Yes she is. Her grandma and grandpa are Jewish. Jewish tradition makes the judgment call depending on a person's mother. If the grandmother is Jewish, the daughter would be Jewish, and then a grand daughter would also be Jewish, in turn.
You daughter's husband's mother is your daughter's mother-in-law. The English language has no term for a relationship between you and your daughter's mother-in-law.
According to Jewish law, you are only Jewish if you have a Jewish-born mother, or if you convert.So if your great great grandmother was Jewish, and she had a daughter (who was your great grandmother), and she had a daughter (who was your grandmother) and she had a daughter (who was your mother) then you would be Jewish. But your great great grandfather has nothing to do with it.Even under Reform Jewish law, which recognizes you as Jewish if your father is Jewish, they would not recognize "patrilineal descent" past one generation (in other words, you're not Jewish if your father's father was Jewish).
Daughter.
they are your cousin
she was the daughter of a Jewish woman who left her Jewish husband for a sheik and took her then nine year old daughter and converted to Islam (based on Gita Boaron who claims to be a cousin)
Kaddish is a Jewish mourning ritual, so yes, a daughter would be expected to mourn the death of her mother but I don't believe it's obligatory.
Two mother-in-laws call each other "daughter-in-law."
Cousin - In - Law
she was the daughter of a Jewish woman who left her Jewish husband for a sheik and took her then nine year old daughter and converted to Islam (based on Gita Boaron who claims to be a cousin)
Yes
Mitosis