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Jews
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Key Information

Jews (Hebrew: יְהוּדִים, ISO 259-2: Yehudim, Israeli pronunciation: [jehuˈdim]), or the Jewish people, are an ethnoreligious group[15] and nation,[16] originating from the Israelites of ancient Israel and Judah.[17] They traditionally adhere to Judaism.[18][19] Jewish ethnicity, religion, and community are highly interrelated,[20][21] as Judaism is an ethnic religion,[22][23] though many ethnic Jews do not practice it.[24][25][26] Religious Jews regard converts to Judaism as members of the Jewish nation, pursuant to the long-standing conversion process.[24][27]

The Israelites emerged from the pre-existing Canaanite peoples to establish Israel and Judah in the Southern Levant during the Iron Age.[28] Originally, Jews referred to the inhabitants of the kingdom of Judah[29] and were distinguished from the gentiles and the Samaritans.[30] According to the Hebrew Bible, these inhabitants predominately originate from the tribe of Judah, who were descendants of Judah, the fourth son of Jacob.[31] The tribe of Benjamin were another significant demographic in Judah and were considered Jews too.[32] By the late 6th century BCE, Judaism had evolved from the Israelite religion, dubbed Yahwism (for Yahweh) by modern scholars,[33] having a theology that religious Jews believe to be the expression of the Mosaic covenant between God and the Jewish people.[34] After the Babylonian exile, Jews referred to followers of Judaism,[32][35] descendants of the Israelites,[36][37][38][39] citizens of Judea,[40][41] or allies of the Judean state.[5][42][43] Jewish migration within the Mediterranean region during the Hellenistic period, followed by population transfers, caused by events like the Jewish–Roman wars, gave rise to the Jewish diaspora, consisting of diverse Jewish communities that maintained their sense of Jewish history, identity, and culture.[44]

In the following millennia, Jewish diaspora communities coalesced into three major ethnic subdivisions according to where their ancestors settled: the Ashkenazim (Central and Eastern Europe), the Sephardim (Iberian Peninsula), and the Mizrahim (Middle East and North Africa).[45][46] While these three major divisions account for most of the world's Jews, there are other smaller Jewish groups outside of the three.[47] Prior to World War II, the global Jewish population reached a peak of 16.7 million,[48] representing around 0.7% of the world's population at that time. During World War II, approximately six million Jews throughout Europe were systematically murdered by Nazi Germany in a genocide known as the Holocaust.[49][50] Since then, the population has slowly risen again, and as of 2021, was estimated to be at 15.2 million by the demographer Sergio Della Pergola[2] or less than 0.2% of the total world population in 2012.[51][b] Today, over 85% of Jews live in Israel or the United States. Israel, whose population is 73.9% Jewish, is the only country where Jews comprise more than 2.5% of the population.[2]

Jews have significantly influenced and contributed to the development and growth of human progress in many fields, both historically and in modern times, including in science and technology,[53] philosophy,[54] ethics,[55] literature,[53] governance,[53] business,[53] art, music, comedy, theatre,[56] cinema, architecture,[53] food, medicine,[57][58] and religion. Jews founded Christianity[59] and had an indirect but profound influence on Islam.[60] In these ways and others, Jews have played a significant role in the development of Western culture.[61][62]

Name and etymology

[edit]

The term "Jew" is derived from the Hebrew word יְהוּדִי Yehudi, with the plural יְהוּדִים Yehudim.[63] Endonyms in other Jewish languages include the Ladino ג׳ודיו Djudio (plural ג׳ודיוס, Djudios) and the Yiddish ייִד Yid (plural ייִדן Yidn).

Though Genesis 29:35 and 49:8 connect "Judah" with the verb yada, meaning "praise", scholars generally agree that "Judah" most likely derives from the name of a Levantine geographic region dominated by gorges and ravines.[64][65] The gradual ethnonymic shift from "Israelites" to "Jews", regardless of their descent from Judah, although not contained in the Torah, is made explicit in the Book of Esther (4th century BCE) of the Tanakh.[66] Some modern scholars disagree with the conflation, based on the works of Josephus, Philo and Apostle Paul.[67]

The English word "Jew" is a derivation of Middle English Gyw, Iewe. The latter was loaned from the Old French giu, which itself evolved from the earlier juieu, which in turn derived from judieu/iudieu which through elision had dropped the letter "d" from the Medieval Latin Iudaeus, which, like the New Testament Greek term Ioudaios, meant both "Jew" and "Judean" / "of Judea".[68] The Greek term was a loan from Aramaic *yahūdāy, corresponding to Hebrew יְהוּדִי Yehudi.[31]

Some scholars prefer translating Ioudaios as "Judean" in the Bible since it is more precise, denotes the community's origins and prevents readers from engaging in antisemitic eisegesis.[69][70] Others disagree, believing that it erases the Jewish identity of Biblical characters such as Jesus.[30] Daniel R. Schwartz distinguishes "Judean" and "Jew". Here, "Judean" refers to the inhabitants of Judea, which encompassed southern Palestine. Meanwhile, "Jew" refers to the descendants of Israelites that adhere to Judaism. Converts are included in the definition.[71] But Shaye J.D. Cohen argues that "Judean" is inclusive of believers of the Judean God and allies of the Judean state.[5]

The etymological equivalent is in use in other languages, e.g., يَهُودِيّ yahūdī (sg.), al-yahūd (pl.), in Arabic, "Jude" in German, "judeu" in Portuguese, "Juif" (m.)/"Juive" (f.) in French, "jøde" in Danish and Norwegian, "judío/a" in Spanish, "jood" in Dutch, "żyd" in Polish etc., but derivations of the word "Hebrew" are also in use to describe a Jew, e.g., in Italian (Ebreo), in Persian ("Ebri/Ebrani" (Persian: عبری/عبرانی)) and Russian (Еврей, Yevrey).[72] The German word "Jude" is pronounced [ˈjuːdə], the corresponding adjective "jüdisch" [ˈjyːdɪʃ] (Jewish) is the origin of the word "Yiddish".[73]

According to The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, fourth edition (2000),

It is widely recognized that the attributive use of the noun Jew, in phrases such as Jew lawyer or Jew ethics, is both vulgar and highly offensive. In such contexts Jewish is the only acceptable possibility. Some people, however, have become so wary of this construction that they have extended the stigma to any use of Jew as a noun, a practice that carries risks of its own. In a sentence such as There are now several Jews on the council, which is unobjectionable, the substitution of a circumlocution like Jewish people or persons of Jewish background may in itself cause offense for seeming to imply that Jew has a negative connotation when used as a noun.[74]

Identity

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Map of Canaan

Judaism shares some of the characteristics of a nation,[75][76][77][78][79][80] an ethnicity,[15] a religion, and a culture,[81][82][83] making the definition of who is a Jew vary slightly depending on whether a religious or national approach to identity is used.[84][better source needed] Generally, in modern secular usage, Jews include three groups: people who were born to a Jewish family regardless of whether or not they follow the religion, those who have some Jewish ancestral background or lineage (sometimes including those who do not have strictly matrilineal descent), and people without any Jewish ancestral background or lineage who have formally converted to Judaism and therefore are followers of the religion.[85] In the context of biblical and classical literature, Jews could refer to inhabitants of the Kingdom of Judah,[29][30][31][32] or the broader Judean region,[40][41][86] allies of the Judean state,[5][42][43] or anyone that followed Judaism.[87][35]

