1) By endeavoring to gain Torah-beliefs and attitudes, such as awareness of God, and the importance of time, life, free-will and responsibility.
2) By endeavoring to behave according to the Torah-ways (see for example Leviticus ch.19 and Deuteronomy 10:12), such as kindness, optimism, avoiding jealousy, anger, viciousness, slander, violence and carelessness.
3) By keeping the laws of the Torah, whether personal (such as putting on Tefillin or a head-covering), interpersonal (such as paying for any monetary or property damage one causes), or in relation to God (such as prayer, kosher laws, and Sabbath and holy-day observance).
The above list provides only a few examples of a wide subject. To gain a vivid idea, it could be helpful to read a biography of someone like Rabbi Moshe Feinstein.
The Jewish Bible is not the Old Testament, it is the Tanach. Within the Tanach, there are three sections which are: Torah (Teachings), Nevi'im (Prophets), and K'tuvim (Writings). The Christian Old Testament was based on the Tanach, however, it was altered throughout to support the teachings of Christianity. One of the alterations was the order of the books which render the Jewish categorization inapplicable.
It put an end to placing Jews in concentration camps.
There may be some who do, but it's not a practice that's encouraged or widespread.
In the decade preceding the founding of Chanukkah, the Greeks would not let the Jews practice Judaism or do anything that had to do with the Jewish religion. The children would hide in caves and learn about Judaism or practice Torah. In case the Greeks came to find them, they would quickly put away what they were doing, take out the dreidels and start playing. Therefore, the Greeks would never know they were practicing Judaism.
Buddhists consciously perform their tasks (eating, walking, working, etc) throughout the day mindfully as the Buddha indicated we should and reflect during the day on our actions of body, speech and mind to see where we need to practice harder. In this way we ensure that we are putting the Buddha's teachings into all our activities.
a sentence with the word Torah in is: the Torah is the Jewish book.Answer:The Torah contains the words of God (Exodus 24:12).
According to Torah itself, nothing, just read and understand it. However, Judaism has placed traditions upon the reading of Torah which would include a processional, a kissing of the scroll, and other traditions geared at paying reverence to Torah as "the Word of God."
You put one Jesus by following His principles and teachings. His principle and teachings are found in the bible.
I think they did to kill the Jews.
The Jews put prayers &notes in the cracks
Many many people fit the bill of your question, and many were killed for their faith and for refusing to repent of their good deeds. All the disciples were 'prosecuted' and suffered stripes for following Jesus' teachings, and they were the first of many who suffered, often unto death, for 'putting the teachings of Jesus into practice.'
basically as soon as the Germans occupied a country, they would put the Jews into ghettos.