Exodus.
An example of an exodus is when Moses led his people out of Egypt because he believed that god was watching over him and his people, therefore he proved that to the Egyptians and got his people out of Egyptian slavery.
A:Moses is respected as the founder of Jewish nation because the Bible attributes that to him. The Bible says that he led the Hebrews on the Exodus out of Egypt to the Promised Land that would one day become Israel and Judah, although it was left to his successor, Joshua, to conquer the land. Almost all scholars say that there was no Exodus as described in the Bible, but it is the tradition of an Exodus that is important to most believers.
The Jewish people
Opinion.
They were all the Jews and other people who saw the works of Moses.
The Torah tells us that the Israelites left Egypt and arrived in the land of Israel after 40 years in the Sinai desert.
After the people left Egypt, they then reached M arah, which is a oasis , but here the water was bitter.
According to traditional Jewish chronology, the Exodus took place in 1312 BCE.In the Exodus, Moses brought the Israelites out of the Egyptian slavery under the guidance of God, after God brought plagues upon the Egyptians (Exodus ch.1-12). After the Israelites left, Egypt was in turmoil for decades. Though Israel was later harassed (Judges ch.3,6 and 10) by its smaller neighbors (Ammon, Moab, Midian), not a peep was heard from Egypt for four hundred years.Egypt's turmoil is also borne out by the Ipuwer papyrus, which mentions a number of the Plagues ("Pestilence is throughout the land....the river is blood, death is not scarce...there is no food...neither fruit nor herbs can be found...barley has perished...all is ruin...the statues are burned") (Professor John van Seters, Journal of Egyptian Archaeology no. 50). The plagues were also described by ancient historians, including Herodotus and Diodorus. The Exodus is mentioned by Strabo, Berosus, Artapanus, Numenius, Justin, and Tacitus.
When Israel left Egypt, they were a people without a purpose or union, but the act of leaving Egypt, combined with receiving the commandments, formed the Israelites into a people with a unified identity and mission. In effect, the exodus forged the Israelite identity and it was as if the people were redefined and recreated for their new mission.
The Passover feast of unleavened bread is significant in Jewish tradition because it commemorates the Israelites' exodus from slavery in Egypt. During this feast, unleavened bread is eaten to symbolize the haste with which the Israelites left Egypt, as they did not have time to let their bread rise. It serves as a reminder of their liberation and the importance of freedom in Jewish history and faith.
When the Nazis had hold over Germany for a time, many people that migrated were Jewish. The Nazis were trying to eradicate the Jews, and many left as soon as they were able. Some non-Jewish Germans left as well because they did not agree with Nazi rule.