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David Rabeeya has written:

'Sephardic Lolita'

'Tehom shemesh'

'A guide to understanding Judaism and Islam' -- subject(s): Judaism, Relations, Islam

'Sephardic Muse' -- subject(s): Oriental Jews, Miscellanea

'Afifah'

'Sephardic recipes' -- subject(s): Cookery, Sephardic, cookery, Sephardic Cookery

'Sephardic myths and realities' -- subject(s): Miscellanea, Sephardim

'A Humanistic Siddur of Spirituality And Meaning'

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David Rabeeya has written:

'Sephardic Lolita'

'Tehom shemesh'

'A guide to understanding Judaism and Islam' -- subject(s): Judaism, Relations, Islam

'Sephardic Muse' -- subject(s): Oriental Jews, Miscellanea

'Afifah'

'Sephardic recipes' -- subject(s): Cookery, Sephardic, cookery, Sephardic Cookery

'Sephardic myths and realities' -- subject(s): Miscellanea, Sephardim

'A Humanistic Siddur of Spirituality And Meaning'

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Sephardic Temple Tifereth Israel was founded in 1928 in Los Angeles, California. It was established to serve the spiritual and communal needs of the Sephardic Jewish community in the area.

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Yes.


Judaism does not proselytize or seek converts, but it does accept sincere converts. Conversion for marriage is not a sincere reason. Once someone has converted properly, a Jew (Sephardic or not) may marry them.

Conversion is a life-changing and very serious undertaking and a potential convert should think it over carefully. It must not be done on a whim or because of temporary circumstances. One who converts is expected (from then on) to live as a Jew.

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Reform Judaism had its origins in the Ashkenazi community, but there are plenty of Ashkenazi Orthodox Jews and plenty of Reform Jews with Sephardic backgrounds. In Europe, you can find Liberal synagogues (analogous to the Reform movement in the United States) that are dominated by Sephardic Jews, predominantly in French speaking countries that welcomed many Algerian Jews after the collapse of French North Africa.

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The Edomites, or Idumeans, were conquered by Judea during the Maccabean period and forcibly converted to Judaism. Their descendants would certainly exist in the world today, but they would be regarded as Jews, most probably as Sephardic Jews.

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Judaism

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