Historical definitions of Jewish identity have traditionally been based on halakhic definitions of matrilineal descent, and halakhic conversions. These definitions of who is a Jew date back to the codification of the Oral Torah into the Babylonian Talmud, around 200 CE. Interpretations by Jewish sages of sections of the Tanakh – such as Deuteronomy 7:1–5, which forbade intermarriage between their Israelite ancestors and seven non-Israelite nations: "for that [i.e. giving your daughters to their sons or taking their daughters for your sons,] would turn away your children from following me, to serve other gods"[28][failed verification] – are used as a warning against intermarriage between Jews and gentiles. Leviticus 24:10 says that the son in a marriage between a Hebrew woman and an Egyptian man is "of the community of Israel." This is complemented by Ezra 10:2–3, where Israelites returning from Babylon vow to put aside their gentile wives and their children.[88][89] A popular theory is that the rape of Jewish women in captivity brought about the law of Jewish identity being inherited through the maternal line, although scholars challenge this theory citing the Talmudic establishment of the law from the pre-exile period.[90] Another argument is that the rabbis changed the law of patrilineal descent to matrilineal descent due to the widespread rape of Jewish women by Roman soldiers.[91] Since the anti-religious Haskalah movement of the late 18th and 19th centuries, halakhic interpretations of Jewish identity have been challenged.[92]

According to historian Shaye J. D. Cohen, the status of the offspring of mixed marriages was determined patrilineally in the Bible. He brings two likely explanations for the change in Mishnaic times: first, the Mishnah may have been applying the same logic to mixed marriages as it had applied to other mixtures (Kil'ayim). Thus, a mixed marriage is forbidden as is the union of a horse and a donkey, and in both unions the offspring are judged matrilineally.[93] Second, the Tannaim may have been influenced by Roman law, which dictated that when a parent could not contract a legal marriage, offspring would follow the mother.[93] Rabbi Rivon Krygier follows a similar reasoning, arguing that Jewish descent had formerly passed through the patrilineal descent and the law of matrilineal descent had its roots in the Roman legal system.[90]

Origins

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Egyptian depiction of the visit of Western Asiatics in colorful garments, labeled as Aamu. The painting is from the tomb of a 12th dynasty official Khnumhotep II at Beni Hasan, and dated to c. 1900 BCE. Their nearest Biblical contemporaries were the earliest of Hebrews, such as Abraham and Joseph.[94][95][96][97]

The prehistory and ethnogenesis of the Jews are closely intertwined with archaeology, biology, historical textual records, mythology, and religious literature. The ethnic origin of the Jews lie in the Israelites, a confederation of Iron Age Semitic-speaking tribes that inhabited a part of Canaan during the tribal and monarchic periods.[98] Modern Jews are named after and also descended from the southern Israelite Kingdom of Judah.[99][100][101][102][103][104]

Gary A. Rendsburg links the early Canaanite nomadic pastoralists confederation to the Shasu known to the Egyptians around the 15th century BCE.[105]

According to the Hebrew Bible narrative, Jewish history begins with the Biblical patriarchs such as Abraham, his son Isaac, Isaac's son Jacob, and the Biblical matriarchs Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, and Rachel, who lived in Canaan. The twelve sons of Jacob subsequently gave birth to the Twelve Tribes. Jacob and his family migrated to Ancient Egypt after being invited to live with Jacob's son Joseph by the Pharaoh himself. Jacob's descendants were later enslaved until the Exodus, led by Moses. Afterwards, the Israelites conquered Canaan under Moses' successor Joshua, and went through the period of the Biblical judges after the death of Joshua. Through the mediation of Samuel, the Israelites were subject to a king, Saul, who was succeeded by David and then Solomon, after whom the United Monarchy ended and was split into a separate Kingdom of Israel and a Kingdom of Judah. The Kingdom of Judah is described as comprising the tribes of Judah, Benjamin and partially, Levi. They later assimilated remnants of other tribes who migrated there from the northern Kingdom of Israel.[106][107][108]

In the extra-biblical record, the Israelites become visible as a people between 1200 and 1000 BCE.[109] There is well accepted archeological evidence referring to "Israel" in the Merneptah Stele, which dates to about 1200 BCE,[110][111] and in the Mesha stele from 840 BCE. It is debated whether a period like that of the Biblical judges occurred[112][113][114][115][116] and if there ever was a United Monarchy.[117][118][119][120] There is further disagreement about the earliest existence of the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah and their extent and power. Historians agree that a Kingdom of Israel existed by c. 900 BCE,[118]: 169–95 [119][120] there is a consensus that a Kingdom of Judah existed by c. 700 BCE at least,[121] and recent excavations in Khirbet Qeiyafa have provided strong evidence for dating the Kingdom of Judah to the 10th century BCE.[122] In 587 BCE, Nebuchadnezzar II, King of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, besieged Jerusalem, destroyed the First Temple and deported parts of the Judahite population.[123]

Scholars disagree regarding the extent to which the Bible should be accepted as a historical source for early Israelite history. Rendsburg states that there are two approximately equal groups of scholars who debate the historicity of the biblical narrative, the minimalists who largely reject it, and the maximalists who largely accept it, with the minimalists being the more vocal of the two.[124]

Some of the leading minimalists reframe the biblical account as constituting the Israelites' inspiring national myth narrative, suggesting that according to the modern archaeological and historical account, the Israelites and their culture did not overtake the region by force, but instead branched out of the Canaanite peoples and culture through the development of a distinct monolatristic—and later monotheistic—religion of Yahwism centered on Yahweh, one of the gods of the Canaanite pantheon. The growth of Yahweh-centric belief, along with a number of cultic practices, gradually gave rise to a distinct Israelite ethnic group, setting them apart from other Canaanites.[125][126][127] According to Dever, modern archaeologists have largely discarded the search for evidence of the biblical narrative surrounding the patriarchs and the exodus.[128]

Depiction of King Jehu, tenth king of the northern Kingdom of Israel, on the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III, 841–840 BCE.[129] This is "the only portrayal we have in ancient Near Eastern art of an Israelite or Judaean monarch".[130]

According to the maximalist position, the modern archaeological record independently points to a narrative which largely agrees with the biblical account. This narrative provides a testimony of the Israelites as a nomadic people known to the Egyptians as belonging to the Shasu. Over time these nomads left the desert and settled on the central mountain range of the land of Canaan, in simple semi-nomadic settlements in which pig bones are notably absent. This population gradually shifted from a tribal lifestyle to a monarchy. While the archaeological record of the ninth century BCE provides evidence for two monarchies, one in the south under a dynasty founded by a figure named David with its capital in Jerusalem, and one in the north under a dynasty founded by a figure named Omri with its capital in Samaria. It also points to an early monarchic period in which these regions shared material culture and religion, suggesting a common origin. Archaeological finds also provide evidence for the later cooperation of these two kingdoms in their coalition against Aram, and for their destructions by the Assyrians and later by the Babylonians.[131]

Genetic studies on Jews show that most Jews worldwide bear a common genetic heritage which originates in the Middle East, and that they share certain genetic traits with other Gentile peoples of the Fertile Crescent.[132][133][134] The genetic composition of different Jewish groups shows that Jews share a common gene pool dating back four millennia, as a marker of their common ancestral origin.[135] Despite their long-term separation, Jewish communities maintained their unique commonalities, propensities, and sensibilities in culture, tradition, and language.[136]

History

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Israel and Judah

[edit]

