Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Those are the major, monotheistic religions in the region. The minority religions of Druze and Baha'i also have holy sites in Israel.
Most religions of the world do not have holy sites near (or in) Israel, such as:Ancestor WorshipBuddhismCao DaiConfucianismDruidsHinduismNative African ReligionsNative American ReligionsShenismShintoismSikhismTaoismTengriismWiccansAdditionally, a number of minority Middle Eastern religions have no holy sites in Israel: Mandaeanism and SabianismShabakismYarsanism (Ahl-e-Haqq)YazidismZoroastrianismIt may perhaps be easier to list those religions with holy sites near or in Israel JudaismChristianityIslamBaha'iDruze
Jerusalem
Jerusalem
Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Baha'i.
I'm not sure whether you mean religions that look at JERUSALEM as a holy place, or ISRAEL as a whole?As far as I know, no religion - not even Judaism - looks at Israel in its entirety as a holy place. However, both Judaism and Muslim religions regard Jerusalem as a holy place.Jerusalem is a city claimed by both Israel and Palestine for that reason, and is therefore the site of a lot of religious animosity.Answer:Actually many Christians and Jews view the entire country as a holy place.
Hindus do not exactly have holy persons or prophets like other religions. Hindus believe in avatars and gods unlike the other religions like Islam and Christianity that have many saints and prophets.
Judaism, Christianity, Islam, & Baha'i.
The Holy Land is Israel; and it's where Judaism and Christianity started.
Not all religions believe in the concept of the Holy Spirit as understood in Christianity. Some religions, like Islam and Judaism, have different beliefs about the nature of God and the spiritual realm. Each religion has its own unique understanding of spirituality and divine presence.
It's the area surrounding Jerusalem, in Modern day Israel.
Israel is probably the country with the largest variety of holy sites for different faiths (Judaism, Samaritanism, Christianity, Islam, Baha'i, Druze, etc.) However, other countries also have holy sites that are multi-religious. India has a number of Sufi Tombs that are holy for both Muslims and Hindus. The Tombs of Ezra and Ezekiel in Iraq are holy for Jews, Muslims, and Mandaeans. The Chinese religions (Shenism, Daoism, etc.) often share holy sites and temples.