are generally more heterogeneous 186 Scholars such as Harry Ostrer and Raphael Falk believe this indicates that many Jewish males found new mates from European and other communities in the places where they migrated in the diaspora after fleeing ancient Israel 187 In contrast Behar has found evidence that about 40 percent of Ashkenazi Jews originate maternally from just four female founders who were of Middle Eastern origin The populations of Sephardi and Mizrahi Jewish communities showed no evidence for a narrow founder effect 186 Subsequent studies carried out by Feder et al confirmed the large portion of non local maternal origin among Ashkenazi Jews Reflecting on their findings related to the maternal origin of Ashkenazi Jews the authors conclude Clearly the differences between Jews and non Jews are far larger than those observed among the Jewish communities Hence differences between the Jewish communities can be overlooked when non Jews are included in the comparisons 9 188 189 A study showed that 7 of Ashkenazi Jews have the haplogroup G2c which is mainly found in Pashtuns and on lower scales all major Jewish groups Palestinians Syrians and Lebanese 190 191 Studies of autosomal DNA which look at the entire DNA mixture have become increasingly important as the technology develops They show that Jewish populations have tended to form relatively closely related groups in independent communities with most in a community sharing significant ancestry in common 192 For Jewish populations of the diaspora the genetic composition of Ashkenazi Sephardic and Mizrahi Jewish populations show a predominant amount of shared Middle Eastern ancestry According to Behar the most parsimonious explanation for this shared Middle Eastern ancestry is that it is consistent with the historical formulation of the Jewish people as descending from ancient Hebrew and Israelite residents of the Levant and the dispersion of the people of ancient Israel throughout the Old World 193 North African Italian and others of Iberian origin show variable frequencies of admixture with non Jewish historical host populations among the maternal lines In the case of Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews in particular Moroccan Jews who are closely related the source of non Jewish admixture is mainly Southern European while Mizrahi Jews show evidence of admixture with other Middle Eastern populations Behar et al have remarked on a close relationship between Ashkenazi Jews and modern Italians 193 194 A 2001 study found that Jews were more closely related to groups of the Fertile Crescent Kurds Turks and Armenians than to their Arab neighbors whose genetic signature was found in geographic patterns reflective of Islamic conquests 184 195 The studies also show that Sephardic Bnei Anusim descendants of the anusim who were forced to convert to Catholicism which comprise up to 19 8 percent of the population of today s Iberia Spain and Portugal and at least 10 percent of the population of Ibero America Hispanic America and Brazil have Sephardic Jewish ancestry within the last few centuries The Bene Israel and Cochin Jews of India Beta Israel of Ethiopia and a portion of the Lemba people of Southern Africa despite more closely resembling the local populations of their native countries have also been thought to have some more remote ancient Jewish ancestry 196 193 197 189 Views on the Lemba have changed and genetic Y DNA analyses in the 2000s have established a partially Middle Eastern origin for a portion of the male Lemba population but have been unable to narrow this down further 198 199 Population centers For a more comprehensive list see List of urban areas by Jewish population New York City is home to 1 1 million Jews making it the largest Jewish community outside of Israel Although historically Jews have been found all over the world in the decades since World War II and the establishment of Israel they have increasingly concentrated in a small number of countries 200 201 In 2013 the United States and Israel were collectively home to more than 80 percent of the global Jewish population each country having approximately 41 percent of the world s Jews 202 According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics there were 13 421 000 Jews worldwide in 2009 roughly 0 19 percent of the world s population at the time 203 According to the 2007 estimates of The Jewish People Policy Planning Institute the world s Jewish population is 13 2 million 204 Adherents com cites figures ranging from 12 to 18 million 205 These statistics incorporate both practicing Jews affiliated with synagogues and the Jewish community and approximately 4 5 million unaffiliated and secular Jews citation needed According to Sergio Della Pergola a demographer of the Jewish population in 2015 there were about 6 3 million Jews in Israel 5 7 million in the United States and 2 3 million in the rest of the world 206 Israel Main article Israeli Jews Jewish people in Jerusalem Israel Israel the Jewish nation state is the only country in which Jews make up a majority of the citizens 207 Israel was established as an independent democratic and Jewish state on 14 May 1948 208 Of the 120 members in its parliament the Knesset 209 as of 2016 update 14 members of the Knesset are Arab citizens of Israel not including the Druze most representing Arab political parties One of Israel s Supreme Court judges is also an Arab citizen of Israel 210 Between 1948 and 1958 the Jewish population rose from 800 000 to two million 211 Currently Jews account for 75 4 percent of the Israeli population or 6 million people 212 213 The early years of the State of Israel were marked by the mass immigration of Holocaust survivors in the aftermath of the Holocaust and Jews fleeing Arab lands 214 Israel also has a large population of Ethiopian Jews many of whom were airlifted to Israel in the late 1980s and early 1990s 215 better source needed Between 1974 and 1979 nearly 227 258 immigrants arrived in Israel about half being from the Soviet Union 216 This period also saw an increase in immigration to Israel from Western Europe Latin America and North America 217 A trickle of immigrants from other communities has also arrived including Indian Jews and others as well as some descendants of Ashkenazi Holocaust survivors who had settled in countries such as the United States Argentina Australia Chile and South Africa Some Jews have emigrated from Israel elsewhere because of economic problems or disillusionment with political conditions and the continuing Arab Israeli conflict Jewish Israeli emigrants are known as yordim 218 Diaspora outside Israel Main article Jewish diaspora In this Rosh Hashana greeting card from the early 1900s Russian Jews packs in hand gaze at the American relatives beckoning them to the United States Over two million Jews fled the pogroms of the Russian Empire to the safety of the U S between 1881 and 1924 219 A menorah dominating the main square in Birobidzhan An estimated 70 000 Jews live in Siberia 220 The waves of immigration to the United States and elsewhere at the turn of the 19th century the founding of Zionism and later events including pogroms in Imperial Russia mostly within the Pale of Settlement in present day Ukraine Moldova Belarus and eastern Poland the massacre of European Jewry during the Holocaust and the founding of the state of Israel with the subsequent Jewish exodus from Arab lands all resulted in substantial shifts in the population centers of world Jewry by the end of the 20th century 221 More than half of the Jews live in the Diaspora see Population table Currently the largest Jewish community outside Israel and either the largest or second largest Jewish community in the world is located in the United States with 5 2 million to 6 4 million Jews by various estimates Elsewhere in the Americas there are also large Jewish populations in Canada 315 000 Argentina 180 000 300 000 and Brazil 196 000 600 000 and smaller populations in Mexico Uruguay Venezuela Chile Colombia and several other countries see History of the Jews in Latin America 222 According to a 2010 Pew Research Center study about 470 000 people of Jewish heritage live in Latin America and the Caribbean 223 Demographers disagree on whether the United States has a larger Jewish population than Israel with many maintaining that Israel surpassed the United States in Jewish population during the 2000s while others maintain that the United States still has the largest Jewish population in the world Currently a major national Jewish population survey is planned to ascertain whether or not Israel has overtaken the United States in Jewish population 224 The Jewish Zionist Youth Movement in Tallinn Estonia on 1 September 1933 Western Europe s largest Jewish community and the third largest Jewish community in the world can be found in France home to between 483 000 and 500 000 Jews the majority of whom are immigrants or refugees from North African countries such as Algeria Morocco and Tunisia or their descendants 225 The United Kingdom has a Jewish community of 292 000 In Eastern Europe the exact figures are difficult to establish The number of Jews in Russia varies widely according to whether a source uses census data which requires a person to choose a single nationality among choices that include Russian and Jewish or eligibility for immigration to Israel which requires that a person have one or more Jewish grandparents According to the latter criteria the heads of the Russian Jewish community assert that up to 1 5 million Russians are eligible for aliyah 226 227 In Germany the 102 000 Jews registered with the Jewish community are a slowly declining population 228 despite the immigration of tens of thousands of Jews from the former Soviet Union since the fall of the Berlin Wall 229 Thousands of Israelis also live in