Yes.
That everything in the oral and written Torah is true and still applicable today.
Buildings: today we worship in synagogues. Before the Romans destroyed it, the Holy Temple in Jerusalem was judaism's holiest place. Texts: 1) The Torah is the Five Books of Moses. It is the holiest of Jewish books. 2) The Tanach, which is the Hebrew Bible, contains the Torah, the Prophets and the Scriptures. Together, these make up the written law.
In ancient Times, they followed a monolatrous religion that worshipped God, also called Biblical Judaism, today, they follow modern forms of Judaism.
Jeremiah, 10 commandments, Torah, Bible. All the rules/laws in these books are still followed/used today in our law.
The Gharkad tree.Answer:The only source for the above answer is in Muslim lore. I am an Orthodox Jewish scholar, and have never (until today) heard of this type of tree. It has no role in Judaism as we practice it.
Today we call it Judaism. In ancient times, it didn't have a name; it was simply the Torah itself.
Judaism is widely practiced today (21st Century). Also, separate from its practice, Judaism is arguably STUDIED today by more people than ever before in its history.
It was called "Judaism" and it is still around today.
God's Torah.
Until the time of Moses, it may have been named only by its parts: Yir'at Hashem (awareness of God), etc. From the time of Moses onwards, it was simply called Torah. "Judaism," as we call it today, is a description that was coined later.
The Jewish food laws started 3300 years ago, when the Torah was given. They are still ongoing today because the Torah is for all generations. See also:The Jewish food-laws
the Torah (תורה)