The earliest recorded evidence of a people by the name of Israel appears in the Merneptah Stele, which dates to around 1200 BCE. The majority of scholars agree that this text refers to the Israelites, a group that inhabited the central highlands of Canaan, where archaeological evidence shows that hundreds of small settlements were constructed between the 12th and 10th centuries BCE.[137][138] The Israelites differentiated themselves from neighboring peoples through various distinct characteristics including religious practices, prohibition on intermarriage, and an emphasis on genealogy and family history.[139][140][140]

In the 10th century BCE, two neighboring Israelite kingdoms—the northern Kingdom of Israel and the southern Kingdom of Judah—emerged. Since their inception, they shared ethnic, cultural, linguistic and religious characteristics despite a complicated relationship. Israel, with its capital mostly in Samaria, was larger and wealthier, and soon developed into a regional power.[141] In contrast, Judah, with its capital in Jerusalem, was less prosperous and covered a smaller, mostly mountainous territory. However, while in Israel the royal succession was often decided by a military coup d'état, resulting in several dynasty changes, political stability in Judah was much greater, as it was ruled by the House of David for the whole four centuries of its existence.[142] Scholars also describe Biblical Jews as a 'proto-nation', in the modern nationalist sense, comparable to classical Greeks, the Gauls and the British Celts.[143][144][145][146]

Gate from the Israelite city of Hazor's royal fort, dating to the time of Ahab, 9th century BCE

Around 720 BCE, Kingdom of Israel was destroyed when it was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which came to dominate the ancient Near East.[106] Under the Assyrian resettlement policy, a significant portion of the northern Israelite population was exiled to Mesopotamia and replaced by immigrants from the same region.[147] During the same period, and throughout the 7th century BCE, the Kingdom of Judah, now under Assyrian vassalage, experienced a period of prosperity and witnessed a significant population growth.[148] This prosperity continued until the Neo-Assyrian king Sennacherib devastated the region of Judah in response to a rebellion in the area, ultimately halting at Jerusalem.[149] Later in the same century, the Assyrians were defeated by the rising Neo-Babylonian Empire, and Judah became its vassal. In 587 BCE, following a revolt in Judah, the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II besieged and destroyed Jerusalem and the First Temple, putting an end to the kingdom. The majority of Jerusalem's residents, including the kingdom's elite, were exiled to Babylon.[150][151]

Second Temple period

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According to the Book of Ezra, the Persian Cyrus the Great ended the Babylonian exile in 538 BCE,[152] the year after he captured Babylon.[153] The exile ended with the return under Zerubbabel the Prince (so called because he was a descendant of the royal line of David) and Joshua the Priest (a descendant of the line of the former High Priests of the Temple) and their construction of the Second Temple circa 521–516 BCE.[152] As part of the Persian Empire, the former Kingdom of Judah became the province of Judah (Yehud Medinata),[154] with a smaller territory[155] and a reduced population.[118]

Judea was under control of the Achaemenids until the fall of their empire in c. 333 BCE to Alexander the Great. After several centuries under foreign imperial rule, the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleucid Empire resulted in an independent Hasmonean kingdom, under which the Jews once again enjoyed political independence for a period spanning from 110 to 63 BCE.[156] Under Hasmonean rule the boundaries of their kingdom were expanded to include not only the land of the historical kingdom of Judah, but also the Galilee and Transjordan.[157] In the beginning of this process the Idumeans, who had infiltrated southern Judea after the destruction of the First Temple, were converted en masse.[158][159] In 63 BCE, Judea was conquered by the Romans. From 37 BCE to 6 CE, the Romans allowed the Jews to maintain some degree of independence by installing the Herodian dynasty as vassal kings. However, Judea eventually came directly under Roman control and was incorporated into the Roman Empire as the province of Judaea.[160][161]

Temple menorah depicted on a coin of the Hasmonean king of Judaea Antigonus II Mattathias

The Jewish–Roman wars, a series of failed uprisings against Roman rule during the first and second centuries CE, had profound and devastating consequences for the Jewish population of Judaea.[162][163] The First Jewish–Roman War (66–73/74 CE) culminated in the destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple, after which the significantly diminished Jewish population was stripped of political autonomy.[164] A few generations later, the Bar Kokhba revolt (132–136 CE) erupted in response to Roman plans to rebuild Jerusalem as a Roman colony, and, possibly, to restrictions on circumcision.[165] Its violent suppression by the Romans led to the near-total depopulation of Judea,[166][167] and the demographic and cultural center of Jewish life shifted to Galilee.[167] Jews were subsequently banned from residing in Jerusalem and the surrounding area,[168] and the province of Judaea was renamed Syria Palaestina.[169][170] These developments effectively ended Jewish efforts to restore political sovereignty in the region for nearly two millennia.[171] Similar upheavals impacted the Jewish communities in the empire's eastern provinces during the Diaspora Revolt (115–117 CE), leading to the near-total destruction of Jewish diaspora communities in Libya, Cyprus and Egypt,[172][173] including the highly influential community in Alexandria.[164][172]

A Roman coin inscribed Ivdaea Capta, or "captive Judea" (71 CE), representing Judea as a seated mourning woman (right), and a Jewish captive with hands tied (left)

The destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE brought profound changes to Judaism. With the Temple's central place in Jewish worship gone, religious practices shifted towards prayer, Torah study (including Oral Torah), and communal gatherings in synagogues. Judaism also lost much of its sectarian nature.[174]: 69  Two of the three main sects that flourished during the late Second Temple period, namely the Sadducees and Essenes, eventually disappeared, while Pharisaic beliefs became the foundational, liturgical, and ritualistic basis of Rabbinic Judaism, which emerged as the prevailing form of Judaism since late antiquity.[175]

Babylon and Rome

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The Jewish diaspora existed well before the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE and had been ongoing for centuries, with the dispersal driven by both forced expulsions and voluntary migrations.[176][164] In Mesopotamia, a testimony to the beginnings of the Jewish community can be found in Joachin's ration tablets, listing provisions allotted to the exiled Judean king and his family by Nebuchadnezzar II, and further evidence are the Al-Yahudu tablets, dated to the 6th–5th centuries BCE and related to the exiles from Judea arriving after the destruction of the First Temple,[123] though there is ample evidence for the presence of Jews in Babylonia even from 626 BCE.[177] In Egypt, the documents from Elephantine reveal the trials of a community founded by a Persian Jewish garrison at two fortresses on the frontier during the 5th–4th centuries BCE, and according to Josephus the Jewish community in Alexandria existed since the founding of the city in the 4th century BCE by Alexander the Great.[178] By 200 BCE, there were well established Jewish communities both in Egypt and Mesopotamia ("Babylonia" in Jewish sources) and in the two centuries that followed, Jewish populations were also present in Asia Minor, Greece, Macedonia, Cyrene, and, beginning in the middle of the first century BCE, in the city of Rome.[179][164] Later, in the first centuries CE, as a result of the Jewish-Roman Wars, a large number of Jews were taken as captives, sold into slavery, or compelled to flee from the regions affected by the wars, contributing to the formation and expansion of Jewish communities across the Roman Empire as well as in Arabia[180] and Mesopotamia.

