JEWS

[from Judah], traditionally, descendants of Judah, the fourth son of Jacob, whose tribe, with that of his half brother Benjamin, made up the kingdom of Judah; historically, members of the worldwide community of adherents to Judaism. The degree to which national and religious elements of Jewish culture interact has varied throughout history and has been a matter of considerable debate. There were approximately 17.8 million Jews in the world in 1990, with 8 million in the Americas (of which about 5.7 million were in the United States), 3.5 million in Israel, and 3.5 million in Europe.

Biblical Period

According to the biblical account, much of which is impossible to verify in the archaeological record until late in the monarchial period, Jewish history begins with the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, who considered Canaan (an area comprising present-day Israel and the West Bank) their home. Their history continues in Goshen, NE Egypt, where they settled as agriculturists many centuries before the Christian era. Under Ramses II the Jews were severely persecuted and, finally, Moses led them out of Egypt; at Mt. Sinai he delivered to them the Ten Commandments.

Many years of wandering in desert wildernesses followed before the Israelites conquered Canaan. Saul became the first king. Initially successful against the Philistines, he was finally defeated at Gilboa. David, of the tribe of Judah, ruled, conquered the enemies of the Jews, expanded his territory across the Jordan River, and brought prosperity and peace to his people. The reign of his son Solomon, who built the first Temple, was the last before a period of disruption. The tribes of the north formed the kingdom of Israel; those of the south formed the smaller but more strongly united kingdom of Judah.

In 722 b.c., Sargon II captured Samaria, capital of Israel, and most of the Israelites (the lost tribes) were exiled. Judah passed under Assyrian domination, then under Egyptian, and in 586 b.c., under Babylonian, when the Temple was destroyed and the people were exiled until their return was permitted by Cyrus the Great (538 b.c.). The rebuilding of the Temple was completed in 516 b.c. The Jews remained a strong religious group during the period of Hellenism, but regained political independence only under the Maccabees. A rebellion, led by Bar Kokba against the Romans in the 2d cent. a.d., ended in defeat. In 63 b.c. Rome conquered Palestine, and the second Temple was destroyed in a.d. 70.

Diaspora

As political aspirations subsided, the Jewish community was increasingly led by scholars and rabbis. Even during the period of Jewish sovereignty in Palestine, large Jewish communities developed in Egypt and Babylonia. After the fall of the Temple, Babylon's Jewish community became the most important in world Jewry and its academies the most influential centers of Jewish learning. In 8th-century Iberia, a large Jewish community played an important part in intellectual and economic life. From the 9th to the 12th cent., Spanish Jewry enjoyed a golden age of literary efflorescence marked by a highly creative interaction between Jewish and Islamic culture.

From the Crusades to the Enlightenment

From the time of the Crusades date the persecutions that persisted until the 18th cent. During this period the ownership of land and most occupations other than petty trading and moneylending were forbidden to European Jews; the ghetto came into existence. The Jews, who had earlier been an agricultural people, became an urban population. The Jews were expelled from England in 1290 and from France in 1306. In 1391, forced conversions began in Spain; in 1492 all remaining Jews were expelled. Many of the exiles perished; others found asylum in the Netherlands and in the Turkish possessions. The German Jews, who experienced periodic explusions throughout the 15th cent., fled to Poland, where, although subject to persecution, they build a thriving culture.

After 1492, Spanish Jews (see Sephardim) spread throughout the Mediterranean world, often absorbing smaller Jewish communities they encountered. In some places they continued to speak a Judeo-Spanish language known as Judezmo or Ladino into the 20th cent. Some Sephardim also migrated to Western Europe. The other large branch of the Jewish people, known as Ashkenazim, formed in the 9th cent. with the settlement of Jews in the Rhine valley. Marked by their use of Yiddish, a German-Jewish language, the Ashkenazim also migrated east into Poland. The Polish-Lithuanian community became a major center of world Jewry in the 16th cent., distinguished by its high level of Talmudic scholarship. The political vulnerability and religious faith of the Jews led to the rise of several messianic movements; one of the most important was led by Sabbatai Zevi. In the 18th cent. Hasidism arose among the Jews of Eastern Europe.

