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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Israeli_JewsIsraeli Jews - Wikipedia

    Israeli Jews or Jewish Israelis ( Hebrew: יהודים ישראלים Yêhūdīm Yīśrāʾēlīm) comprise Israel 's largest ethnic and religious community. The core of their demographic consists of those with a Jewish identity and their descendants, including ethnic Jews and religious Jews alike. Approximately 99% of the global Israeli Jewish ...

  2. Outside of New York, too, the American Jewish experience was essentially urban. By 1920, New York City’s share of American Jews was 45 percent–its Jewish population was greater than the total populations of most American cities. Chicago and Philadelphia together accounted for 13 percent of American Jewry, and seven other large or midsize ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mizrahi_JewsMizrahi Jews - Wikipedia

    e. Mizrahi Jews ( Hebrew: יהודי המִזְרָח ), also known as Mizrahim ( מִזְרָחִים) or Mizrachi ( מִזְרָחִי) and alternatively referred to as Oriental Jews or Edot HaMizrach ( עֲדוֹת־הַמִּזְרָח, lit. 'Communities of the East' ), [3] are a grouping of Jewish communities that lived in the Muslim world .

  4. Sep 4, 2019 · Howard’s discoveries came at a time when researchers were only beginning to appreciate that humans were in the Americas during the last ice age, which ended around 10,000 years ago. In the years to follow, archaeologists would unearth sleek, fluted spear points, just like the ones found at Clovis, across North America.

  5. Nov 30, 2017 · Where Did The Celts Come From? By the third century B.C., the Celts controlled much of the European continent north of the Alps mountain range, including present-day Ireland and Great Britain.

  6. The Jews of the United States date their community to these first twenty-three souls, although a few Jewish merchants and even a metallurgist had preceded them to North America, and Jews had already made their way, or soon would, to colonial settlements beyond the Atlantic seaboard, among them Curaçao, Surinam, and Jamaica.

  7. Conservative Judaism (known as Masorti Judaism outside North America) is a Jewish religious movement that regards the authority of Jewish law and tradition as emanating primarily from the assent of the people through the generations, more than from divine revelation. It therefore views Jewish law, or Halakha, as both binding and subject to ...

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