After the Bar Kokhba revolt, the Jewish population in Judaea—now significantly reduced— made efforts to recover from the revolt's devastating effects, but never fully regained its former strength.[181][182] Between the second and fourth centuries CE, the region of Galilee emerged as the primary center of Jewish life in Syria Palaestina, experiencing both demographic growth and cultural development. It was during this period that two central rabbinic texts, the Mishnah and the Jerusalem Talmud, were composed.[183] The Romans recognized the patriarchs—rabbinic sages such as Judah ha-Nasi—as representatives of the Jewish people, granting them a certain degree of autonomy.[184] However, as the Roman Empire gave way to the Christianized Byzantine Empire under Constantine, Jews began to face persecution by both the Church and imperial authorities, Jews came to be persecuted by the church and the authorities, and many immigrated to communities in the diaspora. By the fourth century CE, Jews are believed to have lost their demographic majority in Syria Palaestina.[185][181]

The long-established Jewish community of Mesopotamia, which had been living under Parthian and later Sasanian rule, beyond the confines of the Roman Empire, became an important center of Jewish study as Judea's Jewish population declined.[185][181] Estimates often place the Babylonian Jewish community of the 3rd to 7th centuries at around one million, making it the largest Jewish diaspora community of that period.[186] Under the political leadership of the exilarch, who was regarded as a royal heir of the House of David, this community had an autonomous status and served as a place of refuge for the Jews of Syria Palaestina. A number of significant Talmudic academies, such as the Nehardea, Pumbedita, and Sura academies, were established in Mesopotamia, and many important Amoraim were active there. The Babylonian Talmud, a centerpiece of Jewish religious law, was compiled in Babylonia in the 3rd to 6th centuries.[187]

Middle Ages

[edit]

Jewish diaspora communities are generally described to have coalesced into three major ethnic subdivisions according to where their ancestors settled: the Ashkenazim (initially in the Rhineland and France), the Sephardim (initially in the Iberian Peninsula), and the Mizrahim (Middle East and North Africa).[188] Romaniote Jews, Tunisian Jews, Yemenite Jews, Egyptian Jews, Ethiopian Jews, Bukharan Jews, Mountain Jews, and other groups also predated the arrival of the Sephardic diaspora.[189]

Despite experiencing repeated waves of persecution, Ashkenazi Jews in Western Europe worked in a variety of fields, making an impact on their communities' economy and societies. In Francia, for example, figures like Isaac Judaeus and Armentarius occupied prominent social and economic positions. However, Jews were frequently the subjects of discriminatory laws, segregation, blood libels and pogroms, which culminated in events like the Rhineland Massacres (1066) and the expulsion of Jews from England (1290). As a result, Ashkenazi Jews were gradually pushed eastwards to Poland, Lithuania and Russia.[190]

During the same period, Jewish communities in the Middle East thrived under Islamic rule, especially in cities like Baghdad, Cairo, and Damascus. In Babylonia, from the 7th to 11th centuries the Pumbedita and Sura academies led the Arab and to an extent the entire Jewish world. The deans and students of said academies defined the Geonic period in Jewish history.[191] Following this period were the Rishonim who lived from the 11th to 15th centuries. Like their European counterparts, Jews in the Middle East and North Africa also faced periods of persecution and discriminatory policies, with the Almohad Caliphate in North Africa and Iberia issuing forced conversion decrees, causing Jews such as Maimonides to seek safety in other regions.

Hebrew inscription in the Córdoba Synagogue, Spain (1315)

One of the largest Jewish communities of the Middle Ages was in the Iberian Peninsula, which for a time contained the largest Jewish population in Europe.[192] Iberian Jewry endured discrimination under the Visigoths but saw its fortunes improve under Umayyad rule and later the Taifa kingdoms. During this period, the Jews of Muslim Spain entered a "Golden Age" marked by achievements in Hebrew poetry and literature, religious scholarship, grammar, medicine and science, with leading figures including Hasdai ibn Shaprut, Judah Halevi, Moses ibn Ezra and Solomon ibn Gabirol.[193] Jews also rose to high office, most notably Samuel ibn Naghrillah, a scholar and poet who served as grand vizier and military commander of Granada.[193] The Golden Age ended with the rise of the radical Almoravid and Almohad dynasties, whose persecutions drove many Jews from Iberia (including Maimonides),[193] together with the advancing Reconquista. In 1391, widespread pogroms swept across Spain, leaving thousands dead and forcing mass conversions.[194] The Spanish Inquisition was later established to pursue, torture and execute conversos who continued to practice Judaism in secret, while public disputations were staged to discredit Judaism.[194] In 1492, after the Reconquista, Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon decreed the expulsion of all Jews who refused conversion, sending an estimated 200,000 into exile in Portugal, Italy, North Africa, and the Ottoman Empire.[195] In 1497, Portugal's Jews, about 30,000, were formally ordered expelled but instead were forcibly converted to retain their economic role.[194] In 1498, some 3,500 Jews were expelled from Navarre.[194] Many converts outwardly adopted Christianity while secretly preserving Jewish practices, becoming crypto-Jews (also known as marranos or anusim), who remained targets of the various Inquisitions for centuries.[196]

Early modern period

[edit]

Following the expulsions from Spain and Portugal in the 1490s, Jewish exiles dispersed across the Mediterranean, Europe, and North Africa. Many settled in the Ottoman Empire—which, replacing the Iberian Peninsula, became home to the world's largest Jewish population—where new communities developed in Anatolia, the Balkans, and the Land of Israel.[197] Cities such as Istanbul and Thessaloniki grew into major Jewish centers, while in 16th-century Safed a flourishing spiritual life took shape.[197] There, Solomon Alkabetz, Moses Cordovero, and Isaac Luria developed influential new schools of Kabbalah, giving powerful impetus to Jewish mysticism, and Joseph Karo composed the Shulchan Aruch, which became a cornerstone of Jewish law.[197] In the 17th century, Portuguese conversos who returned to Judaism and engaged in trade and banking helped establish Amsterdam as a prosperous Jewish center,[198] while also forming communities in cities such as Antwerp and London.[199] This period also witnessed waves of messianic fervor, most notably the rise of the Sabbatean movement in the 1660s, led by Sabbatai Zvi of İzmir, which reverberated throughout the Jewish world.[200]

Interior of the Portuguese Synagogue in Amsterdam, painted by Emanuel de Witte, c. 1680, Rijksmuseum

In Eastern Europe, Poland–Lithuania became the principal center of Ashkenazi Jewry, eventually becoming home to the largest Jewish population in the world. Jewish life flourished there from in the early modern era, supported by relative stability, economic opportunity, and strong communal institutions.[201] The mid-17th century brought devastation with the Cossack uprisings in Ukraine, which reversed migration flows and sent refugees westward, yet Poland–Lithuania remained the demographic and cultural heartland of Ashkenazic Jewry.[201] Following the partitions of Poland, most of its Jews came under Russian rule and were confined to the "Pale of Settlement."[202] The 18th century also witnessed new religious and intellectual currents. Hasidism, founded by Baal Shem Tov, emphasized mysticism and piety,[203] while its opponents, the Misnagdim ("opponents") led by the Vilna Gaon, defended rabbinic scholarship and tradition.[203] In the 1760s and 1770s, the Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment) emerged in German-speaking lands, where figures such as Moses Mendelssohn promoted secular learning, vernacular literacy, and integration into European society.[204] Elsewhere, Jews began to be re-admitted to Western Europe, including England, where Menasseh ben Israel petitioned Cromwell for their return.[199]

In the Americas, Jews of Sephardic descent first arrived as conversos in Spanish and Portuguese colonies, where many faced trial by Inquisition tribunals for "judaizing."[205] A more durable presence began in Dutch Brazil, where Jews openly practiced their religion and established the first synagogues in the New World, before the Portuguese reconquest forced their dispersal to Amsterdam, the Caribbean, and North America.[205] Sephardic communities took root in Curaçao, Suriname, Jamaica, and Barbados, later joined by Ashkenazi migrants.[205] In North America, Jews were present from the mid-17th century, with New Amsterdam hosting the first organized congregation in 1654.[206] By the time of the American Revolution, small communities in New York, Newport, Philadelphia, Savannah, and Charleston played an active role in the struggle for independence.[206]

