Arab is a race, not a religion. Arabs can be of whatever religion they choose. If they are Christian, they attend a church. If they are Muslim, they attend a mosque. So on and so forth.
Kaaba.
Yes. The three monotheistic religions (of which Arabs and Israelis are mainly composed) all venerate the city.
To unite the Arabs (to his side) & turn the campaign into a "Holy War."
Caliph uthman. Destroyed all variants of their holy book
Eating pork is forbidden in Islam, so all Muslims must not eat it including Muslim Arabs. It's an explicit prohibition in the Holy Qur'an. Pork is not allowed for Muslims to eat, per Religion command, whether they are Arabs or not Arabs. Refer to question below for more information. It is important to note that Arab Christians do eat pork, but some do not in order to respect their neighbors' wishes.
Arabs is not a religion. Muslims venerate Mecca as a Holy City. All Arabs are not Muslim. All Muslims are not Arabs.
Arabs are an ethnicity, so they do not have any holy cities per se. However, as over 90% of Arabs are Muslims, it would be safe to say that Mecca, Medina, and Jerusalem, the three most holy cities in Islam, are holy to most Arabs.
The Holy building for Buddhists is called a Temple.
Holy Ghost Building was created in 2008.
The Sikh holy building is called a Gurdwara.
arabs wear almost no jewlery and if they did the jewelery must have been holy. or had some kind of value to them.
Dude... What do you know about Arabs?! An Arab house is a normal appartment in a normal building or a normal Villa!
Kaaba.
Holy days belong to religions, not to ethnic groups and "Arab" is an ethnic group. There are Sunni Muslim Arabs, Shiite Muslim Arabs, Christian Arabs, and Arabs of other minority religions all of whom have their own unique holidays. Since most Arabs are either Sunni or Shiite Muslims, the holidays that they share are commonly practiced by Arabs, like Eid al-Fitr or Eid al-Adha. Additionally, the day of long prayer every week for all Muslims (Arab or not) is Friday, but unlike among Jews and Christians, the day is not a holy day, just one of communal prayer.
Yes. The three monotheistic religions (of which Arabs and Israelis are mainly composed) all venerate the city.
The Church itself is the people, not the building. No, the Church building is not the Christian holy place. God is everywhere. It is the body of a Christian that is holy.
Almost all major religions have holy books and holy languages.