It depends entirely on the occasion. In the earlier period of Muhammad's prophecy, he invited Arabian Jews to convert to Islam by presenting "evidences" of his role as a prophet. These were, by and large, rejected by the Jews as being spurious connections and not valid evidences. After this wide-scale rejection of Islam by Arabian Jews, Muhammad became increasingly hostile to the Jews. He began to threaten them and accuse them of treachery, ultimately leading to the massacre of the Jewish Tribe Banu Qurayza in Medina and the later massacre of the Jewish Tribe Banu Nadir in Khaybar.
Invited them to Islam based on evidences in their holy books.
Well, because Muhammad (SAW) let other people believe in whatever they wanted to and let Allah punish them.
several Jewish and bedouin clans
It depends on which Medinans you are talking about. There were six major tribes of Medinans, three who were Jewish and three who were Polytheistic, in addition to the Muslims who fled with Muhammad from Mecca, who functioned more-or-less as a seventh tribe. In the beginning, all of these tribes regarded Muhammad as a spiritual person, even if he was not of their religions, and a proper dispute arbitrator. This changed at the end of the eight years of Muhammad's time in Medina. At this time, most of the members of the Polytheistic tribes had converted to Islam and accepted Muhammad's claims of prophecy. Conversely, the three Jewish Tribes were quite wary of his claims and only a few of them converted to Islam. One Jewish tribe fled, one was forcibly ejected, and one was completely slaughtered. Accordingly, as a community, the Jews of Medina bore a negative image of Muhammad, at the end of their encounter.
No. The holy Quran is not the biography of Muhammad PBUH.
The Jews of Medina most commonly spoke in Arabic at the time of the Prophet Muhammad.
As far as I can tell Muhammad was classified as a spree killer.
Muhammad Ali was born and raised in Louisville Kentucky!
Children have the job of learning the torah, so later on they can tell teach their children. So the Jewish people will never die out.
If your mom is Jewish then ur Jewish. But if ur dad is then u r not.
There is no formal Jewish custom, tradition, or law in this regard. But it makes sense in a way, that since the family unit is such an exceptionally strong infrastructure in a Jewish young person's maturation, if the newly-engaged couple are not totally estranged from their parents, then those are the first people they would want to tell.
We cannot answer your question if you do not tell us what the following is.
As far as I can tell, no, Martha Raddatz is not Jewish.