Emancipation and Secularization

Modern political emancipation of the Jews began with the American and French revolutions. In Germany and Austria emancipation of the Jews was proclaimed after the Revolution of 1848. Simultaneously, the Haskalah encouraged the secularization of Jewish life, and the integration of the Jews into the societies in which they lived. Especially in Western Europe, this led to considerable acculturation, and even assimilation, of Jewish communities. The religious Reform movement advocated a form of Judaism shorn of its national elements and emphasizing ethical content rather than adherence to traditional Jewish law.

Zionism and Mass Migration

In Eastern Europe in the late 1800s, new secular movements arose, particularly after a wave of pogroms in 1881. These movements sought to ameliorate the Jewish condition and establish Jewish life on a new national basis. Zionism advocated the return of the Jews to Palestine. The Zionist movement was formally established in Basel in 1897. During the 19th and early 20th cent., there was a mass migration of Jews westward from Eastern and Central Europe and the Ottoman Empire. During the period 1880 to 1924 some 2.5 million Jews emigrated to the United States, which after 1939 was home to the largest Jewish community in the world. Smaller numbers, under the influence of Zionism, settled in Palestine.

Between 1933, when the Nazis rose to power in Germany, and 1945, when Germany was defeated in World War II, the Jews faced persecution of unprecedented scope and violence; thousands were driven into exile and close to 6 million were systematically slaughtered (see anti-Semitism; Holocaust). After the war, great numbers of Jews sought refuge in Palestine. The Jewish state of Israel was established in 1948 from portions of Palestine, and in succeeding years absorbed many Jews from the Middle East and North Africa. Arab-Jewish relations have been complicated by the hostilities that have resulted in and from the Arab-Israeli Wars of 1956, 1967, 1973, and 1982.

Bibliography

See H. Graetz, History of the Jews (6 vol., tr. 1926; repr. 1956); A. L. Sachar, A History of the Jews (5th ed. 1965); C. Roth, The Jewish Contribution to Civilization (3d ed. 1956) and A Short History of the Jewish People (rev. ed. 1969); H. Feingold, Zion in America (1974); R. Seltzer, Jewish People, Jewish Thought (1981); S. W. Baron, A Social and Religious History of the Jews (27 vol., 1952–83); N. de Lange, ed., The Illustrated History of the Jewish People (1997); S. Friedländer, Nazi Germany and the Jews: The Years of Persecution 1933–1939 (Vol. I, 1997); A. Hertzberg and A. Hirt-Manheimer, Jews (1998); D. Vital, A People Apart (1999); M. Konner, Unsettled: An Anthropology of the Jews (2003).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Jews  - 31518 results