Germany either permanently or temporarily for economic reasons 230 Prior to 1948 approximately 800 000 Jews were living in lands which now make up the Arab world excluding Israel Of these just under two thirds lived in the French controlled Maghreb region 15 to 20 percent in the Kingdom of Iraq approximately 10 percent in the Kingdom of Egypt and approximately 7 percent in the Kingdom of Yemen A further 200 000 lived in Pahlavi Iran and the Republic of Turkey Today around 26 000 Jews live in Arab countries 231 and around 30 000 in Iran and Turkey A small scale exodus had begun in many countries in the early decades of the 20th century although the only substantial aliyah came from Yemen and Syria 232 The exodus from Arab and Muslim countries took place primarily from 1948 The first large scale exoduses took place in the late 1940s and early 1950s primarily in Iraq Yemen and Libya with up to 90 percent of these communities leaving within a few years The peak of the exodus from Egypt occurred in 1956 The exodus in the Maghreb countries peaked in the 1960s Lebanon was the only Arab country to see a temporary increase in its Jewish population during this period due to an influx of refugees from other Arab countries although by the mid 1970s the Jewish community of Lebanon had also dwindled In the aftermath of the exodus wave from Arab states an additional migration of Iranian Jews peaked in the 1980s when around 80 percent of Iranian Jews left the country citation needed Outside Europe the Americas the Middle East and the rest of Asia there are significant Jewish populations in Australia 112 500 and South Africa 70 000 31 There is also a 6 800 strong community in New Zealand 233 Demographic changes Main article Historical Jewish population comparisons Assimilation Main articles Jewish assimilation and Interfaith marriage in Judaism Since at least the time of the Ancient Greeks a proportion of Jews have assimilated into the wider non Jewish society around them by either choice or force ceasing to practice Judaism and losing their Jewish identity 234 Assimilation took place in all areas and during all time periods 234 with some Jewish communities for example the Kaifeng Jews of China disappearing entirely 235 The advent of the Jewish Enlightenment of the 18th century see Haskalah and the subsequent emancipation of the Jewish populations of Europe and America in the 19th century accelerated the situation encouraging Jews to increasingly participate in and become part of secular society The result has been a growing trend of assimilation as Jews marry non Jewish spouses and stop participating in the Jewish community 236 Rates of interreligious marriage vary widely In the United States it is just under 50 percent 237 in the United Kingdom around 53 percent in France around 30 percent 238 and in Australia and Mexico as low as 10 percent 239 In the United States only about a third of children from intermarriages affiliate with Jewish religious practice 240 The result is that most countries in the Diaspora have steady or slightly declining religiously Jewish populations as Jews continue to assimilate into the countries in which they live citation needed War and persecution Further information Persecution of Jews Antisemitism and Jewish military history The Roman Emperor Nero sends Vespasian with an army to destroy the Jews 69 CE The Jewish people and Judaism have experienced various persecutions throughout Jewish history During Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages the Roman Empire in its later phases known as the Byzantine Empire repeatedly repressed the Jewish population first by ejecting them from their homelands during the pagan Roman era and later by officially establishing them as second class citizens during the Christian Roman era 241 242 According to James Carroll Jews accounted for 10 of the total population of the Roman Empire By that ratio if other factors had not intervened there would be 200 million Jews in the world today instead of something like 13 million 243 Later in medieval Western Europe further persecutions of Jews by Christians occurred notably during the Crusades when Jews all over Germany were massacred and a series of expulsions from the Kingdom of England Germany France and in the largest expulsion of all Spain and Portugal after the Reconquista the Catholic Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula where both unbaptized Sephardic Jews and the ruling Muslim Moors were expelled 244 245 In the Papal States which existed until 1870 Jews were required to live only in specified neighborhoods called ghettos 246 World War I poster showing a soldier cutting the bonds from a Jewish man who says You have cut my bonds and set me free now let me help you set others free Islam and Judaism have a complex relationship Traditionally Jews and Christians living in Muslim lands known as dhimmis were allowed to practice their religions and administer their internal affairs but they were subject to certain conditions 247 They had to pay the jizya a per capita tax imposed on free adult non Muslim males to the Islamic state 247 Dhimmis had an inferior status under Islamic rule They had several social and legal disabilities such as prohibitions against bearing arms or giving testimony in courts in cases involving Muslims 248 Many of the disabilities were highly symbolic The one described by Bernard Lewis as most degrading 249 was the requirement of distinctive clothing not found in the Quran or hadith but invented in early medieval Baghdad its enforcement was highly erratic 249 On the other hand Jews rarely faced martyrdom or exile or forced compulsion to change their religion and they were mostly free in their choice of residence and profession 250 Notable exceptions include the massacre of Jews and forcible conversion of some Jews by the rulers of the Almohad dynasty in Al Andalus in the 12th century 251 as well as in Islamic Persia 252 and the forced confinement of Moroccan Jews to walled quarters known as mellahs beginning from the 15th century and especially in the early 19th century 253 In modern times it has become commonplace for standard antisemitic themes to be conflated with anti Zionist publications and pronouncements of Islamic movements such as Hezbollah and Hamas in the pronouncements of various agencies of the Islamic Republic of Iran and even in the newspapers and other publications of Turkish Refah Partisi 254 better source needed Throughout history many rulers empires and nations have oppressed their Jewish populations or sought to eliminate them entirely Methods employed ranged from expulsion to outright genocide within nations often the threat of these extreme methods was sufficient to silence dissent The history of antisemitism includes the First Crusade which resulted in the massacre of Jews 244 the Spanish Inquisition led by Tomas de Torquemada and the Portuguese Inquisition with their persecution and autos da fe against the New Christians and Marrano Jews 255 the Bohdan Chmielnicki Cossack massacres in Ukraine 256 the Pogroms backed by the Russian Tsars 257 as well as expulsions from Spain Portugal England France Germany and other countries in which the Jews had settled 245 According to a 2008 study published in the American Journal of Human Genetics 19 8 percent of the modern Iberian population has Sephardic Jewish ancestry 258 indicating that the number of conversos may have been much higher than originally thought 259 260 Jews in Minsk 1941 Before World War II some 40 percent of the population was Jewish By the time the Red Army retook the city on 3 July 1944 there were only a few Jewish survivors The persecution reached a peak in Nazi Germany s Final Solution which led to the Holocaust and the slaughter of approximately 6 million Jews 261 Of the world s 16 million Jews in 1939 almost 40 were murdered in the Holocaust 262 The Holocaust the state led systematic persecution and genocide of European Jews and certain communities of North African Jews in European controlled North Africa and other minority groups of Europe during World War II by Germany and its collaborators remains the most notable modern day persecution of Jews 263 The persecution and genocide were accomplished in stages Legislation to remove the Jews from civil society was enacted years before the outbreak of World War II 264 Concentration camps were established in which inmates were used as slave labour until they died of exhaustion or disease 265 Where the Third Reich conquered new territory in Eastern Europe specialized units called Einsatzgruppen murdered Jews and political opponents in mass shootings 266 Jews and Roma were crammed into ghettos before being transported hundreds of kilometres by freight train to extermination camps where if they survived the journey the majority of them were murdered in gas chambers 267 Virtually every arm of Germany s bureaucracy was involved in the logistics of the mass murder turning the country into what one Holocaust scholar has called a genocidal nation 268 Migrations Further information Expulsions of Jews Expulsions of Jews in Europe from 1100 to 1600 Throughout Jewish history Jews have repeatedly been directly or indirectly expelled from both their original homeland the Land of Israel and many of the areas in which they have settled This experience as refugees has shaped Jewish identity and religious practice in many ways and is thus a major element of Jewish history 269 The patriarch Abraham is described as a migrant to the land of Canaan from Ur of the Chaldees 270 after an attempt on his life by King Nimrod 271 His descendants the Children of Israel in the Biblical story whose historicity is uncertain undertook the Exodus meaning departure or exit in Greek from ancient Egypt as recorded in the Book of Exodus 272 Etching of the expulsion of the Jews from