Modern period

[edit]

In the late 19th century, Jews in Western Europe gradually achieved legal emancipation, though social acceptance remained limited by persistent antisemitism and rising nationalism. In Eastern Europe, particularly within the Russian Empire's Pale of Settlement, Jews faced mounting legal restrictions and recurring pogroms. From this environment emerged Zionism, a national revival movement originating in Central and Eastern Europe that sought to re-establish a Jewish polity in the Land of Israel as a means of returning the Jewish people to their ancestral homeland and ending centuries of exile and persecution. This led to waves of Jewish migration to Ottoman-controlled Palestine. Theodor Herzl, who is considered the father of political Zionism,[207] offered his vision of a future Jewish state in his 1896 book Der Judenstaat (The Jewish State); a year later, he presided over the First Zionist Congress.[208]

The antisemitism that inflicted Jewish communities in Europe also triggered a mass exodus of more than two million Jews to the United States between 1881 and 1924.[209] The Jews of Europe and the United States gained success in the fields of science, culture and the economy. Among those generally considered the most famous were Albert Einstein and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Many Nobel Prize winners at this time were Jewish, as is still the case.[210]

Map of the Jewish diaspora:
  Israel
  + 1,000,000
  + 100,000
  + 10,000
  + 1,000

When Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party came to power in Germany in 1933, the situation for Jews deteriorated rapidly as a direct result of Nazi policies. Many Jews fled from Europe to Mandatory Palestine, the United States, and the Soviet Union as a result of racial anti-Semitic laws, economic difficulties, and the fear of an impending war. World War II started in 1939, and by 1941, Hitler occupied almost all of Europe. Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, the Final Solution—an extensive, organized effort with an unprecedented scope intended to annihilate the Jewish people—began, and resulted in the persecution and murder of Jews in Europe and North Africa. In Poland, three million were murdered in gas chambers in all concentration camps combined, with one million at the Auschwitz camp complex alone. The Holocaust is the name given to this genocide, in which six million Jews in total were systematically murdered.

Before and during the Holocaust, enormous numbers of Jews immigrated to Mandatory Palestine. In 1944, the Jewish insurgency in Mandatory Palestine began with the aim of gaining full independence from the United Kingdom. In late 1947, the expulsion and flight of Palestinian Arabs began. On 14 May 1948, upon the termination of the mandate, David Ben-Gurion declared the creation of the State of Israel, a Jewish and democratic state. Immediately afterwards, all neighboring Arab states invaded, and were resisted by the newly formed Israel Defense Forces. In 1949, the war ended and Israel started building its state and absorbing waves of Aliyah, granting citizenship to Jews all over the world via the Law of Return passed in 1950. However, both the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and wider Arab–Israeli conflict continue to this day.

Culture

[edit]

Religion

[edit]

The Jewish people and the religion of Judaism are strongly interrelated. Converts to Judaism typically have a status within the Jewish ethnos equal to those born into it.[211] However, several converts to Judaism, as well as ex-Jews, have claimed that converts are treated as second-class Jews by many born Jews.[212] Conversion is not encouraged by mainstream Judaism, and it is considered a difficult task. A significant portion of conversions are undertaken by children of mixed marriages, or would-be or current spouses of Jews.[213]

The Hebrew Bible, a religious interpretation of the traditions and early history of the Jews, established the first of the Abrahamic religions, which are now practiced by 54 percent of the world. Judaism guides its adherents in both practice and belief, and has been called not only a religion, but also a "way of life,"[214] which has made drawing a clear distinction between Judaism, Jewish culture, and Jewish identity rather difficult. Throughout history, in eras and places as diverse as the ancient Hellenic world,[215] in Europe before and after The Age of Enlightenment (see Haskalah),[216] in Islamic Spain and Portugal,[217] in North Africa and the Middle East,[217] India,[218] China,[219] or the contemporary United States[220] and Israel,[221] cultural phenomena have developed that are in some sense characteristically Jewish without being at all specifically religious. Some factors in this come from within Judaism, others from the interaction of Jews or specific communities of Jews with their surroundings, and still others from the inner social and cultural dynamics of the community, as opposed to from the religion itself. This phenomenon has led to considerably different Jewish cultures unique to their own communities.[222]

Languages

[edit]

Hebrew is the liturgical language of Judaism (termed lashon ha-kodesh, "the holy tongue"), the language in which most of the Hebrew scriptures (Tanakh) were composed, and the daily speech of the Jewish people for centuries. By the 5th century BCE, Aramaic, a closely related tongue, joined Hebrew as the spoken language in Judea.[223] By the 3rd century BCE, some Jews of the diaspora were speaking Greek.[224] Others, such as in the Jewish communities of Asoristan, known to Jews as Babylonia, were speaking Hebrew and Aramaic, the languages of the Babylonian Talmud. Dialects of these same languages were also used by the Jews of Syria Palaestina at that time.[citation needed]

For centuries, Jews worldwide have spoken the local or dominant languages of the regions they migrated to, often developing distinctive dialectal forms or branches that became independent languages. Yiddish is the Judaeo-German language developed by Ashkenazi Jews who migrated to Central Europe. Ladino is the Judaeo-Spanish language developed by Sephardic Jews who migrated to the Iberian Peninsula. Due to many factors, including the impact of the Holocaust on European Jewry, the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries, and widespread emigration from other Jewish communities around the world, ancient and distinct Jewish languages of several communities, including Judaeo-Georgian, Judaeo-Arabic, Judaeo-Berber, Krymchak, Judaeo-Malayalam and many others, have largely fallen out of use.[6]

For over sixteen centuries Hebrew was used almost exclusively as a liturgical language, and as the language in which most books had been written on Judaism, with a few speaking only Hebrew on the Sabbath.[225] Hebrew was revived as a spoken language by Eliezer ben Yehuda, who arrived in Palestine in 1881. It had not been used as a mother tongue since Tannaic times.[223] Modern Hebrew is designated as the "State language" of Israel.[226]

Despite efforts to revive Hebrew as the national language of the Jewish people, knowledge of the language is not commonly possessed by Jews worldwide and English has emerged as the lingua franca of the Jewish diaspora.[227][228][229][230][231] Although many Jews once had sufficient knowledge of Hebrew to study the classic literature, and Jewish languages like Yiddish and Ladino were commonly used as recently as the early 20th century, most Jews lack such knowledge today and English has by and large superseded most Jewish vernaculars. The three most commonly spoken languages among Jews today are Hebrew, English, and Russian. Some Romance languages, particularly French and Spanish, are also widely used.[6] Yiddish has been spoken by more Jews in history than any other language,[232] but it is far less used today following the Holocaust and the adoption of Modern Hebrew by the Zionist movement and the State of Israel. In some places, the mother language of the Jewish community differs from that of the general population or the dominant group. For example, in Quebec, the Ashkenazic majority has adopted English, while the Sephardic minority uses French as its primary language.[233][234][235] Similarly, South African Jews adopted English rather than Afrikaans.[236] Due to both Czarist and Soviet policies,[237][238] Russian has superseded Yiddish as the language of Russian Jews, but these policies have also affected neighboring communities.[239] Today, Russian is the first language for many Jewish communities in a number of Post-Soviet states, such as Ukraine[240][241][242][243] and Uzbekistan,[244][better source needed] as well as for Ashkenazic Jews in Azerbaijan,[245][246] Georgia,[247] and Tajikistan.[248][249] Although communities in North Africa today are small and dwindling, Jews there had shifted from a multilingual group to a monolingual one (or nearly so), speaking French in Algeria,[250] Morocco,[245] and the city of Tunis,[251][252] while most North Africans continue to use Arabic or Berber as their mother tongue.[citation needed]

Leadership

[edit]

There is no single governing body for the Jewish community, nor a single authority with responsibility for religious doctrine.[253] Instead, a variety of secular and religious institutions at the local, national, and international levels lead various parts of the Jewish community on a variety of issues.[254] Today, many countries have a Chief Rabbi who serves as a representative of that country's Jewry. Although many Hasidic Jews follow a certain hereditary Hasidic dynasty, there is no one commonly accepted leader of all Hasidic Jews. Many Jews believe that the Messiah will act a unifying leader for Jews and the entire world.[255]

Theories on ancient Jewish national identity

[edit]
Bible manuscript in Hebrew, 14th century. Hebrew language and alphabet were the cornerstones of the Jewish national identity in antiquity.

