Prayers are in Hebrew and Aramaic.
Orthodox Judaism follows the historical and traditional ritual beliefs of Judaism
Haredi Judaism
This would depend on the type of Judaism considered, and could be either the US or Israel. Israel has less than half the overall individual or family Temple memberships as in the US. There are, however, slightly more Orthodox Temple members in Israel than in the US.
Orthodox Judaism.
Yes, but Orthodox Judaism does not.
Orthodox Judaism.
Orthodox Judaism is growing.
Orthodox.
Hasidim are a portion of Orthodox Jews. They follow Judaism on a strictly Orthodox level.
It depends on how strictly you define Orthodox Judaism. Orthodox Jews hold that their form of Judaism is the same form of Judaism practiced by the Biblical Patriarch Abraham. As a result, he is the Founder of Orthodox Judaism. However, Jews did not go around calling themselves "Orthodox" until Samson Raphael Hirsch coined the term in the 1800s as a response to the Liberal forms of Judaism (Reform and Historical-Conservative) that were contemporaneously developing.
The most traditional branch of Judaism is referred to as Orthodox Judaism.
It's the strictest, most Orthodox form of Judaism.