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From a historical perspective, the single most important event in Jewish history was the Babylonian Exile, but this, and the return from Exile, are not really an 'Exodus'.The story of the Exodus from Egypt was important in Jewish biblical tradition, but not in history. Nearly all scholars say there was no Exodus from Egypt as described in The Bible, so the Exodus could not be important in a normal historical sense.
Egypt. And you're wrong. The most important event was the Giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai, not the Exodus.
The Giving of the Torah by God.
There is no single event that can be unanimously declared "the most important". But if you survey different Jews, you make get these answers:The revelation of Torah at Mt. SinaiAbraham's realization that there is one GodThe destruction of the Second Temple in JerusalemThe HolocaustThe birth of the State of Israel
Religious Jews learn their history every single day.
The book of Exodus is part of the 'Pentateuch', which literally means 'five scrolls', or five books that form a single whole. They are ordered in the following way: 'Genesis', 'Exodus', 'Leviticus', 'Numbers', and 'Deuteronomy'. The Jewish name for these five books is 'Torah'. Thus, 'Exodus' represents the second book in the Hebrew Bible.
I believe it was th Jewish faith...
The creation of the world :)
Queen Elizabeth the First of England.
Opinion: the narrative of the Giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai (Exodus ch.19-20).
the great awakening
Jewish history is filled with stories about miracles. Some Jews believe in miracles, some believe they are allegorical. But there is no single Jewish miracle, other than the fact that all human beings have a chance at life.