Exile occurs when people once forced to live in a foreign land. During the Isralites exile in Babylon, their religion became Judaism. Jews met each week on the Sabbath, a day to worship and rest in a house of worship.
they stayed close to one another and passed hrough it
Why not ask Geiger, whomever he may be. What does this question have to do with Judaism.
They changed from a religion that was location-based, and attached to the Temple, to a portable religion, that they could carry with them to any country.
The Holocaust
The people's observance of the Torah unified them and gave them optimism and morale.
The Bible= Judaism and christianity.... the bible book of exodus............
The post-exilic period refers to the time following the Babylonian exile of the Jewish people, beginning around 538 BCE when they were allowed to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the Temple. This era is significant for the restoration of Jewish identity, religious practices, and the establishment of the Second Temple. It includes the composition of key biblical texts, the reformation of social and religious life, and the emergence of new religious leadership. This period laid the foundation for Judaism as it is known today.
The Babylonians drove the Jews into their first exile. The Romans were the ones who caused the second and current exile period.
A:Judaism, as we know it today, evolved over a period of centuries, from the polytheistic religion that we now know the early Hebrews followed. There were several key points in the development of Judaism, but no single, identifiable beginning.An early economic factor was the influx into Judah of refugees from Israel after the destruction of their homeland in 722 BCE. Judahite traditions had to adapt and accommodate at least some of the traditions of the Israelites in order to foster national unity. This gradually led to the earliest books of the Bible being written. Judaism was beginning to take shape and had some discernible parallels to modern Judaism.Another important political and economic factor was the Babylonian Exile. The Jews no longer had a king to lead them, and the priests took on this role, in a theocracy. During the Exile and the period that followed, most of the Hebrew Bible was completed. This was also the period during which Judaism became firmly monotheistic, although it seems to have already become monolatrous even before the Exile. We can say the Exile marked the beginning of monotheistic Judaism.The First Roman-Jewish War began in 66 CE as a result of swingeing taxes imposed by the Romans and the appropriation of money from the Jerusalem Temple. The inevitable result of the war was the destruction of the Temple and, with it, the inability to continue animal sacrifices as well as the disappearance of the Sadducee faction. The Pharisees evolved Judaism, to become the Rabbinic Judaism we know today. This was the beginning of modern Judaism.
The Babylonian exile.
Psalm 137 is traditionally sung during the period of mourning and exile, such as Tisha B'Av, a Jewish day of fasting that commemorates the destruction of the First and Second Temples in Jerusalem. It is a reflection on the experience of exile and the longing for return to the ancestral homeland.
Since Judaism does not encourage its adherents to proselytize, people learned about it by seeing Jews in their places of exile, or picking up and reading Jewish books.