Frankfurt in 1614 The text says 1380 persons old and young were counted at the exit of the gate Jews fleeing pogroms 1882 Centuries later Assyrian policy was to deport and displace conquered peoples and it is estimated some 4 500 000 among captive populations suffered this dislocation over three centuries of Assyrian rule 273 With regard to Israel Tiglath Pileser III claims he deported 80 of the population of Lower Galilee some 13 520 people 274 Some 27 000 Israelites 20 to 25 of the population of the Kingdom of Israel were described as being deported by Sargon II and were replaced by other deported populations and sent into permanent exile by Assyria initially to the Upper Mesopotamian provinces of the Assyrian Empire 275 276 Between 10 000 and 80 000 people from the Kingdom of Judah were similarly exiled by Babylonia 273 but these people were then returned to Judea by Cyrus the Great of the Persian Achaemenid Empire 277 Many Jews were exiled again by the Roman Empire 278 The 2 000 year dispersion of the Jewish diaspora beginning under the Roman Empire citation needed as Jews were spread throughout the Roman world and driven from land to land citation needed settled wherever they could live freely enough to practice their religion Over the course of the diaspora the center of Jewish life moved from Babylonia 279 to the Iberian Peninsula 280 to Poland 281 to the United States 282 and as a result of Zionism back to Israel 283 There were also many expulsions of Jews during the Middle Ages and Enlightenment in Europe including 1290 16 000 Jews were expelled from England see the Statute of Jewry in 1396 100 000 from France in 1421 thousands were expelled from Austria Many of these Jews settled in East Central Europe especially Poland 284 Following the Spanish Inquisition in 1492 the Spanish population of around 200 000 Sephardic Jews were expelled by the Spanish crown and Catholic church followed by expulsions in 1493 in Sicily 37 000 Jews and Portugal in 1496 The expelled Jews fled mainly to the Ottoman Empire the Netherlands and North Africa others migrating to Southern Europe and the Middle East 285 During the 19th century France s policies of equal citizenship regardless of religion led to the immigration of Jews especially from Eastern and Central Europe 286 This contributed to the arrival of millions of Jews in the New World Over two million Eastern European Jews arrived in the United States from 1880 to 1925 287 In summary the pogroms in Eastern Europe 257 the rise of modern antisemitism 288 the Holocaust 289 as well as the rise of Arab nationalism 290 all served to fuel the movements and migrations of huge segments of Jewry from land to land and continent to continent until they arrived back in large numbers at their original historical homeland in Israel 283 In the latest phase of migrations the Islamic Revolution of Iran caused many Iranian Jews to flee Iran Most found refuge in the US particularly Los Angeles California and Long Island New York and Israel Smaller communities of Persian Jews exist in Canada and Western Europe 291 Similarly when the Soviet Union collapsed many of the Jews in the affected territory who had been refuseniks were suddenly allowed to leave This produced a wave of migration to Israel in the early 1990s 218 Growth Praying at the Western Wall Israel is the only country with a Jewish population that is consistently growing through natural population growth although the Jewish populations of other countries in Europe and North America have recently increased through immigration In the Diaspora in almost every country the Jewish population in general is either declining or steady but Orthodox and Haredi Jewish communities whose members often shun birth control for religious reasons have experienced rapid population growth 292 Orthodox and Conservative Judaism discourage proselytism to non Jews but many Jewish groups have tried to reach out to the assimilated Jewish communities of the Diaspora in order for them to reconnect to their Jewish roots Additionally while in principle Reform Judaism favors seeking new members for the faith this position has not translated into active proselytism instead taking the form of an effort to reach out to non Jewish spouses of intermarried couples 293 There is also a trend of Orthodox movements reaching out to secular Jews in order to give them a stronger Jewish identity so there is less chance of intermarriage As a result of the efforts by these and other Jewish groups over the past 25 years there has been a trend known as the Baal teshuva movement for secular Jews to become more religiously observant though the demographic implications of the trend are unknown 294 Additionally there is also a growing rate of conversion to Jews by Choice of gentiles who make the decision to head in the direction of becoming Jews 295 ContributionsJews have made many contributions to humanity in a broad and diverse range of fields including the sciences arts politics and business 296 For example over 20 percent 297 298 299 300 301 302 of Nobel Prize laureates have been of Jewish descent with multiple winners in each category 303 See also Judaism portalJewish studies Lists of JewsReferencesNotes The exact world Jewish population however is difficult to measure In addition to issues with census methodology disputes among proponents of halakhic secular political and ancestral identification factors regarding who is a Jew may affect the figure considerably depending on the source 35 Citations a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Dashefsky Arnold Della Pergola Sergio Sheskin Ira eds 2018 World Jewish Population PDF Report Berman Jewish DataBank Retrieved 22 June 2019 a b c Links Beth Hatefutsoth Archived from the original on 26 March 2009 Retrieved 2 April 2012 Kiaris Hippokratis 2012 Genes Polymorphisms and the Making of Societies How Genetic Behavioral Traits Influence Human Cultures Universal Publishers p 21 ISBN 978 1 61233 093 8 a b c Shen Peidong Lavi Tal Kivisild Toomas Chou Vivian Sengun Deniz Gefel Dov Shpirer Issac Woolf Eilon Hillel Jossi Feldman Marcus W Oefner Peter J September 2004 Reconstruction of patrilineages and matrilineages of Samaritans and other Israeli populations from Y Chromosome and mitochondrial DNA sequence Variation Human Mutation 24 3 248 260 doi 10 1002 humu 20077 PMID 15300852 S2CID 1571356 a b Ridolfo Jim 2015 Digital Samaritans Rhetorical Delivery and Engagement in the Digital Humanities University of Michigan Press p 69 ISBN 978 0 472 07280 4 Wade Nicholas 9 June 2010 Studies Show Jews Genetic Similarity The New York Times Nebel Almut Filon Dvora Weiss Deborah A Weale Michael Faerman Marina Oppenheim Ariella Thomas Mark G December 2000 High resolution Y chromosome haplotypes of Israeli and Palestinian Arabs reveal geographic substructure and substantial overlap with haplotypes of Jews Human Genetics 107 6 630 641 doi 10 1007 s004390000426 PMID 11153918 S2CID 8136092 a b Jews Are the Genetic Brothers of Palestinians Syrians and Lebanese Sciencedaily com 9 May 2000 Retrieved 12 April 2013 a b c Atzmon Gil Hao Li Pe er Itsik Velez Christopher Pearlman Alexander Palamara Pier Francesco Morrow Bernice Friedman Eitan Oddoux Carole Burns Edward Ostrer Harry June 2010 Abraham s Children in the Genome Era Major Jewish Diaspora Populations Comprise Distinct Genetic Clusters with Shared Middle Eastern Ancestry The American Journal of Human Genetics 86 6 850 859 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2010 04 015 PMC 3032072 PMID 20560205 a b Ethnic minorities in English law Books google co uk Retrieved on 23 December 2010 Edgar Litt 1961 Jewish Ethno Religious Involvement and Political Liberalism Social Forces 39 4 328 32 doi 10 2307 2573430 JSTOR 2573430 Craig R Prentiss 2003 Religion and the Creation of Race and Ethnicity An Introduction NYU Press pp 85 ISBN 978 0 8147 6700 9 The Avraham Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Eli Lederhendler Stephen S Wise Professor of American Jewish History and Institutions 2001 Studies in Contemporary Jewry Volume XVII Who Owns Judaism Public Religion and Private Faith in America and Israel Volume XVII Who Owns Judaism Public Religion and Private Faith in America and Israel Oxford University Press USA pp 101 ISBN 978 0 19 534896 5 Ernest Krausz Gitta Tulea Jewish Survival The Identity Problem at the Close of the Twentieth Century International Workshop at Bar Ilan University on the 18th and 19th of March 1997 Transaction Publishers pp 90 ISBN 978 1 4128 2689 1 John A Shoup III 2011 Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East An Encyclopedia An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 133 ISBN 978 1 59884 363 7 Tet Lim N Yee 2005 Jews Gentiles and Ethnic Reconciliation Paul s Jewish identity and Ephesians Cambridge University Press pp 102 ISBN 978 1 139 44411 8 a b M Nicholson 2002 International Relations A Concise Introduction NYU Press pp 19 ISBN 978 0 8147 5822 9 The Jews are a nation and were so before there was a Jewish state of Israel a b Alan Dowty 1998 The Jewish State A Century Later Updated With a New Preface University of California Press pp 3 ISBN 978 0 520 92706 3 Jews are a people a nation in the original sense of the word an ethnos Raymond P Scheindlin 1998 A Short History of the Jewish People From Legendary Times to Modern Statehood Oxford University Press pp 1 ISBN 978 0 19 513941 9 Israelite origins and kingdom The first act in the long drama of Jewish history is the age of the Israelites Facts On File Incorporated 2009 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East Infobase Publishing pp 337 ISBN 978 1 4381 2676 0 The people of the Kingdom of Israel and the ethnic and religious group known as the Jewish people that descended from them have been subjected to a number of forced migrations in their history Harry Ostrer MD 2012 