A number of modern scholars of nationalism support the existence of Jewish national identity in antiquity. One of them is David Goodblatt,[256] who generally believes in the existence of nationalism before the modern period. In his view, the Bible, the parabiblical literature and the Jewish national history provide the base for a Jewish collective identity. Although many of the ancient Jews were illiterate (as were their neighbors), their national narrative was reinforced through public readings. The Hebrew language also constructed and preserved national identity. Although it was not widely spoken after the 5th century BCE, Goodblatt states:[257][258][259]

the mere presence of the language in spoken or written form could invoke the concept of a Jewish national identity. Even if one knew no Hebrew or was illiterate, one could recognize that a group of signs was in Hebrew script. ... It was the language of the Israelite ancestors, the national literature, and the national religion. As such it was inseparable from the national identity. Indeed its mere presence in visual or aural medium could invoke that identity.

Anthony D. Smith, an historical sociologist considered one of the founders of the field of nationalism studies, wrote that the Jews of the late Second Temple period provide "a closer approximation to the ideal type of the nation [...] than perhaps anywhere else in the ancient world." He adds that this observation "must make us wary of pronouncing too readily against the possibility of the nation, and even a form of religious nationalism, before the onset of modernity."[143] Agreeing with Smith, Goodblatt suggests omitting the qualifier "religious" from Smith's definition of ancient Jewish nationalism, noting that, according to Smith, a religious component in national memories and culture is common even in the modern era.[144] This view is echoed by political scientist Tom Garvin, who writes that "something strangely like modern nationalism is documented for many peoples in medieval times and in classical times as well," citing the ancient Jews as one of several "obvious examples", alongside the classical Greeks and the Gaulish and British Celts.[260]

Fergus Millar suggests that the sources of Jewish national identity and their early nationalist movements in the first and second centuries CE included several key elements: the Bible as both a national history and legal source, the Hebrew language as a national language, a system of law, and social institutions such as schools, synagogues, and Sabbath worship.[261] Adrian Hastings argued that Jews are the "true proto-nation", that through the model of ancient Israel found in the Hebrew Bible, provided the world with the original concept of nationhood which later influenced Christian nations. However, following Jerusalem's destruction in the first century CE, Jews ceased to be a political entity and did not resemble a traditional nation-state for almost two millennia. Despite this, they maintained their national identity through collective memory, religion and sacred texts, even without land or political power, and remained a nation rather than just an ethnic group, eventually leading to the rise of Zionism and the establishment of Israel.[146]

Steven Weitzman suggests that Jewish nationalist sentiment in antiquity was encouraged because under foreign rule (Persians, Greeks, Romans) Jews were able to claim that they were an ancient nation. This claim was based on the preservation and reverence of their scriptures, the Hebrew language, the Temple and priesthood, and other traditions of their ancestors.[262] Doron Mendels further observes that the Hasmonean kingdom, one of the few examples of indigenous statehood at its time, significantly reinforced Jewish national consciousness. The memory of this period of independence contributed to the persistent efforts to revive Jewish sovereignty in Judea, leading to the major revolts against Roman rule in the 1st and 2nd centuries CE.[263]

Demographics

[edit]

Ethnic divisions

[edit]

Within the world's Jewish population there are distinct ethnic divisions, most of which are primarily the result of geographic branching from an originating Israelite population, and subsequent independent evolutions. An array of Jewish communities was established by Jewish settlers in various places around the Old World, often at great distances from one another, resulting in effective and often long-term isolation. During the millennia of the Jewish diaspora the communities would develop under the influence of their local environments: political, cultural, natural, and populational. Today, manifestations of these differences among the Jews can be observed in Jewish cultural expressions of each community, including Jewish linguistic diversity, culinary preferences, liturgical practices, religious interpretations, as well as degrees and sources of genetic admixture.[264]

Sephardic Jewish festival in Tétouan, Morocco, Alfred Dehodencq, 1865, Paris Museum of Jewish Art and History

Jews are often identified as belonging to one of two major groups: the Ashkenazim and the Sephardim. Ashkenazim are so named in reference to their geographical origins (their ancestors' culture coalesced in the Rhineland, an area historically referred to by Jews as Ashkenaz). Similarly, Sephardim (Sefarad meaning "Spain" in Hebrew) are named in reference their origins in Iberia. The diverse groups of Jews of the Middle East and North Africa are often collectively referred to as Sephardim together with Sephardim proper for liturgical reasons having to do with their prayer rites. A common term for many of these non-Spanish Jews who are sometimes still broadly grouped as Sephardim is Mizrahim (lit.'easterners' in Hebrew). Nevertheless, Mizrahis and Sepharadim are usually ethnically distinct.[265]

Smaller groups include, but are not restricted to, Indian Jews such as the Bene Israel, Bnei Menashe, Cochin Jews, and Bene Ephraim; the Romaniotes of Greece; the Italian Jews ("Italkim" or "Bené Roma"); the Teimanim from Yemen; various African Jews, including most numerously the Beta Israel of Ethiopia; and Chinese Jews, most notably the Kaifeng Jews, as well as various other distinct but now almost extinct communities.[266]

The divisions between all these groups are approximate and their boundaries are not always clear. The Mizrahim for example, are a heterogeneous collection of North African, Central Asian, Caucasian, and Middle Eastern Jewish communities that are no closer related to each other than they are to any of the earlier mentioned Jewish groups. In modern usage, however, the Mizrahim are sometimes termed Sephardi due to similar styles of liturgy, despite independent development from Sephardim proper. Thus, among Mizrahim there are Egyptian Jews, Iraqi Jews, Lebanese Jews, Kurdish Jews, Moroccan Jews, Libyan Jews, Syrian Jews, Bukharian Jews, Mountain Jews, Georgian Jews, Iranian Jews, Afghan Jews, and various others. The Teimanim from Yemen are sometimes included, although their style of liturgy is unique and they differ in respect to the admixture found among them to that found in Mizrahim. In addition, there is a differentiation made between Sephardi migrants who established themselves in the Middle East and North Africa after the expulsion of the Jews from Spain and Portugal in the 1490s and the pre-existing Jewish communities in those regions.[266]

Maurycy Gottlieb's 1878 painting of Ashkenazi Jews praying in synagogue on Yom Kippur.

