yep,The real truth is the word Jew has its meaning from Judah and could only mean jew=Judah not any other tribe.
The twelve tribes are the descendants of Jacob's 12 sons and are the ancestors of the Jews.
41% of all Jews live in israel
There are about six million Jews in the country of Israel (in 2015), and around 14 million Jews worldwide. Other than converts, all Jews are from Jacob's bloodline. God gave Jacob the additional name of Israel (Genesis ch.35), and it was Jacob who fathered the Twelve Israelite Tribes who are the ancestors of all Jews. See also:Are Hebrews, Israelites and Jews the same people?
All 12 tribes of Israel spoke Hebrew, with varying dialects.All 12 tribes of Israel spoke Hebrew, with varying dialects.
David, son of Jesse is the second king of Israel according to the bible
No. All twelve tribes are from Israel. They are known as the twelve tribes of Israel, they all descend from Abraham's grandson who was named Israel. There are some offshoot religions that claim to be one of the tribes, or a "lost tribe" of Israel, but blood tests have proven they do not descend from Israel.
Israel is important to Jews because it is their homeland where Avraham (Abraham) was commanded to move by G-D. It was in those days called "Canaan" and that is also where the 12 Tribes of Israel were, and Israel was commanded to live there by G-D.
Jews who decide to live in Israel have officials take information about them, and there were lost tribes of Ethiopian Jews who needed to undergo special conversions to be recognized as Jews.
Israel is the homeland of the Jews. The word Israel also refers to all the Jews in the world.
The Jewish home is considered to be Israel. All Jews are welcome there, and some Jews think that all Jews should live in Israel.
They are people who were born Jewish, plus people who converted into Judaism.
They didn't change from being Israelites to Jews. The 12 Israelite tribes were banished to Babylon. When they finally returned to Israel, only 2 tribes were still identifiable. Jews were named after the largest of the two: Judah.