Legacy A Genetic History of the Jewish People Oxford University Press pp 26 ISBN 978 0 19 997638 6 Jew History Beliefs amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 20 August 2022 In the broader sense of the term a Jew is any person belonging to the worldwide group that constitutes through descent or conversion a continuation of the ancient Jewish people who were themselves descendants of the Hebrews of the Old Testament Hebrew people Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 20 August 2022 Eli Lederhendler 2001 Studies in Contemporary Jewry Volume XVII Who Owns Judaism Public Religion and Private Faith in America and Israel Oxford University Press pp 101 ISBN 978 0 19 534896 5 Historically the religious and ethnic dimensions of Jewish identity have been closely interwoven In fact so closely bound are they that the traditional Jewish lexicon hardly distinguishes between the two concepts Jewish religious practice by definition was observed exclusively by the Jewish people and notions of Jewish peoplehood nation and community were suffused with faith in the Jewish God the practice of Jewish religious law and the study of ancient religious texts Tet Lim N Yee 2005 Jews Gentiles and Ethnic Reconciliation Paul s Jewish identity and Ephesians Cambridge University Press pp 102 ISBN 978 1 139 44411 8 This identification in the Jewish attitude between the ethnic group and religious identity is so close that the reception into this religion of members not belonging to its ethnic group has become impossible Ernest Krausz Gitta Tulea 1997 Jewish Survival The Identity Problem at the Close of the Twentieth Century International Workshop at Bar Ilan University on the 18th and 19th of March 1997 Transaction Publishers pp 90 ISBN 978 1 4128 2689 1 A person born Jewish who refutes Judaism may continue to assert a Jewish identity and if he or she does not convert to another religion even religious Jews will recognize the person as a Jew A Portrait of Jewish Americans Pew Research Center 1 October 2013 But the survey also suggests that Jewish identity is changing in America where one in five Jews 22 now describe themselves as having no religion Facts About Israel History GxMSDev a b Noll K L 7 December 2012 Canaan and Israel in Antiquity A Textbook on History and Religion Second Edition A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 567 44117 1 a b Thompson Thomas L 1 January 2000 Early History of the Israelite People From the Written amp Archaeological Sources BRILL pp 137ff ISBN 978 90 04 11943 7 They are rather a very specific group among the population of Palestine which bears a name that occurs here for the first time that at a much later stage in Palestine s history bears a substantially different signification a b John Day 2005 In Search of Pre Exilic Israel Bloomsbury Publishing pp 47 5 48 In this sense the emergence of ancient Israel is viewed not as the cause of the demise of Canaanite culture but as its upshot Day pp 31 33 p 57 n 33 Albertz Rainer 2003 Israel in Exile The History and Literature of the Sixth Century B C E Society of Biblical Lit pp 45ff ISBN 978 1 58983 055 4 Since the exilic era constitutes a gaping hole in the historical narrative of the Bible historical reconstruction of this era faces almost insurmountable difficulties Like the premonarchic period and the late Persian period the exilic period though set in the bright light of Ancient Near Eastern history remains historically obscure Since there are very few Israelite sources the only recourse is to try to cast some light on this darkness from the history of the surrounding empires under whose dominion Israel came in this period Marvin Perry 2012 Western Civilization A Brief History Volume I To 1789 Cengage Learning p 87 ISBN 978 1 111 83720 4 Botticini Maristella Eckstein Zvi 1 September 2007 From Farmers to Merchants Conversions and Diaspora Human Capital and Jewish History Journal of the European Economic Association 5 5 885 926 doi 10 1162 JEEA 2007 5 5 885 The death toll of the Great Revolt against the Roman empire amounted to about 600 000 Jews whereas the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 caused the death of about 500 000 Jews Massacres account for roughly 40 percent of the decrease of the Jewish population in Palestine Moreover some Jews migrated to Babylon after these revolts because of the worse economic conditions After accounting for massacres and migrations there is an additional 30 to 40 percent of the decrease in the Jewish population in Palestine about 1 1 3 million Jews to be explained p 19 Boyarin Daniel and Jonathan Boyarin 2003 Diaspora Generation and the Ground of Jewish Diaspora p 714 it is crucial to recognize that the Jewish conception of the Land of Israel is similar to the discourse of the Land of many if not nearly all indigenous peoples of the world Somehow the Jews have managed to retain a sense of being rooted somewhere in the world through twenty centuries of exile from that someplace organic metaphors are not out of place in this discourse for they are used within the tradition itself It is profoundly disturbing to hear Jewish attachment to the Land decried as regressive in the same discursive situations in which the attachment of native Americans or Australians to their particular rocks trees and deserts is celebrated as an organic connection to the Earth that we have lost p 714 Cohen Robin 1997 Global Diasporas An Introduction p 24 London UCL Press although the word Babylon often connotes captivity and oppression a rereading of the Babylonian period of exile can thus be shown to demonstrate the development of a new creative energy in a challenging pluralistic context outside the natal homeland When the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in AD 70 it was Babylon that remained as the nerve and brain centre for Jewish life and thought the crushing of the revolt of the Judaeans against the Romans and the destruction of the Second Temple by the Roman general Titus in AD 70 precisely confirmed the catastrophic tradition Once again Jews had been unable to sustain a national homeland and were scattered to the far corners of the world p 24 Johnson Paul A History of the Jews The Bar Kochba Revolt HarperPerennial 1987 pp 158 61 Paul Johnson analyzes Cassius Dio s Roman History Epitome of Book LXIX para 13 14 Dio s passage cited separately among other sources Even if Dio s figures are somewhat exaggerated the casualties amongst the population and the destruction inflicted on the country would have been considerable According to Jerome many Jews were also sold into slavery so many indeed that the price of Jewish slaves at the slave market in Hebron sank drastically to a level no greater than that for a horse The economic structure of the country was largely destroyed The entire spiritual and economic life of the Palestinian Jews moved to Galilee Jerusalem was now turned into a Roman colony with the official name Colonia Aelia Capitolina Aelia after Hadrian s family name P Aelius Hadrianus Capitolina after Jupiter Capitolinus The Jews were forbidden on pain of death to set foot in the new Roman city Aelia thus became a completely pagan city no doubt with the corresponding public buildings and temples We can be certain that a statue of Hadrian was erected in the centre of Aelia and this was tantamount in itself to a desecration of Jewish Jerusalem p 159 Cassius Dio s Roman History Epitome of Book LXIX para 13 14 13 At first the Romans took no account of them Soon however all Judaea had been stirred up and the Jews everywhere were showing signs of disturbance were gathering together and giving evidence of great hostility to the Romans partly by secret and partly by overt acts 2 many outside nations too were joining them through eagerness for gain and the whole earth one might almost say was being stirred up over the matter Then indeed Hadrian sent against them his best generals First of these was Julius Severus who was dispatched from Britain where he was governor against the Jews 3 Severus did not venture to attack his opponents in the open at any one point in view of their numbers and their desperation but by intercepting small groups thanks to the number of his soldiers and his under officers and by depriving them of food and shutting them up he was able rather slowly to be sure but with comparatively little danger to crush exhaust and exterminate them Very few of them in fact survived Fifty of their most important outposts and nine hundred and eighty five of their most famous villages were razed to the ground Five hundred and eighty thousand men were slain in the various raids and battles and the number of those that perished by famine disease and fire was past finding out 2 Thus nearly the whole of Judaea was made desolate a result of which the people had had forewarning before the war For the tomb of Solomon which the Jews regard as an object of veneration fell to pieces of itself and collapsed and many wolves and hyenas rushed howling into their cities 3 Many Romans moreover perished in this war Therefore Hadrian in writing to the senate did not employ the opening phrase commonly affected by the emperors If you and our children are in health it is well I and the legions are in health para 13 14 Safran William 2005 The Jewish Diaspora in a Comparative and Theoretical Perspective Israel Studies 10 1 36 60 doi 10 2979 ISR 2005 10 1 36 JSTOR 30245753 S2CID 144379115 Project MUSE 180371 diaspora referred to a very specific case that of the exile of the Jews from the Holy Land and their dispersal throughout several parts of the globe Diaspora galut connoted deracination legal disabilities oppression and an often painful adjustment to a hostland whose hospitality was unreliable and ephemeral It also connoted the existence on foreign soil of an expatriate community that considered