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During World War 2, the Nazis put many of them on starvation diets and worked them. When they got too weak to work, they packed them into gas chambers. Eventually the oxygen would run out and they would all die. Some they hanged. They put a wire around the necks of some while they were standing up. When the person became exhausted after a day or two, he or she would fall asleep and choke to death. They way they put 6 million Jews to death varied. (The Nazis also put 5 million others to death. That was not part of your question.)

In Russia, before the Communists took over every Jewish man had to serve 14 years in the army and no Jew could own land. Frequent pogroms occurred against Jewish communities. Occasional persecutions occurred against Jews in all parts of Europe. They were run out of England in 1250. They came back shortly afterward. Until the Nazis took over Germany, they were not persecuted in Northern Europe after it became Protestant. In Spain after 1492 they were forced to convert to Christianity. Since Spain basically wore the outward trappings of Christianity, many became pseudo-Christians and maintained an underground Jewish Movement. They would be baptized and buried by the church and go the required once a year. In the United States, religious persecution basically ended with the disgust that followed the Salem Witch Trials. The Jews, like everyone else had to pay a tax to the established church. Since most people had nothing to do with the established church, everyone who paid the tax resented it. Still, people did not suffer for their religious beliefs. They suffered because they did not pay the tax.

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12y ago
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Judaism believes that everything the creator (god) does is for good. From our perspective it may seem evil but in a 2 world picture, we trust that whatever happens here on earth is ultimately according to a divine plan that is good. Our souls are here on earth for a reason. We are here on a mission to accomplish something and earth is a proving ground for receiving eternal benefit.

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Judaism teaches that human beings have free will. Suffering is caused by the bad choices of those that inflict the suffering.

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13y ago

Jews believe that all human beings have free will. Suffering is the result of bad choices made by the people who inflict the suffering.

Suffering can also be caused by nature (such as an earthquake), which is considered inherently neutral by most interpretations in Judaism.

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13y ago

Suffering is a huge area of discussion in the Jewish world, with complex philosophy. Most Jews says it is the result of the free will of human beings, or the interaction with humans and nature. A small minority of Orthodox Jews regard it as punishment from God.

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13y ago

If you do not obey God's laws, you will be punished greatly, and will never be classified as one of God's children again

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12y ago

Jews are every bit as human as every other religious group. Accordingly, they don't like suffering or seeing other people suffer.

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12y ago

Suffering is in order to:

prepare us for the next world

cleanse one's sins

add to one's merits

provide humility

bring us to pray

test us

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10y ago

Yes, we're humans too.

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Q: What is the Jewish response to evil and suffering?
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Hindu response to Evil and Suffering?

Type your answer here... they respond well and think that suffering i good as long as it doesnt cause harm to anyone.


What is the Hindi response to suffering?

pida


What is worse suffering or evil?

Usually suffering is the result of committing some evil act. Our conscience gets the beter of us and so we suffer from guilt at having committed evil.


Why do evil suffering cause some people to reject belief in god?

People may reject belief in God if they hear or see of evil and suffering because they are told he is omnipotent, omnibenevolent and onmiscience. So if they are told he is all of these then why cant he stop the evil and suffering?


Why do evil and suffering cause some people to reject belief in God?

Some people struggle to reconcile the existence of evil and suffering with the idea of a benevolent and all-powerful God. This can lead them to question or reject their belief in God's existence, as they see these things as incompatible. The presence of evil and suffering in the world can challenge their faith and raise existential doubts about the nature of God.


What was the Jewish response to what was happening to them during the holocaust?

There was no single, co-ordinated Jewish response. Have a look at the related question.


Why is there evil and suffering?

A lot of people ask themselves...If God is all powerful and loving, then why is there evil and suffering in the world. Evil as in crime and murder and suffering as in earthquakes, hurricanes or even an illness. What I have learned in my R.E lesson is that if there is no evil and suffering, there is no generosity in the world and the best thing I like about Islam is that most of it is to do about thinking less about yourself and thinking more about others. Most important is to give to charity. If there is no suffering, there is no charity, and if there is no charity, less people will think about others.


What is conscious evil?

Conscious evil is the same as moral evil, which is contrasted to ontological evil. Ontological evil is not due to human agency; it occurs when human suffering is caused by natural events such as earthquakes and hurricanes. Moral or conscious evil is due to human agency; it occurs when a human being causes human suffering. .


Where did evil come from and why is there suffering in the world?

A:In philosophy, this is called the problem of evil and suffering. Evil must come from somewhere, but if God is all-powerful, all-knowing, all good, and the sole creator of the world, then why is there evil and suffering? The problem can only be resolved if at least one of these propositions is false. Therefore if God is all-powerful, he is either not all-knowing and is therefore unaware of all the evil in the world, or he is not all-good and is unconcerned about all. Evil and suffering exist because at least one proposition of religion is false.


A Buddhist response to evil and suffering?

Suffering is a disturbance or irritation of the mindstream. It is an obscuration of the mind, or essence of a person, or, if you will, the soul. The opposite of suffering in Buddhist epistemology is not really happiness or even the cessation of suffering, but freedom from the polarizing concept that causes us to be attracted to some things and averse to others. Suffering is thought to be the result of confused thinking. People think that to be happy, they need to grasp at those things that they think will bring them pleasure. We are very attached to this idea; that having what we want will bring us happiness. It is actually that grasping, that attachment that causes suffering. The Buddhist response to evil is to understand that it emerges from the same root as suffering, and is a result of confusion about what will bring lasting happiness. Buddhists also recognize that all sentient beings have an essential Buddha Nature, and that harmful actions are a result of obscurations of that Buddha Nature.


Why is there long suffering?

In philosophy, this is called the problem of evil and suffering. If God is all-powerful, all-knowing, all good, and the sole creator of the world, then why is there evil and suffering? The problem can only be resolved if at least one of these propositions is false.


When was Jewish response to The Forty Days of Musa Dagh created?

Jewish response to The Forty Days of Musa Dagh was created in 1933.