Jews do not avoid samaria, but there is a longstanding divide between Jews and Samaritans, a minority population indigenous to Samaria. Samaritans believe that God sanctified Mount Gerizim (outside modern Nablus) as the holy site for sacrifices. Jews say the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. This division may be a relic of the division between Judah and Israel before the Babylonian Exile, with the Samaritans being a remnant of the population of the northern kingdom of Israel that managed to hang onto their original homes through the invasions that destroyed that kingdom. The Samaritan Torah has been passed down through the past 2500 years through an independent scribal tradition from the Jewish Torah. The two Torahs differ in about 6000 p rlaces, mostly small variations in spelling or grammar, but a few significant places. The Samaritans entirely reject the Jewish texts added to The Bible after the Torah.
Note: The question was in the past tense, but I've answered in the present tense. Samaritans still exist, they are not confined to an old Christian parable.
AnswerJoseph and Mary would have avoided Samaria, which lay between Judea and Galilee, because of ill-feeling between the Jews and the Samaritans.
Samaritans were considered social outcasts during the time of Jesus because they were seen as heterodox in their religious beliefs and practices, as they only accepted the first five books of the Bible. Additionally, there was historical animosity between Samaritans and Jews, dating back to the Assyrian conquest of the Northern Kingdom of Israel. These factors led to social and religious tensions that marginalized Samaritans in the eyes of many Jews.
The Jews first settled the West Bank or as it was known then "Judea and Samaria" 3200 years ago. King David further cemented Jewish hold on Judea and Samaria when he declared Jerusalem his capital. Jews resided throughout the ages in cities such as Hebron, Shchem (Nablus) and (East) Jerusalem but were forced to flee following Jordanian occupation in 1948. Jews started returning to Judea and Samaria (West Bank) in 1967 right after Israel gained control of the territory. Today around 20% of the population in the West Bank is Jewish and their share keeps growing.
sychor - a town, and samaria a region/state. sychor was within samaria xx
Samaria is in the region that is referred to as the West Bank. To Israel, it is known as the Judea and Samaria Area.
No. "Hebrews" refer to the ancestors of today's Jews, and "Palestinians" refers to the modern day Arab inhabitants of Judea, Samaria, and Gaza.
To avoid assimilation.
Agnes Samaria was born in 1972.
All people everywhere want to avoid persecution by anybody.
No, Samaria is a region in Israel. It is in what is referred to as the West Bank.
Jews hid in order to avoid deportation to death camps in Eastern Europe.
Philip went to Samaria. He had to preach about Christ to the samaratians