Sephardi Jews differ from the more common Ashkenazi Jews in that they are the descendants of Jews from the Iberian Peninsula up until the Spanish Inquisition and the Arab World in general as opposed to being from Europe. They have differing variations in culture and in practises, which mainly comes from the fact that they interpret halakhah (Jewish Law) in a different manner.
It is worth noting that Sephardi Jews are considered just as Jewish as Ashkenazi Jews, there are just fewer of them.
Jews are Jewish and non-Jews are a different religion.
The same as American Jews and American Christians. It's about the faith.
Because Jews are not just a religion they are a race of people, and you can tell the difference. just like you can tell the difference between Asians and whites.
Most Jews are Ashkenazim, Jews historically from Europe. (Israel is split roughly 50/50 between Ashkenazim and Sephardim, but the remaining global community is predominantly Ashkenazi.) However, most Jews are Semites, not Caucasoids as Europeans are.
No, that's the wrong way around. The country or gentile people of Ashkenaz existed long before Jews ever came there. Western Jews are called Ashkenazim because they dwelt in that country for a time.
Some Jews are ashkenazim and some are sefardim.
Ashkenazim Jews from Israel have animosity towards Sephardi Jews from Israel. Ashkenazim view them as second class Jews. Before 1492 it was the other way around. Sephardi shined more than Ashkenazim then. It is like a wheel of fortune.There are very smart Ashkenazim but there are very smart Sephardi too. Sephardi Jews should not be treated as second class Jews because of the color of their skin since both are Jewish... Ashkenazim and Sephardi should be treated equally well.The above outlines the historical context, but does not provide an answer. The typical reason that there was intra-Jewish discrimination in Israel was that Mizrahim (Jews from the Arab World typically called Sephardim) were typically uneducated, superstitious, and generally not very well-informed about how the world worked. European Jews were lawyers, bankers, and doctors (for the most part) and Arab Jews were merchants, tradesmen, and artisans (for the most part). Because of these adjustment issues, Mizrahim generally were poorer and stuck out like sore thumbs in the Western-Style Israeli System.Anti-Mizrahi discrimination in Israel is fast-disappearing as the children and grandchildren of the original immigrants are more at home in Israel, serve in the Armed Forces, and generally have close relations with Ashkenazim (European Jews).Answer:Let's not generalize. Very many Sephardim and Ashkenazim are marrying each other recently.
Yes, but Ashkenazi Jews are stricter than Sephardi Jews.
Cornmeal -for Sephardim yes, for Ashkenazim no. Grits - If you're asking about grits made from corn (such as hominy), then these too are okay for Sephardi Jews only.
Ashkenazim are Jews of Central and Eastern Europe who speak Yiddish (Judeo-German with Hebrew, Aramaic, and Slavic influences) and follow the Jewish religion (a monotheistic religion based on the Mosaic tradition and Rabbinical commentary as described in the Torah and Talmud). They claim to be (partially at least) descended from the Ancient Israelites of the Middle East, and generally only marry other Jews and are separate from their host populations (i.e. if an Ashkenazi Jew lives in Poland, he will not be that involved in non-Jewish Polish soceity) Non-Ashkenazi is a broad term really. I do not know if you mean Jews of other places (e.g. Sephardi Jews of Spain, Turkey and North Africa, Mizrahi Jews of the Middle East, Yemenite Jews, etc.) or non-Jewish central and Eastern Europeans.
Yes, but there's not enough information available to them, like with Ashkenazi Jews.
The Western Jews (Ashkenazim), and those of the East (Sephardim).
The Jews of Europe are the Ashkenazim (named after the city of Ashkenaz, Poland). Also known as Ashkenazic Jews.
Ashkenazi Jews are from Eastern Europe.
Sephardi is a term used to refer to Jews who live(d) in Sepharad, the ancient name for Spain, mainly after the Roman exile. As Solomon did not live in Spain, nor was from Spain, he was not a Sephardi Jew.
Ashkenazi Jews aren't more strict than Sephardi Jews, this question is based on a false assumption.
No, that's the wrong way around. The country or gentile people of Ashkenaz existed long before Jews ever came there. Western Jews are called Ashkenazim because they dwelt in that country for a time.