to help their families and hope to protect them from other countries
One of the goals of the Jewish faith is to visit Israel at least once.
The two main goals of the boycott in the Holocaust were to economically isolate and undermine Jewish businesses and to encourage anti-Semitic sentiment among the German population. The boycott aimed to stigmatize and marginalize the Jewish community, ultimately leading to their persecution and eventual genocide.
Zealots were a first-century Jewish sect that believed in strict adherence to Jewish law and the rejection of Roman authority. They were extremely passionate about the liberation of Israel from Roman rule and were willing to use violence and armed resistance to achieve their goals.
It depends on the cause. Jewish charities tend to be rather insular, so a donation to a Jewish group usually ends up going to poor or sick Jews. This is contrasted with non-Jewish charities which usually give the money to populations they intend to proselytize as a "reward" for converting. A number of other Jewish causes are committed to more universal goals such as tree-planting, peace-lobbying, anti-defamation, and disease cures. It would be no more or less wise to assist a Jewish organization doing such things than a non-Jewish organization doing such things.
The goals are precisely as wide as football goals. They are football goals.
The goals which can not meet are destructive goals or you can say that goals which are incomplete.
GA stands for goals against. GF stands for goals for.
No, he was not Jewish or part Jewish.
According to halacha (Jewish law), if the mother is Jewish the child is Jewish. If the father is Jewish, the child is not Jewish.
A child is born Jewish if the child's mother is Jewish.
In team standings, 'goals for' stands for the number of goals the team has scored and 'goals against' stands for the number of goals the team has allowed its opponents to score.
To be Jewish can mean you either practice the Jewish religion, or are from a Jewish decent. It is both a race and a religion. Someone that is culturally Jewish may not practice the religion, but has a Jewish heritage. Likewise, people that do practice the Jewish religion do not have to be culturally Jewish, or have Jewish ancestors.