its presence to be transitory Meanwhile it developed a set of institutions social patterns and ethnonational and or religious symbols that held it together These included the language religion values social norms and narratives of the homeland Gradually this community adjusted to the hostland environment and became itself a center of cultural creation All the while however it continued to cultivate the idea of return to the homeland p 36 Sheffer Gabriel 2005 Is the Jewish Diaspora Unique Reflections on the Diaspora s Current Situation Israel Studies 10 1 1 35 doi 10 2979 ISR 2005 10 1 1 JSTOR 30245752 S2CID 143958201 Project MUSE 180374 the Jewish nation which from its very earliest days believed and claimed that it was the chosen people and hence unique This attitude has further been buttressed by the equally traditional view which is held not only by the Jews themselves about the exceptional historical age of this diaspora its singular traumatic experiences its singular ability to survive pogroms exiles and Holocaust as well as its special relations with its ancient homeland culminating in 1948 with the nation state that the Jewish nation has established there First like many other members of established diasporas the vast majority of Jews no longer regard themselves as being in Galut exile in their host countries Perceptually as well as actually Jews permanently reside in host countries of their own free will as a result of inertia or as a result of problematic conditions prevailing in other hostlands or in Israel It means that the basic perception of many Jews about their existential situation in their hostlands has changed Consequently there is both a much greater self and collective legitimatization to refrain from making serious plans concerning return or actually making Aliyah to emigrate or go up to Israel This is one of the results of their wider yet still rather problematic and sometimes painful acceptance by the societies and political systems in their host countries It means that they and to an extent their hosts do not regard Jewish life within the framework of diasporic formations in these hostlands as something that they should be ashamed of hide from others or alter by returning to the old homeland p 4 Davies William David Finkelstein Louis Katz Steven T 1984 The Cambridge History of Judaism Volume 4 The Late Roman Rabbinic Period Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 77248 8 Although Dio s figure of 985 as the number of villages destroyed during the war seems hyperbolic all Judaean villages without exception excavated thus far were razed following the Bar Kochba Revolt This evidence supports the impression of total regional destruction following the war Historical sources note the vast number of captives sold into slavery in Palestine and shipped abroad The Judaean Jewish community never recovered from the Bar Kochba war In its wake Jews no longer formed the majority in Palestine and the Jewish center moved to the Galilee Jews were also subjected to a series of religious edicts promulgated by Hadrian that were designed to uproot the nationalistic elements with the Judaean Jewish community these proclamations remained in effect until Hadrian s death in 138 An additional more lasting punitive measure taken by the Romans involved expunging Judaea from the provincial name changing it from Provincia Judaea to Provincia Syria Palestina Although such name changes occurred elsewhere never before or after was a nation s name expunged as the result of rebellion Dalit Rom Shiloni Exclusive Inclusivity Identity Conflicts Between the Exiles and the People who Remained 6th 5th Centuries BCE A amp C Black 2013 p xv n 3 it is argued that biblical texts of the Neo Babylonian and the early Persian periods show a fierce adversarial relationship s between the Judean groups We find no expressions of sympathy to the deported community for its dislocation no empathic expressions towards the People Who Remained under Babylonian subjugation in Judah The opposite is apparent hostile denigrating and denunciating language characterizes the relationships between resident and exiled Judeans throughout the sixth and fifth centuries p xvii Eban Abba Solomon 1984 Heritage Civilization and the Jews Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 44103 6 Dosick 2007 pp 59 60 a b The Jewish Population of the World 2014 Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 30 June 2015 based on American Jewish Year Book American Jewish Committee The Holocaust HISTORY com Retrieved 10 November 2015 Mitchell Travis 22 January 2020 What Americans Know About the Holocaust Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Retrieved 16 January 2023 Silverman Anav October 2012 Jews make up only 0 2 of mankind ynetnews Pfeffer Anshel 12 September 2007 Jewish Agency 13 2 million Jews worldwide on eve of Rosh Hashanah 5768 Haaretz Archived from the original on 19 March 2009 Retrieved 24 January 2009 a b c d e Jonathan Daly 2013 The Rise of Western Power A Comparative History of Western Civilization A amp C Black pp 21 ISBN 978 1 4411 1851 6 Upon the foundation of Judaism two civilizations centered on monotheistic religion emerged Christianity and Islam To these civilizations the Jews added a leaven of astonishing creativity in business medicine letters science the arts and a variety of other leadership roles Maimonides Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy utm edu Retrieved 26 August 2015 Sekine Seizo 20 January 2005 A Comparative Study of the Origins of Ethical Thought Hellenism and Hebraism Sheed amp Ward ISBN 978 1 4616 7459 7 page needed Broadway Musicals A Jewish Legacy DC Theatre Scene Rabin Roni Caryn 14 May 2012 Tracing the Path of Jewish Medical Pioneers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 20 August 2022 Shatzmiller Joseph Doctors to Princes and Paupers Jews Medicine and Medieval Society Berkeley U of California 1995 Print Max I Dimont 2004 Jews God and History Penguin Publishing Group pp 102 ISBN 978 1 101 14225 7 During the subsequent five hundred years under Persian Greek and Roman domination the Jews wrote revised admitted and canonized all the books now comprising the Jewish Old Testament Julie Galambush 2011 The Reluctant Parting How the New Testament s Jewish Writers Created a Christian Book HarperCollins pp 3 ISBN 978 0 06 210475 5 The fact that Jesus and his followers who wrote the New Testament were first century Jews then produces as many questions as it does answers concerning their experiences beliefs and practices John M G Barclay John Philip McMurdo Sweet 1996 Early Christian Thought in Its Jewish Context Cambridge University Press pp 20 ISBN 978 0 521 46285 3 Early Christianity began as a Jewish movement in first century Palestine Dr Andrea C Paterson 2009 Three Monotheistic Faiths Judaism Christianity Islam An Analysis and Brief History AuthorHouse pp 41 ISBN 978 1 4520 3049 4 Judaism also contributed to the religion of Islam for Islam derives its ideas of holy text the Qur an ultimately from Judaism The dietary and legal codes of Islam are based on those of Judaism The basic design of the mosque the Islamic house of worship comes from that of the early synagogues The communal prayer services of Islam and their devotional routines resembles those of Judaism Cambridge University Historical Series An Essay on Western Civilization in Its Economic Aspects p 40 Hebraism like Hellenism has been an all important factor in the development of Western Civilization Judaism as the precursor of Christianity has indirectly had much to do with shaping the ideals and morality of Western nations since the Christian era Judaism The Judaic tradition Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 20 August 2022 Judaism has played a significant role in the development of Western culture because of its unique relationship with Christianity the dominant religious force in the West Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East Facts On File Inc Infobase Publishing 2009 p 336 Jew Oxford English Dictionary Botterweck G Johannes Ringgren Helmer eds 1986 Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament Vol V Translated by Green David E Grand Rapids Mich William B Eerdmans pp 483 84 ISBN 978 0 8028 2329 8 Grintz Yehoshua M 2007 Jew In Berenbaum Michael Skolnik Fred eds Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 11 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference p 253 ISBN 978 0 02 866097 4 Falk Avner 1996 A Psychoanalytic History of the Jews Madison N J Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 131 ISBN 0 8386 3660 8 Yiddish Merriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary 11th ed Springfield Massachusetts Merriam Webster 2004 p 1453 ISBN 0 87779 809 5 Kleinedler Steven Spitz Susan et al eds 2005 The American Heritage Guide to Contemporary Usage and Style Houghton Mifflin Company Jew ISBN 978 0 618 60499 9 Jacob Neusner 1991 An Introduction to Judaism A Textbook and Reader Westminster John Knox Press pp 375 ISBN 978 0 664 25348 6 That there is a Jewish nation can hardly be denied after the creation of the State of Israel Brandeis Louis 25 April 1915 The Jewish Problem How To Solve It University of Louisville School of Law Retrieved 2 April 2012 Jews are a distinctive nationality of which every Jew whatever his country his station or shade of belief is necessarily a member Palmer Edward Henry 2002 First published 1874 A History of the Jewish Nation From the Earliest Times to the Present Day Gorgias Press ISBN 978 1 931956 69 7 OCLC 51578088 Retrieved 2 April 2012 Einstein Albert 21 June 1921 How I Became a Zionist PDF Einstein Papers Project Princeton University Press Archived from the original PDF on 5 November 2015 Retrieved 5 April 2012 The Jewish nation is a living fact David M Gordis Zachary I Heller 2012 Jewish Secularity