1,000 to 20,000 or less.
1,000 to 20,000 or less.
6
Homes in which the Torah is observed and in which having many children is one of the ideals.
1.7
On November 9-10, 1938, the Nazis staged vicious pogroms-state sanctioned, anti-Jewish riots-against the Jewish community of Germany. These came to be known as Kristallnacht (translated literally, it means "Crystal Night" but it is now commonly translated as "Night of Broken Glass"), a reference to the untold numbers of broken windows of synagogues, Jewish-owned stores, community centers, and homes plundered and destroyed during the pogroms. Encouraged by the Nazi regime, the rioters burned or destroyed 267 synagogues, vandalized or looted 7,500 Jewish businesses, and killed at least 91 Jewish people. They also damaged many Jewish cemeteries, hospitals, schools, and homes as police and fire brigades stood aside. Kristallnacht was a turning point in history. The pogroms marked an intensification of Nazi anti-Jewish policy that would culminate in the Holocaust-the systematic, state-sponsored murder of Jews.
I think the category you are looking for is "rural".
Paris is the big community of Jewish people after America and Israel, the entire France has about 491000 people and Europe about 1 million.
Austin allows many custom modular homes. You do need to verify with the park manage before you move to one though. There are several Austin communities that allow modular homes. You can contact a local realty company or check online to find a community that fits your needs.
Even though a rabbi is a teacher and a member of the Jewish clergy, they can do MANY things: 1. Doctor or Mohel to perform Jewish Circumcision 2. Write Jewish Books 3. Kosher Food Supervision 4. Jewish Politics 5. Jewish Courts 6. Jewish Therapy 7. Jewish Lifecycle Events
That's easy: Read Paul's letters. Many of them have titles that name the community he was writing to. He visited most of them, except Alexandria at the mouth of the Nile River, where there was also a big Jewish community.
Before the Jewish people were sent into Concentration camps, they were sent to labor camps. After they did not want to use them in the labor camps any longer, then sent them to the Concentration Camps.
In Some Orthodox traditions, the woman is the head of the home, while the man is obligated to work, pray and study. In Non-Orthodox homes (and many modern Orthodox homes), there is no religiously prescribed heirarchy.