Jewish homes are no different than non-Jewish homes, though they may have a mezuzah in the doorway of one or more doors, and they may have some ritual or symbolic objects.
If there is a kosher kitchen, it will have two sets of dishes and cookware, stored separately from each other, and possibly a third set stored outside the kitchen for use on Passover.
The Jewish home is considered to be Israel. All Jews are welcome there, and some Jews think that all Jews should live in Israel.
A Jewish house of worship is called a synagogue. Jews often pray at home, as well.
You don't ring the doorbell and/or yell at the door. Jews in mourning have their doors unlocked, so you walk in quietly. If the family is Orthodox, you can bring kosher food to their home.
Boys and men are given skullcaps for their heads and they learn the Jewish traditions and they eat kosher food.
Corrie ten Boom is deceased. She died in 1983. But no, she was not Jewish. Her father wore the Jewish star at one time because he wanted to identify with the Jews in their suffering, and because the Savior was Jewish. But the ten Boom family was Dutch.
Jewish people live in many countries, particularly the USA and their 'home': Israel.
The League of Nations approved the British Mandate for Palestine as a national home for the Jewish People as early as 1919.
Peach is celebrated in the home.
A Jewish house of prayer is called a synagogue. A Jewish house of Torah-study is called a beit midrash or a Yeshiva. A home where Jews live is simply called "a Jewish house."
Jewish prayer at home is usually personal and varies by individual, just as it does in Christian religions. Many traditional Jews also recite standard prayers from a book called a Siddur.
Israel, while home to many Jews, also is home to Muslims, Christians, Druze, Baha'i and others.
No. The Jewish religion does not have priests. Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday that is celebrated by each family in the home.