The Search for Roots and the Challenges of Relevant Meaning University Press of America pp 1 ISBN 978 0 7618 5793 8 Judaism is a culture and a civilization which embraces the secular as well Seth Daniel Kunin 2000 Themes and Issues in Judaism A amp C Black pp 1 ISBN 978 0 304 33758 3 Although culture and Judaism is a culture or cultures as well as religion can be subdivided into different analytical categories Paul R Mendes Flohr 1991 Divided Passions Jewish Intellectuals and the Experience of Modernity Wayne State University Press pp 421 ISBN 0 8143 2030 9 Although Judaism is a culture or rather has a culture it is eminently more than a culture Weiner Rebecca 2007 Who is a Jew Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 6 October 2007 Fowler Jeaneane D 1997 World Religions An Introduction for Students Sussex Academic Press p 7 ISBN 1 898723 48 6 What is the origin of Matrilineal Descent Shamash org 4 September 2003 Archived from the original on 18 October 1996 Retrieved 9 January 2009 What is the source of the law that a child is Jewish only if its mother is Jewish Torah org Archived from the original on 24 December 2008 Retrieved 9 January 2009 a b Emma Klein 2016 Lost Jews The Struggle for Identity Today Springer pp 6 ISBN 978 1 349 24319 8 Robin May Schott 2010 Birth Death and Femininity Philosophies of Embodiment Indiana University Press pp 67 ISBN 978 0 253 00482 6 Dosick 2007 pp 56 57 a b Shaye J D Cohen 1999 The Beginnings of Jewishness U California Press pp 305 06 ISBN 0 585 24643 2 Mieroop Marc Van De 2010 A History of Ancient Egypt John Wiley amp Sons p 131 ISBN 978 1 4051 6070 4 Bard Kathryn A 2015 An Introduction to the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt John Wiley amp Sons p 188 ISBN 978 1 118 89611 2 Curry Andrew 2018 The Rulers of Foreign Lands Archaeology Magazine www archaeology org Kamrin Janice 2009 The Aamu of Shu in the Tomb of Khnumhotep II at Beni Hassan Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections 1 3 22 36 S2CID 199601200 Kuan Jeffrey Kah Jin 2016 Neo Assyrian Historical Inscriptions and Syria Palestine Israelite Judean Tyrian Damascene Political and Commercial Relations in the Ninth Eighth Centuries BCE Wipf and Stock Publishers pp 64 66 ISBN 978 1 4982 8143 0 Cohen Ada Kangas Steven E 2010 Assyrian Reliefs from the Palace of Ashurnasirpal II A Cultural Biography UPNE p 127 ISBN 978 1 58465 817 7 Ostrer Harry 2012 Legacy A Genetic History of the Jewish People Oxford University Press published 8 May 2012 ISBN 978 0 19 537961 7 Killebrew Ann E October 2005 Biblical Peoples and Ethnicity An Archaeological Study of Egyptians Canaanite Society of Biblical Lit ISBN 978 1 58983 097 4 Schama Simon 2014 The Story of the Jews Finding the Words 1000 BC 1492 AD HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 233944 7 In the broader sense of the term a Jew is any person belonging to the worldwide group that constitutes through descent or conversion a continuation of the ancient Jewish people who were themselves the descendants of the Hebrews of the Old Testament The Jewish people as a whole initially called Hebrews ʿIvrim were known as Israelites Yisreʾelim from the time of their entrance into the Holy Land to the end of the Babylonian Exile 538 BC Jew at Encyclopaedia Britannica Ostrer Harry 2012 Legacy A Genetic History of the Jewish People Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 970205 3 Brenner Michael 2010 A Short History of the Jews Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 14351 4 Adams Hannah 1840 The History of the Jews From the Destruction of Jerusalem to the Present Time London Society House a b Broshi Maguen 2001 Bread Wine Walls and Scrolls Bloomsbury Publishing p 174 ISBN 1 84127 201 9 Israelite refugees found high office in Kingdom of Judah seals found in Jerusalem show Haaretz Judah Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 1 April 2018 Dever William 2001 What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It Eerdmans pp 98 99 ISBN 3 927120 37 5 After a century of exhaustive investigation all respectable archaeologists have given up hope of recovering any context that would make Abraham Isaac or Jacob credible historical figures archaeological investigation of Moses and the Exodus has similarly been discarded as a fruitless pursuit Tubb 1998 pp 13 14 full citation needed Mark Smith in The Early History of God Yahweh and Other Deities of Ancient Israel states Despite the long regnant model that the Canaanites and Israelites were people of fundamentally different culture archaeological data now casts doubt on this view The material culture of the region exhibits numerous common points between Israelites and Canaanites in the Iron I period c 1200 1000 BCE The record would suggest that the Israelite culture largely overlapped with and derived from Canaanite culture In short Israelite culture was largely Canaanite in nature Given the information available one cannot maintain a radical cultural separation between Canaanites and Israelites for the Iron I period pp 6 7 Smith Mark 2002 The Early History of God Yahweh and Other Deities of Ancient Israel Eerdman s Rendsberg Gary 2008 Israel without the Bible In Frederick E Greenspahn The Hebrew Bible New Insights and Scholarship NYU Press pp 3 5 Spielvogel Jackson J 2012 Western civilization 8th ed Australia Wadsworth Cengage Learning p 33 ISBN 978 0 495 91324 5 What is generally agreed however is that between 1200 and 1000 B C E the Israelites emerged as a distinct group of people possibly united into tribes or a league of tribes Yoder John C 2015 Power and Politics in the Book of Judges Men and Women of Valor Augsburg Fortress Publishers ISBN 978 1 4514 9642 0 Marc Zvi Brettler 2002 The Book of Judges Psychology Press p 107 ISBN 978 0 415 16216 6 Thomas L Thompson 2000 Early History of the Israelite People From the Written amp Archaeological Sources Brill p 96 ISBN 90 04 11943 4 Hjelm Ingrid Thompson Thomas L eds 2016 History Archaeology and The Bible Forty Years After Historicity Changing Perspectives Routledge p 4 ISBN 978 1 317 42815 2 Philip R Davies 1995 In Search of Ancient Israel A Study in Biblical Origins A amp C Black p 26 ISBN 978 1 85075 737 5 Lipschits Oded 2014 The History of Israel in the Biblical Period In Berlin Adele Brettler Marc Zvi eds The Jewish Study Bible 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 997846 5 a b c Finkelstein Israel Silberman Neil Asher 2001 The Bible unearthed archaeology s new vision of ancient Israel and the origin of its stories 1st Touchstone ed New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 86912 8 a b Kuhrt Amiele 1995 The Ancient Near East Routledge p 438 ISBN 978 0 415 16762 8 a b Wright Jacob L July 2014 David King of Judah Not Israel The Bible and Interpretation Golden Jonathan M 21 May 2009 Ancient Canaan and Israel An Introduction OUP USA ISBN 978 0 19 537985 3 Lemche Niels Peter 1998 The Israelites in History and Tradition Westminster John Knox Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 664 22727 2 Holloway Steven W Handy Lowell K 1 May 1995 The Pitcher is Broken Memorial Essays for Gosta W Ahlstrom Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 567 63671 3 For Israel the description of the battle of Qarqar in the Kurkh Monolith of Shalmaneser III mid ninth century and for Judah a Tiglath pileser III text mentioning Jeho Ahaz of Judah IIR67 K 3751 dated 734 733 are the earliest published to date Julia Phillips Berger Sue Parker Gerson 2006 Teaching Jewish History Behrman House Inc p 41 ISBN 978 0 86705 183 4 Chouraqui Andre 1975 The people and the faith of the Bible Internet Archive Amherst University of Massachusetts Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 87023 172 8 Baker Luke 3 February 2017 Ancient tablets reveal life of Jews in Nebuchadnezzar s Babylon Reuters a b Second Temple Period 538 BCE to 70 CE Persian Rule Biu ac il Retrieved 15 March 2014 Harper s Bible Dictionary ed by Achtemeier etc Harper amp Row San Francisco 1985 p 103 a b Becking Bob 2006 We All Returned as One Critical Notes on the Myth of the Mass Return In Lipschitz Oded Oeming Manfred eds Judah and the Judeans in the Persian Period Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns p 8 ISBN 978 1 57506 104 7 a b Grabbe Lester L 2004 A History of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period Yehud A History of the Persian Province of Judah v 1 T amp T Clark p 355 ISBN 978 0 567 08998 4 Cohen Robin 17 March 2008 Global Diasporas An Introduction Routledge p 24 ISBN 978 1 134 07795 3 Yehud being the Aramaic equivalent of the Hebrew Yehuda or Judah and medinata the word for province Peter Fibiger Bang Walter Scheidel 2013 The Oxford Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean OUP USA pp 184 87 ISBN 978 0 19 518831 8 Jared Diamond 1993 Who are the Jews PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 8 November 2010 Natural History 102 11 November 1993 12 19 Hammer MF Redd AJ Wood ET et al June 2000 Jewish and Middle Eastern non Jewish populations share a common pool of Y chromosome biallelic haplotypes Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97 12 6769 74 Bibcode 2000PNAS 97 6769H doi 10 1073 pnas 100115997 PMC 18733 PMID 10801975 Wade Nicholas 9 May 2000 Y Chromosome Bears Witness to Story of the Jewish Diaspora The New York Times Retrieved 10 October 2012 Balter Michael 3 June 2010 Tracing the Roots of Jewishness Science Retrieved 4 October 2018 Genes Behavior and the Social Environment Moving Beyond the Nature By Committee on Assessing Interactions Among Social Behavioral and Genetic Factors in Health Board on Health Sciences Policy Institute of Medicine Lyla M Hernandez National Academies Press 2006 p 100 ISBN 978 0 309 10196 7 Jodi Magness 2011 Sectarianism before and after 70 CE In Daniel R Schwartz Zeev Weiss eds Was 70 CE a Watershed