Ashkenazi Jews represent the bulk of modern Jewry, with at least 70 percent of Jews worldwide (and up to 90 percent prior to World War II and the Holocaust). As a result of their emigration from Europe, Ashkenazim also represent the overwhelming majority of Jews in the New World continents, in countries such as the United States, Canada, Argentina, Australia, and Brazil. In France, the immigration of Jews from Algeria (Sephardim) has led them to outnumber the Ashkenazim.[266] Only in Israel is the Jewish population representative of all groups, a melting pot independent of each group's proportion within the overall world Jewish population.[267]

Genetic studies

[edit]

Y DNA studies tend to imply a small number of founders in an old population whose members parted and followed different migration paths.[268] In most Jewish populations, these male line ancestors appear to have been mainly Middle Eastern. For example, Ashkenazi Jews share more common paternal lineages with other Jewish and Middle Eastern groups than with non-Jewish populations in areas where Jews lived in Eastern Europe, Germany, and the French Rhine Valley. This is consistent with Jewish traditions in placing most Jewish paternal origins in the region of the Middle East.[269][270]

Conversely, the maternal lineages of Jewish populations, studied by looking at mitochondrial DNA, are generally more heterogeneous.[271] Scholars such as Harry Ostrer and Raphael Falk believe this indicates that many Jewish males found new mates from European and other communities in the places where they migrated in the diaspora after fleeing ancient Israel.[272] In contrast, Behar has found evidence that about 40 percent of Ashkenazi Jews originate maternally from just four female founders, who were of Middle Eastern origin. The populations of Sephardi and Mizrahi Jewish communities "showed no evidence for a narrow founder effect."[271] Subsequent studies carried out by Feder et al. confirmed the large portion of non-local maternal origin among Ashkenazi Jews. Reflecting on their findings related to the maternal origin of Ashkenazi Jews, the authors conclude "Clearly, the differences between Jews and non-Jews are far larger than those observed among the Jewish communities. Hence, differences between the Jewish communities can be overlooked when non-Jews are included in the comparisons."[14][273][274] However, a 2025 genetic study on the Ashkenazi Jewish founder population supports the presence of a substantial Near Eastern component in the maternal lineages. Analyses of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) indicate that the core founder lineages, estimated at around 54, likely originated from the Near East, with these founder signatures appearing in multiple copies across the population. While later admixture introduced additional mtDNA lineages, these absorbed lineages are distinguishable from the original founders. The findings are consistent with genome-wide Identity-by-Descent and Lineage Extinction analyses, reinforcing the Near Eastern origin of the Ashkenazi maternal founders.[275] A study showed that 7% of Ashkenazi Jews have the haplogroup G2c, which is mainly found in Pashtuns and on lower scales all major Jewish groups, Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese.[276][277]

Studies of autosomal DNA, which look at the entire DNA mixture, have become increasingly important as the technology develops. They show that Jewish populations have tended to form relatively closely related groups in independent communities, with most in a community sharing significant ancestry in common.[278] For Jewish populations of the diaspora, the genetic composition of Ashkenazi, Sephardic, and Mizrahi Jewish populations show a predominant amount of shared Middle Eastern ancestry. According to Behar, the most parsimonious explanation for this shared Middle Eastern ancestry is that it is "consistent with the historical formulation of the Jewish people as descending from ancient Hebrew and Israelite residents of the Levant" and "the dispersion of the people of ancient Israel throughout the Old World".[279] North African, Italian and others of Iberian origin show variable frequencies of admixture with non-Jewish historical host populations among the maternal lines. In the case of Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews (in particular Moroccan Jews), who are closely related, the source of non-Jewish admixture is mainly Southern European, while Mizrahi Jews show evidence of admixture with other Middle Eastern populations. Behar et al. have remarked on a close relationship between Ashkenazi Jews and modern Italians.[279][280] A 2001 study found that Jews were more closely related to groups of the Fertile Crescent (Kurds, Turks, and Armenians) than to their Arab neighbors, whose genetic signature was found in geographic patterns reflective of Islamic conquests.[269][281]

The studies also show that Sephardic Bnei Anusim (descendants of the "anusim" who were forced to convert to Catholicism), which comprise up to 19.8 percent of the population of today's Iberia (Spain and Portugal) and at least 10 percent of the population of Ibero-America (Hispanic America and Brazil), have Sephardic Jewish ancestry within the last few centuries. The Bene Israel and Cochin Jews of India, Beta Israel of Ethiopia, and a portion of the Lemba people of Southern Africa, despite more closely resembling the local populations of their native countries, have also been thought to have some more remote ancient Jewish ancestry.[282][279][283][274] Views on the Lemba have changed and genetic Y-DNA analyses in the 2000s have established a partially Middle-Eastern origin for a portion of the male Lemba population but have been unable to narrow this down further.[284][285]

Population centers

[edit]
New York City is home to 960,000 Jews, making it the largest Jewish community outside of Israel.

Although historically, Jews have been found all over the world, in the decades since World War II and the establishment of Israel, they have increasingly concentrated in a small number of countries.[286][287] In 2021, Israel and the United States together accounted for over 85 percent of the global Jewish population, with approximately 45.3% and 39.6% of the world's Jews, respectively.[2] More than half (51.2%) of world Jewry resides in just ten metropolitan areas. As of 2021, these ten areas were Tel Aviv, New York, Jerusalem, Haifa, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, Paris, Washington, and Chicago. The Tel Aviv metro area has the highest percent of Jews among the total population (94.8%), followed by Jerusalem (72.3%), Haifa (73.1%), and Beersheba (60.4%), the balance mostly being Israeli Arabs. Outside Israel, the highest percent of Jews in a metropolitan area was in New York (10.8%), followed by Miami (8.7%), Philadelphia (6.8%), San Francisco (5.1%), Washington (4.7%), Los Angeles (4.7%), Toronto (4.5%), and Baltimore (4.1%).[2]

As of 2010, there were nearly 14 million Jews around the world, roughly 0.2% of the world's population at the time.[288] According to the 2007 estimates of The Jewish People Policy Planning Institute, the world's Jewish population is 13.2 million.[289] This statistic incorporates both practicing Jews affiliated with synagogues and the Jewish community, and approximately 4.5 million unaffiliated and secular Jews.[citation needed]

According to Sergio Della Pergola, a demographer of the Jewish population, in 2021 there were about 6.8 million Jews in Israel, 6 million in the United States, and 2.3 million in the rest of the world.[2]

Israel

[edit]
Jewish people in Jerusalem, Israel

Israel, the Jewish nation-state, is the only country in which Jews make up a majority of the citizens.[290] Israel was established as an independent democratic and Jewish state on 14 May 1948.[291] Of the 120 members in its parliament, the Knesset,[292] as of 2016, 14 members of the Knesset are Arab citizens of Israel (not including the Druze), most representing Arab political parties. One of Israel's Supreme Court judges is also an Arab citizen of Israel.[293]

Between 1948 and 1958, the Jewish population rose from 800,000 to two million.[294] Currently, Jews account for 75.4 percent of the Israeli population, or 6 million people.[295][296] The early years of the State of Israel were marked by the mass immigration of Holocaust survivors in the aftermath of the Holocaust and Jews fleeing Arab lands.[297] Israel also has a large population of Ethiopian Jews, many of whom were airlifted to Israel in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[298][299] Between 1974 and 1979 nearly 227,258 immigrants arrived in Israel, about half being from the Soviet Union.[300] This period also saw an increase in immigration to Israel from Western Europe, Latin America, and North America.[301]