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...stressed that if there were more taxes paid by Jews, there would be more funds to support...They believed that there were far more Jews than the number reflected in what was supposed...advocating a higher tax, speakers demanded that Jews pay directly and individually and not through...
...had unfortunate dealings with individual Jews they encountered and, in any case, did...reason for the seesaw career of French Jews was the lingering strength of the forces...tradition was ambivalent in its thinking about Jews, the conservative, monarchical, clerical...
...philosophy subject that I put forward under this name. I use quotation marks to avoid confusing these jews with real Jews. What is most real about real Jews is that Europe, in any case, does not know what to do with them: Christians demand their conversion...
...shekel from every adult male Jew. In any case, the Land of Onias...persecution, and that other Jews also were attracted by the welcome...just as in the fifteenth century Jews who were persecuted in Spain...would be expected, between the Jews of the Land of Israel and the...
19. Finn, " The Jews in China ," p. 42; see also Edward I. Ezra and Arthur Sopher, " Chinese Jews," in Kublin, ed., Jews in Old China , p. 222. 20. Donald D. Leslie, The Survival of the Chinese Jews: The Jewish Community of Kaifeng...
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...from 1642 to 1723. The Jews during this period numbered...Cheng-chi, a Chinese Jew who had received the highest...Westerner to contact Kaifeng Jews, although he did not...and the native Chinese Jew Ai Tien: Ai Tien of Kaifeng...assumed it belonged to Jews. Thus, when he met the...
...effigy to a prominent Alabama Jew, Nott observed that Jews have remained unchanged...Southern attitudes to the Jew. Even if the Jews were not black, their racial...voice asks anymore, "Is the Jew white?" As Jews assimilated they ceased to...
...that results in the Jews death. This anecdote about the Jew in the privy turned...recounted the story of the Jew. For Stubbes, it also revealed the Jews unwillingness to...his treatment of the Jews, as in the case of the Jew in the privy. 29...
...tell me Miss Isaacs is a Jew," she exclaims. "And if the Jews kill the Lord and Master...demonic images of the Jew had on American behavior toward Jews. What we do know is that...toward individual, living Jews (the "Jew next door") with preconceived...
...of the hermeneutic Jew, who comes to represent...Christendom. The Jews desire to kill Jesus...law. In place of Jews privileged relation...the play pictures a Jew who fails both to...against a Judaizing and Jew-Supporting Christian," in Jews and Christians in...
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...is chosen, whether defined by Jews or by Christians. I do not see how any Jew can say he is practicing Judaism...jealous that this great soul wasnt a Jew speaking for us Jews. But she did speak for at least this Jew. What she was saying is that...
Who Are the Jews? The small yellow bird ahead...immigration and job retraining of Jews who were persecuted minorities...problem of defining who is a Jew. For example, a debate is...immigrants who identify themselves as Jews. Are they descendants of ancient...
...materialistic West; and those Jews such as the spiritualized...peasant. This sort of Jew should naturally stretch...Jacob) Bromberg, a Jew who had participated...in his article on Jews and Eurasianism that...position of the Russian Jew is interesting, for...Russian elite toward Jews indicates that a nationalistic...
...me they were all Jews, it became clear that in their world, "Jew" does not really mean a Jew-a person of Mosaic...When they oppose Jews, they think theyre...scenes. "So why do Jews hate us?" I myself...quickly became a good Jew. Minutes into this...
...primary reason for working with non-Jews is that I believe in my obligation as a Jew, as a rabbi, as a clergyperson...more expansive audience, reaching Jews and non-Jews alike. Ultimately, the non-Jew we educate may take the knowledge...
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...Shakespeare from sharing the Jew-hatred of his characters because...that the playwright ever met a Jew. Jews were expelled from England in...two men, a Christian and a Jew, worked together to free Soviet Jews in ways that were mostly kept...
Obama and the Jews; Its Time for the Jewish Vote to Defect...launching an outreach effort to American Jews to convince them that Mr. Obama is the...Jewish population is dropping. In general, Jews tend to be more liberal and more affiliated...
Return of Bad Times for Jews; Islamists Use European Colonial Guilt...help. Some of our funniest comedians are Jews, in a long line stretching from the Borscht Belt through vaudeville to Hollywood. Jews love to laugh at themselves. They arent...
Russian law targets Jews and Christians alike The Union of Councils for Soviet Jews applauds your Oct. 1 editorial "In Russia, a question...documents current popular and official hatred of Jews. The fact that Moscows rabbis were afraid to speak...
Boxing Club Brings Together Jews, Arabs. Byline: Aron Heller Associated...sports violent nature, Luxemburg says Jews and Arabs never clash in his gym...Boxing Club offers a hub of coexistence. Jews and Arabs who would normally never cross...
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encyclopedia articles on: Jews  - 353 results

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JEWS from Judah , traditionally, descendants of...There were approximately 17.8 million Jews in the world in 1990, with 8 million in the...before the Christian era. Under Ramses II the Jews were severely persecuted and, finally, Moses...
JEWS-HARP or jews-harp, musical instrument of ancient lineage composed of a small metal...between the teeth and the metal tongue is plucked with the fingers. Each jews-harp can produce only one tone, the quality of which may be varied...
WANDERING JEW , in legend in literary and popular legend, a Jew who mocked or mistreated Jesus while he was on his way to...but not until the early 17th cent. was he identified as a Jew. The story is common in Western Europe, but it presents...
WANDERING JEW , in botany common name for several creeping plants of the genus Tradescantia...is most commonly cultivated in window boxes and hanging pots. Wandering jew is classified in the division Magnoliophyta , class Liliopsida, order Commelinales...
...Israel. Palestine is the Holy Land of Jews, having been promised to them by God...period Moses led the Hebrew people (see Jews ) out of Egypt, across the Sinai, and...Romans, the Herods (see Herod ). When the Jews revolted in a.d. 66, the Romans destroyed...
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