in Jewish History On Jews and Judaism before and after the Destruction of the Second Temple Brill ISBN 978 90 04 21744 7 a b c d Mark Avrum Ehrlich ed 2009 Encyclopedia of the Jewish Diaspora Origins Experiences and Culture Volume 1 ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 873 6 מרדכי וורמברנד ובצלאל ס רותת עם ישראל תולדות 4000 שנה מימי האבות ועד חוזה השלום ע מ 95 Translation Mordechai Vermebrand and Betzalel S Ruth The People of Israel the history of 4000 years from the days of the Forefathers to the Peace Treaty 1981 p 95 a b Dr Solomon Gryazel History of the Jews From the destruction of Judah in 586 BC to the present Arab Israeli conflict p 137 Salo Wittmayer Baron 1937 A Social and Religious History of the Jews by Salo Wittmayer Baron Volume 1 of A Social and Religious History of the Jews Columbia University Press p 132 Jews in the Hellenistic and Roman Cities Routledge London and New york 2002 pp 90 94 104 05 ISBN 978 0 203 44634 8 Leonard Victor Rutgers 1998 The Hidden Heritage of Diaspora Judaism Volume 20 of Contributions to biblical exegesis and theology Peeters Publishers p 202 ISBN 978 90 429 0666 2 a b c Louis H Feldman 2006 Judaism And Hellenism Reconsidered Brill Goodman Martin 26 February 2010 Secta and natio The Times Literary Supplement Retrieved 2 October 2013 Ben Sasson Haim Hillel 1972 1969 Ettinger Samuel ed Jewish society through the ages Schocken Books OCLC 581911264 GAON JewishEncyclopedia com www jewishencyclopedia com Retrieved 23 June 2020 Schloss Chaim 2002 2000 Years of Jewish History From the Destruction of the Second Bais Hamikdash Until the Twentieth Century Feldheim Publishers ISBN 978 1 58330 214 9 BBC Religions Converting to Judaism A person who converts to Judaism becomes a Jew in every sense of the word and is just as Jewish as someone born into Judaism Bbc co uk Retrieved 2 October 2013 Are Converts Treated as Second Class InterfaithFamily 2 May 2011 Paul Golin The Complicated Relationship Between Intermarriage and Jewish Conversion Huffingtonpost com 31 March 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2013 Neusner 1991 p 64 Patai Raphael 1996 1977 The Jewish Mind Detroit Wayne State University Press p 7 ISBN 0 8143 2651 X Johnson Lonnie R 1996 Central Europe Enemies Neighbors Friends Oxford Oxford University Press p 145 ISBN 0 19 510071 9 a b Sharot 1997 pp 29 30 Sharot 1997 pp 42 43 Sharot 1997 p 42 Fishman Sylvia Barack 2000 Jewish Life and American Culture Albany N Y State University of New York Press p 38 ISBN 0 7914 4546 1 Kimmerling Baruch 1996 The Israeli State and Society Boundaries and Frontiers Albany N Y State University of New York Press p 169 ISBN 0 88706 849 9 Lowenstein Steven M 2000 The Jewish Cultural Tapestry International Jewish Folk Traditions Oxford Oxford University Press p 228 ISBN 0 19 513425 7 a b Grintz Jehoshua M March 1960 Hebrew as the Spoken and Written Language in the Last Days of the Second Temple Journal of Biblical Literature The Society of Biblical Literature 79 1 32 47 doi 10 2307 3264497 JSTOR 3264497 Feldman 2006 p 54 Parfitt T V 1972 The Use Of Hebrew In Palestine 1800 1822 Journal of Semitic Studies 17 2 237 252 doi 10 1093 jss 17 2 237 Basic Law Israel The Nation State Of The Jewish People PDF The Knesset Knesset of the State of Israel Archived from the original PDF on 10 April 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Nava Nevo 2001 International Handbook of Jewish Education Springer p 428 ISBN 978 94 007 0354 4 In contrast to other peoples who are masters of their national languages Hebrew is not the common possession of all Jewish people and it mainly if not exclusively lives and breathes in Israel Although there are oases of Hebrew in certain schools it has not become the Jewish lingua franca and English is rapidly taking its place as the Jewish people s language of communication Even Hebrew speaking Israeli representatives tend to use English in their public appearances at international Jewish conventions Chaya Herman 2006 Prophets and Profits Managerialism and the Restructuring of Jewish Schools in South Africa HSRC Press p 121 ISBN 978 0 7969 2114 7 It is English rather than Hebrew that emerged as the lingua franca of the Jews towards the late 20th century This phenomenon occurred despite efforts to make Hebrew a language of communication and despite the fact that the teaching of Hebrew was considered the raison d etre of the Jewish day schools and the nerve center of Jewish learning Elana Shohamy 2010 Negotiating Language Policy in Schools Educators as Policymakers Routledge p 185 ISBN 978 1 135 14621 4 This priority given to English is related to the special relationship between Israel and the United States and the current status of English as a lingua franca for Jews worldwide Elan Ezrachi 2012 Dynamic Belonging Contemporary Jewish Collective Identities Bergahn Books p 214 ISBN 978 0 85745 258 0 As Stephen P Cohen observes English is the language of Jewish universal discourse Jewish Languages How Do We Talk To Each Other Jewish Agency Archived from the original on 7 March 2014 Retrieved 5 April 2014 Only a minority of the Jewish people today can actually speak Hebrew In order for a Jew from one country to talk to another who speaks a different language it is more common to use English than Hebrew Hebrew Aramaic and the rise of Yiddish D Katz 1985 Readings in the sociology of Jewish languages Quebec Sephardim Make Breakthroughs forward com 2 April 2004 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Edna Aizenberg 2012 Contemporary Sephardic Identity in the Americas An Interdisciplinary Approach p xxii ISBN 978 0 8156 5165 9 Gerald Tulchinsky 2008 Canada s Jews A People s Journey pp 447 49 ISBN 978 0 8020 9386 8 Jessica Piombo 2009 Institutions Ethnicity and Political Mobilization in South Africa Palgrave Macmillan p 51 ISBN 978 0 230 62382 8 Andrew Noble Koss dissertation 2010 World War I and the Remaking of Jewish Vilna 1914 1918 Stanford University 30 31 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Paul Wexler 2006 Chapter 38 Evaluating Soviet Yiddish Language Policy Between 1917 1950 Jewish and Non Jewish Creators of Jewish Languages Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 780 ISBN 978 3 447 05404 1 Anna Verschik 25 May 2007 Jewish Russian Jewish Languages Research Website Archived from the original on 16 October 2014 Retrieved 1 April 2014 Ehrlich Mark Avrum 2009 Encyclopedia of the Jewish Diaspora Origins Experiences and Culture Volume 1 p 1007 ISBN 978 1 85109 873 6 Subtelny O 2009 Ukraine A History 4th Edition University of Toronto Press Scholarly Publishing Division ISBN 978 1 4426 9728 7 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Congress E P Gonzalez M J 2005 Multicultural Perspectives in Working with Families Springer Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8261 3146 1 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Anshel Pfeffer 14 March 2014 The Jews who said no to Putin Haaretz Archived from the original on 26 March 2014 Bukharan Jews Jewish Virtual Library jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 12 March 2015 a b Moshe Ma oz 2011 Muslim Attitudes towards Jews and Israel pp 135 160 ISBN 978 1 84519 527 4 Azerbaijan Like many immigrant communities of the Czarist and Soviet eras in Azerbaijan Ashkenazi Jews appear to be linguistically Russified Most Ashkenazi Jews speak Russian as their first language with Azeri being spoken as the second Yaakov Kleiman 2004 DNA amp Tradition The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews Devora Publishing p 72 ISBN 978 1 930143 89 0 The community is divided between native Georgian Jews and Russian speaking Ashkenazim who began migrating there at the beginning of the 19th century and especially during World War II Joshua A Fishman 1985 Readings in the Sociology of Jewish Languages pp 165 169 74 ISBN 90 04 07237 3 Jews in Tadzhikistan have adopted Tadzhik as their first language The number of Yiddish speaking Ashkenazic Jews in that region is comparatively low cf 2 905 in 1979 Both Ashkenazic and Oriental Jews have assimilated to Russian the number of Jews speaking Russian as their first language amounting to a total of 6 564 It is reasonable to assume that the percentage of assimilated Ashkenazim is much higher than the portion of Oriental Jews Harald Haarmann 1986 Language in Ethnicity A View of Basic Ecological Relations Walter de Gruyter pp 70 73 79 82 ISBN 978 3 11 086280 5 Gafaiti Hafid 2009 Transnational Spaces and Identities in the Francophone World p 234 ISBN 978 0 8032 2465 0 Gottreich Emily Benichou Schroeter Daniel J 2011 Jewish Culture and Society in North Africa pp 258 270 ISBN 978 0 253 00146 7 Tunisia jdc org Archived from the original on 16 October 2013 Retrieved 12 March 2015 Eisenstadt S N 2004 Explorations in Jewish Historical Experience The Civilizational Dimension Leiden The Netherlands Brill p 75 ISBN 90 04 13693 2 Lewis Hal M 2006 From Sanctuary to Boardroom A Jewish Approach to Leadership Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield p 1 ISBN 0 7425 5229 2 Messiah Key beliefs in Judaism GCSE Religious Studies Revision Eduqas BBC Bitesize Retrieved 20 August 2022 David Goodblatt history ucsd edu Elements of Ancient Jewish Nationalism Bryn Mawr Classical Review Adam L Porter Illinois College review of Goodblatt David M Elements of ancient Jewish nationalism 2006 Archived 9 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine in Journal of Hebrew Scriptures Volume 9 2009 Weitzman Steven 2008 On the Political Relevance of Antiquity A Response to David Goodblatt s Elements of Ancient Jewish Nationalism Jewish Social Studies 14 3 168 JSTOR 40207028 Dosick 2007 p 60 Dosick 2007 p 59 a b c Schmelz Usiel Oscar Della Pergola Sergio 2007 Demography In Berenbaum Michael Skolnik Fred eds Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 5 