Answer 1
This is an erroneous question. In defining ethnicity, as taken from the UK Statistics Board (which is linked to below):
Membership of any ethnic group is something that is subjectively meaningful to the person concerned, and can be based upon a combination of categories such as:
There are Jews from all races (Oriental, Indian, Semitic, and Arab), African, Caucasian, Latin, etc.). These are not converts, but people descended as Jews through thousands of years of history. Jews are found in most countries of the world (Libya expelled every last one after Israel regained her independence in 1948, and it is noteworthy that over 1 million Jews were expelled from Muslim lands (Arab and Persian [Iran], while about half that number of Muslims were displaced, at their own choosing [Israel asked them to stay and live in peace], from Israel, yet the UN has not passed one resolution for these 1 million Jewish refugees). Wherever Jews are found, they speak the local language and observe local customs, in addition to practicing their Judaic religious customs and the worship styles of their religious communities. Jews are no different in this regard than Christians or Muslims throughout the world, who practice their religions within their communities and countries.
In short, being Jewish is not an ethnicity.
Answer 2
In the general spirit of the question, I would disagree with Answer 1 in that Judaism is not an ethnicity. Living in diverse regions across the world does not prohibit a group of people from maintaining an ethnic character and the Romani (Gypsies) would be a clear example of another ethnicity that exists across multiple cultures. However, the Romani have no uniform religion, often believing a bowdlerized version of the local dominant faith.
There are several other groups that are both ethnically and religiously defined, but the Jews are certainly among the most famous, most numerous, and most widely scattered. The next most commonly referred to group like this is the Druze, an ethno-religious group that is split between the nations of Syria, Israel, and Lebanon. The Druze religion is for the most part secretive, but what is known about is that it has become an independent offshoot of Shi'a Islam (in the same way that Baha'i has become an independent offshoot of Shi'a Islam). In both the case of the Druze and the Baha'i, both followers of those faiths and Muslims do not believe the Druze and Baha'i to be the same or to be Muslim.
Another group of people live on the northern border of Iraq and Iran and are called the Yazidi. They have a religion related to Zoroastrianism but influenced by Islam. Ethnically, they are similar to the Kurds and are occasionally considered to be Kurdish, but while some Kurds do believe in Yazidism, most see it as a heresy and separate identity and most Yazidi would not identify as Kurdish if asked.
The Copts of Egypt are almost as numerous as the Jews (perhaps larger). They represent the original inhabitants of Egypt and practice a unique form of Christianity that is practiced by no other ethnic group. However, Copts do not traditionally consider themselves a distinct race since many Muslim Egyptians also trace their lineage back to Coptic ancestors who converted centuries ago and Coptic Christians are still in communion with the larger Church and as such are not an entirely unique religion as Jews, Druze, and Yazidi are.
In classical Jewish sources such as the Torah, Jews are spoken of as a nation, with Judaism being their national code of living.Today, many speak of Judaism as both a religion and an ethnicity. It's an ethnicity because Jews are descended from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their wives: Jews, despite their diversity, are related to each other (as has been shown by DNA analyses of far-flung Jewish communities). And it's a religion, because Judaism is defined in dictionaries as the religion of Moses; the religion of the Torah, which includes people born Jewish as well as non-ethnic Jews who became converts.
In classical Jewish sources such as the Torah, Jews are spoken of as a nation, with Judaism being their national code of living.Today, many speak of Judaism as both a religion and an ethnicity. It's an ethnicity because Jews are descended from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their wives: Jews, despite their diversity, are related to each other (as has been shown by DNA analyses of far-flung Jewish communities). And it's a religion, because Judaism is defined in dictionaries as the religion of Moses; the religion of the Torah, which includes people born Jewish as well as non-ethnic Jews who became converts.
In classical Jewish sources such as the Torah, Jews are spoken of as a nation, with Judaism being their national code of living. Today, many speak of Judaism as both a religion and an ethnicity. It's an ethnicity because Jews are descended from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their wives: Jews, despite their diversity, are related to each other (as has been shown by DNA analyses of far-flung Jewish communities). And it's a religion, because Judaism is defined in dictionaries as the religion of Moses; the religion of the Torah, which includes people born Jewish as well as non-ethnic Jews who became converts.
Jews.
Jews come in all genders, just like non-Jews do. Gender has nothing to do with ethnicity or religion.
The motivation was entirely racist, political and ideological, not religious. (Obviously, there was a religious background to antisemitism, but religion was not a motive for the Holocaust). Michael is arguing with me about this, and i am showing him that I am right.---The Holocaust wasn't all about religion. Sure, the Jews were the main targets, but 6 million other people were also killed. Poles, Russians, homosexuals, gypsies, communists, socialists, intellectuals, and anyone who disagreed with Hitler. The Jews were the main target yes, but not the only target and people seem to forget that.---The Nazis did not persecute the Jews for their religion but because of their ethnicity ('race'). The Holocaust had almost nothing to do with religion.
Answer 1The term "Judaism" technically applies only to the religion followed by the Jewish people. Whether or not Jews constitute an ethnic group is a question that has kept many great minds busy for many years.A look at the physical features of Jews from around the world will reveal very great variation. There are black Jews, there are Indian Jews, there are Oriental Jews, and Jews with hair and eyes of every colour - it is said that people with blonde hair and blue eyes make up a larger percentage of Israel's population than that of Sweden. So it seems that Jews cannot be termed an ethnic group.What's more, many people convert to Judaism. Somebody who does so is commonly known as a ger or a "Jew by choice." (It should be noted that Jewish law is very clear on the fact that converts must never be considered "less of a Jew" than those born as Jews. A ger is, according to Talmudic law, every bit as much a Jew as someone born to a Jewish mother, which is traditionally the way that Judaism is passed from one generation to the next. Some Reform and all Progressive Jews also consider that somebody born to a Jewish father and a non-Jewish mother is Jewish, too).However, there is also a Jewish ethnicity shared by all those who have Jewish mitochondrial DNA. This has led to a general agreement that the Jews are an ethno-religious group, ie; a group that is defined as Jews by either ethnicity or religion, or both.Answer 2Judaism is defined as both a religion and an ethnicity. It's an ethnicity because Jews are descended from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their wives: Jews, despite their diversity, are related to each other (as has been shown by DNA analyses of far-flung Jewish communities). And it's a religion, because Judaism is defined as the religion of Moses; the religion of the Torah, which includes people born Jewish as well as converts.
Jews religion is called Judaism.
The religion is Judaism. The people are Jews.
Judaism is the religion of Jewish people, or Jews. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Judaism is the religion of Jewish people, or Jews. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Jews are defined by their religion. Culture is secondary and is, to a degree, subject to change and influences.
The Jewish people.