They hated it. Would anyone like living in a foreign country where no one understands his/her language he/she can't understand the foreign tongue!
It was a living hell.
Jews were forced into ghettos and often died from disease or lack of food
like yeah, millions. there evry where!
No, there were survivors, too. There were also Jews living in countries like the US that were beyond the reach of the Nazis.
Uk is the country that the Indians like the most for doing business and for living.
You could type in Google" What kind of strange things would happen to see that ghosts are living in you house" All kinds of strange things like strange sounds, strange stuff like ex. ( I put my blanket there, but why did my blanket come back the space that i putted it there before that.
Originally, the Jewish faith was created in what is now modern day Israel. Many Jews live in Israel today, and many people associate Jewish people with that country today. Not ALL Jews are from Israel. There are many that have ancestors who lived in ancient Israel, but many could have converted to Judaism but lived in another country. Saying that Jews are from one country is like saying that Christians come from Italy, it's just not true. Therefore, no Jews are not from a certain country.
It depends entirely on what country you're referring to, and whether you are talking about Orthodox Jews or non-Orthodox Jews.
Yes, turkeys (not turkey's) have cells, as do all living things except for strange bodies like viruses.
just like you when you finally pee and you get a strange pleasure. that is the pleasure a poor country gets when they see food and water. my view point. :D
Italy enacted racial laws in 1938, eliminating civil rights for Jews. About 6000 Jews left the country to avoid this indignity, reducing the Jewish population to about 40,000 at the start of the war. Jewish refugees fleeing German occupied lands added to these numbers, so that by 1943, there were something like 44,500 Jews living in Italy. Of these, 7,680 died during the Holocaust (mostly at Auschwitz).
Just like anyone else. They either choose names they just like, or they name their children after a relative (usually a deceased relative for Ashkenazic Jews, and a living relative for Sefardic Jews).