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference p 571 572 ISBN 978 0 02 866097 4 Dosick 2007 p 61 Hammer M F Redd A J Wood E T Bonner M R Jarjanazi H Karafet T Santachiara Benerecetti S Oppenheim A Jobling M A Jenkins T Ostrer H Bonne Tamir B 6 June 2000 Jewish and Middle Eastern non Jewish populations share a common pool of Y chromosome biallelic haplotypes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97 12 6769 6774 Bibcode 2000PNAS 97 6769H doi 10 1073 pnas 100115997 PMC 18733 PMID 10801975 a b Nebel Almut Filon Dvora Brinkmann Bernd Majumder Partha P Faerman Marina Oppenheim Ariella November 2001 The Y Chromosome Pool of Jews as Part of the Genetic Landscape of the Middle East The American Journal of Human Genetics 69 5 1095 1112 doi 10 1086 324070 PMC 1274378 PMID 11573163 Frudakis Tony 19 July 2010 Ashkezani Jews Molecular Photofitting Predicting Ancestry and Phenotype Using DNA Elsevier p 383 ISBN 978 0 08 055137 1 a b Behar Doron M Metspalu Ene Kivisild Toomas Rosset Saharon Tzur Shay Hadid Yarin Yudkovsky Guennady Rosengarten Dror Pereira Luisa Amorim Antonio Kutuev Ildus Gurwitz David Bonne Tamir Batsheva Villems Richard Skorecki Karl 30 April 2008 Counting the Founders The Matrilineal Genetic Ancestry of the Jewish Diaspora PLOS ONE 3 4 e2062 Bibcode 2008PLoSO 3 2062B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0002062 PMC 2323359 PMID 18446216 Lewontin Richard 6 December 2012 Is There a Jewish Gene New York Review of Books Feder Jeanette Ovadia Ofer Glaser Benjamin Mishmar Dan April 2007 Ashkenazi Jewish mtDNA haplogroup distribution varies among distinct subpopulations lessons of population substructure in a closed group European Journal of Human Genetics 15 4 498 500 doi 10 1038 sj ejhg 5201764 PMID 17245410 a b Ostrer Harry Skorecki Karl February 2013 The population genetics of the Jewish people Human Genetics 132 2 119 127 doi 10 1007 s00439 012 1235 6 PMC 3543766 PMID 23052947 Sign In PDF Family Tree DNA Retrieved 1 April 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Picornell Antonia Ramon Misericordia Skorecki Karl Behar Doron M Calafell Francesc Jobling Mark A December 2008 The Genetic Legacy of Religious Diversity and Intolerance Paternal Lineages of Christians Jews and Muslims in the Iberian Peninsula The American Journal of Human Genetics 83 6 725 736 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2008 11 007 PMC 2668061 PMID 19061982 Johnson 1987 p 512 The continuing decline of Europe s Jewish population 9 February 2015 Archived from the original on 1 April 2020 Donald L Niewyk The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust Columbia University Press 2000 p 45 The Holocaust is commonly defined as the murder of more than 5 000 000 Jews by the Germans in World War II However the Holocaust usually includes all of the different victims who were systematically murdered Johnson 1987 pp 484 88 Johnson 1987 pp 490 92 Ukrainian mass Jewish grave found BBC News Online 5 June 2007 Retrieved 10 October 2012 Johnson 1987 pp 493 98 Berenbaum Michael The World Must Know United States Holocaust Museum 2006 p 103 de Lange 2002 pp 41 43 Johnson 1987 p 10 Hirsch Emil G Seligsohn Max Bacher Wilhelm 1901 1906 NIMROD In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls Johnson 1987 p 30 a b Smith Christopher Daniel L 14 January 2015 The Religion of the Landless ISBN 9781608994786 Cooper Jerrold S Cooper Jerrold S Schwartz Glenn M 1996 The Study of the Ancient Near East in the Twenty first Century ISBN 9780931464966 Moore Megan Bishop Kelle Brad E 17 May 2011 Biblical History and Israel S Past ISBN 9780802862600 Dille Sarah J July 2004 Mixing Metaphors ISBN 9780826469694 Johnson 1987 pp 85 86 Johnson 1987 p 147 Johnson 1987 p 163 Johnson 1987 p 177 Johnson 1987 p 231 Johnson 1987 p 460 a b Gartner 2001 p 431 Gartner 2001 pp 11 12 Johnson 1987 pp 229 31 Johnson 1987 p 306 Johnson 1987 p 370 Gartner 2001 pp 213 15 Gartner 2001 pp 357 70 Johnson 1987 pp 529 30 Netzer Amnon 2007 Iran In Berenbaum Michael Skolnik Fred eds Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 10 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference p 13 ISBN 978 0 02 866097 4 Gartner 2001 pp 400 01 Kaplan 2003 p 301 Danzger M Herbert 2008 The Return to Traditional Judaism at the End of the Twentieth Century Cross Cultural Comparisons The Blackwell Companion to Judaism pp 495 511 doi 10 1002 9780470758014 ch27 ISBN 978 0 470 75801 4 de Lange 2002 p 220 Schwartz Richard H 2001 Judaism and Global Survival New York Lantern Books p 153 ISBN 1 930051 87 5 Shalev Baruch 2005 100 Years of Nobel Prizes p 57 A striking fact is the high number of Laureates of the Jewish faith over 20 of the total Nobel Prizes 138 including 17 in Chemistry 26 in Medicine and Physics 40 in Economics and 11 in Peace and Literature each These numbers are especially startling in light of the fact that only some 14 million people 0 2 of the world s population are Jewish Dobbs Stephen Mark 12 October 2001 As the Nobel Prize marks centennial Jews constitute 1 5 of laureates J The Jewish News of Northern California Retrieved 3 April 2012 Throughout the 20th century Jews more so than any other minority ethnic or cultural group have been recipients of the Nobel Prize perhaps the most distinguished award for human endeavor in the six fields for which it is given Remarkably Jews constitute almost one fifth of all Nobel laureates This in a world in which Jews number just a fraction of 1 percent of the population Jewish Nobel Prize Winners Archived from the original on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2011 Ted Falcon David Blatner 2001 28 Judaism for dummies John Wiley amp Sons Similarly because Jews make up less than a quarter of one percent of the world s population it s surprising that over 20 percent of Nobel prizes have been awarded to Jews or people of Jewish descent Lawrence E Harrison 2008 The Central Liberal Truth How Politics Can Change a Culture and Save It Oxford University Press p 102 That achievement is symbolized by the fact that 15 to 20 percent of Nobel Prizes have been won by Jews who represent two tenths of one percent of the world s population Jonathan B Krasner Jonathan D Sarna 2006 The History of the Jewish People Ancient Israel to 1880s America Behrman House Inc p 1 These accomplishments account for 20 percent of the Nobel Prizes awarded since 1901 What a feat for a people who make up only 2 percent of the world s population Jewish Nobel Prize Winners Jinfo org Retrieved 16 March 2016 At least 194 Jews and people of half or three quarters Jewish ancestry have been awarded the Nobel Prize accounting for 22 of all individual recipients worldwide between 1901 and 2015 and constituting 36 of all US recipients during the same period In the scientific research fields of Chemistry Economics Physics and Physiology Medicine the corresponding world and US percentages are 26 and 38 respectively Among women laureates in the four research fields the Jewish percentages world and US are 33 and 50 respectively Of organizations awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 22 were founded principally by Jews or by people of half Jewish descent Since the turn of the century i e since the year 2000 Jews have been awarded 25 of all Nobel Prizes and 28 of those in the scientific research fields Further readingBaron Salo Wittmayer 1952 A Social and Religious History of the Jews Volume II Ancient Times Part II Philadelphia Jewish Publication Society of America Carr David R 2003 2000 Judaism in Christendom In Neusner Jacob Avery Peck Alan J eds The Blackwell Companion to Judaism Malden Massachusetts Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1 57718 058 5 Cowling Geoffrey 2005 Introduction to World Religions Singapore First Fortress Press ISBN 0 8006 3714 3 Dekmejian R Hrair 1975 Patterns of Political Leadership Egypt Israel Lebanon State University of New York Press ISBN 0 87395 291 X de Lange Nicholas 2002 2000 An Introduction to Judaism Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 46073 5 Dosick Wayne 2007 Living Judaism New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 062179 7 Elazar Daniel J 2003 2000 Judaism as a Theopolitical Phenomenon In Neusner Jacob Avery Peck Alan J eds The Blackwell Companion to Judaism Malden Massachusetts Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1 57718 058 5 Feldman Louis H 2006 Judaism and Hellenism Reconsidered Leiden The Netherlands Brill ISBN 90 04 14906 6 Gartner Lloyd P 2001 History of the Jews in Modern Times Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 289259 2 Goldenberg Robert 2007 The Origins of Judaism From Canaan to the Rise of Islam Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84453 6 Goldstein Joseph 1995 Jewish History in Modern Times Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1 898723 06 0 Gould Allan 1991 What did they think of the Jews J Aronson ISBN 978 0 87668 751 2 Johnson Paul 1987 A History of the Jews New York HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 091533 1 Kaplan Dana Evan 2003 2000 Reform Judaism In Neusner Jacob Avery Peck Alan J eds The Blackwell Companion to Judaism Malden Massachusetts Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1 57718 058 5 Katz Shmuel 1974 Battleground Fact and Fantasy in Palestine Taylor Productions ISBN 0 929093 13 5 Lewis Bernard 1984 The Jews of Islam Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00807 8 Lewis Bernard 1999 Semites and Anti Semites An Inquiry into Conflict and Prejudice W W Norton amp Co ISBN 0 393 31839 7 Littman David 1979 Jews Under Muslim Rule The Case Of Persia The Wiener Library Bulletin XXXII New series 49 50 Neusner Jacob 1991 Studying Classical Judaism A Primer Westminster John Knox Press ISBN a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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