A trickle of immigrants from other communities has also arrived, including Indian Jews and others, as well as some descendants of Ashkenazi Holocaust survivors who had settled in countries such as the United States, Argentina, Australia, Chile, and South Africa. Some Jews have emigrated from Israel elsewhere, because of economic problems or disillusionment with political conditions and the continuing Arab–Israeli conflict. Jewish Israeli emigrants are known as yordim.[302]

Diaspora (outside Israel)

[edit]
In this Rosh Hashana greeting card from the early 1900s, Russian Jews, packs in hand, gaze at the American relatives beckoning them to the United States. Over two million Jews fled the pogroms of the Russian Empire to the safety of the U.S. between 1881 and 1924.[303]
A menorah dominating the main square in Birobidzhan. An estimated 70,000 Jews live in Siberia.[304]

The waves of immigration to the United States and elsewhere at the turn of the 19th century, the founding of Zionism and later events, including pogroms in Imperial Russia (mostly within the Pale of Settlement in present-day Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus and eastern Poland), the massacre of European Jewry during the Holocaust, and the founding of the state of Israel, with the subsequent Jewish exodus from Arab lands, all resulted in substantial shifts in the population centers of world Jewry by the end of the 20th century.[305]

More than half of the Jews live in the Diaspora (see Population table). Currently, the largest Jewish community outside Israel, and either the largest or second-largest Jewish community in the world, is located in the United States, with 6 million to 7.5 million Jews by various estimates. Elsewhere in the Americas, there are also large Jewish populations in Canada (315,000), Argentina (180,000–300,000), and Brazil (196,000–600,000), and smaller populations in Mexico, Uruguay, Venezuela, Chile, Colombia and several other countries (see History of the Jews in Latin America).[306] According to a 2010 Pew Research Center study, about 470,000 people of Jewish heritage live in Latin America and the Caribbean.[288] Demographers disagree on whether the United States has a larger Jewish population than Israel, with many maintaining that Israel surpassed the United States in Jewish population during the 2000s, while others maintain that the United States still has the largest Jewish population in the world. Currently, a major national Jewish population survey is planned to ascertain whether or not Israel has overtaken the United States in Jewish population.[307]

The Jewish Zionist Youth Movement in Tallinn, Estonia, on 1 September 1933

Western Europe's largest Jewish community, and the third-largest Jewish community in the world, can be found in France, home to between 483,000 and 500,000 Jews, the majority of whom are immigrants or refugees from North African countries such as Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia (or their descendants).[308] The United Kingdom has a Jewish community of 292,000. In Eastern Europe, the exact figures are difficult to establish. The number of Jews in Russia varies widely according to whether a source uses census data (which requires a person to choose a single nationality among choices that include "Russian" and "Jewish") or eligibility for immigration to Israel (which requires that a person have one or more Jewish grandparents). According to the latter criteria, the heads of the Russian Jewish community assert that up to 1.5 million Russians are eligible for aliyah.[309][310] In Germany, the 102,000 Jews registered with the Jewish community are a slowly declining population,[311] despite the immigration of tens of thousands of Jews from the former Soviet Union since the fall of the Berlin Wall.[312] Thousands of Israelis also live in Germany, either permanently or temporarily, for economic reasons.[313]

Prior to 1948, approximately 800,000 Jews were living in lands which now make up the Arab world (excluding Israel). Of these, just under two-thirds lived in the French-controlled Maghreb region, 15 to 20 percent in the Kingdom of Iraq, approximately 10 percent in the Kingdom of Egypt and approximately 7 percent in the Kingdom of Yemen. A further 200,000 lived in Pahlavi Iran and the Republic of Turkey. Today, around 26,000 Jews live in Arab countries[314] and around 30,000 in Iran and Turkey. A small-scale exodus had begun in many countries in the early decades of the 20th century, although the only substantial aliyah came from Yemen and Syria.[315] The exodus from Arab and Muslim countries took place primarily from 1948. The first large-scale exoduses took place in the late 1940s and early 1950s, primarily in Iraq, Yemen and Libya, with up to 90 percent of these communities leaving within a few years. The peak of the exodus from Egypt occurred in 1956. The exodus in the Maghreb countries peaked in the 1960s. Lebanon was the only Arab country to see a temporary increase in its Jewish population during this period, due to an influx of refugees from other Arab countries, although by the mid-1970s the Jewish community of Lebanon had also dwindled. In the aftermath of the exodus wave from Arab states, an additional migration of Iranian Jews peaked in the 1980s when around 80 percent of Iranian Jews left the country.[citation needed]

Outside Europe, the Americas, the Middle East, and the rest of Asia, there are significant Jewish populations in Australia (112,500) and South Africa (70,000).[48] There is also a 6,800-strong community in New Zealand.[316]

Demographic changes

[edit]

Assimilation

[edit]

Since at least the time of the Ancient Greeks, a proportion of Jews have assimilated into the wider non-Jewish society around them, by either choice or force, ceasing to practice Judaism and losing their Jewish identity.[317] Assimilation took place in all areas, and during all time periods,[317] with some Jewish communities, for example the Kaifeng Jews of China, disappearing entirely.[318] The advent of the Jewish Enlightenment of the 18th century (see Haskalah) and the subsequent emancipation of the Jewish populations of Europe and America in the 19th century, accelerated the situation, encouraging Jews to increasingly participate in, and become part of, secular society. The result has been a growing trend of assimilation, as Jews marry non-Jewish spouses and stop participating in the Jewish community.[319]

Rates of interreligious marriage vary widely: In the United States, it is just under 50 percent;[320] in the United Kingdom, around 53 percent; in France, around 30 percent;[321] and in Australia and Mexico, as low as 10 percent.[322] In the United States, only about a third of children from intermarriages affiliate with Jewish religious practice.[323] The result is that most countries in the Diaspora have steady or slightly declining religiously Jewish populations as Jews continue to assimilate into the countries in which they live.[citation needed]

War and persecution

[edit]
The Roman Emperor Nero sends Vespasian with an army to destroy the Jews, 69 CE.

The Jewish people and Judaism have experienced various persecutions throughout Jewish history. During Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, the Roman Empire (in its later phases known as the Byzantine Empire) repeatedly repressed the Jewish population, first by ejecting them from their homelands during the pagan Roman era and later by officially establishing them as second-class citizens during the Christian Roman era.[324][325]

According to James Carroll, "Jews accounted for 10% of the total population of the Roman Empire. By that ratio, if other factors had not intervened, there would be 200 million Jews in the world today, instead of something like 13 million."[326]

Later in medieval Western Europe, further persecutions of Jews by Christians occurred, notably during the Crusades—when Jews all over Germany were massacred—and in a series of expulsions from the Kingdom of England, Germany, and France. Then there occurred the largest expulsion of all, when Spain and Portugal, after the Reconquista (the Catholic Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula), expelled both unbaptized Sephardic Jews and the ruling Muslim Moors.[327][328]

In the Papal States, which existed until 1870, Jews were required to live only in specified neighborhoods called ghettos.[329]

World War I poster showing a soldier cutting the bonds from a Jewish man, who says, "You have cut my bonds and set me free—now let me help you set others free!"

Islam and Judaism have a complex relationship. Traditionally Jews and Christians living in Muslim lands, known as dhimmis, were allowed to practice their religions and administer their internal affairs, but they were subject to certain conditions.[330] They had to pay the jizya (a per capita tax imposed on free adult non-Muslim males) to the Islamic state.[330] Dhimmis had an inferior status under Islamic rule. They had several social and legal disabilities such as prohibitions against bearing arms or giving testimony in courts in cases involving Muslims.[331] Many of the disabilities were highly symbolic. The one described by Bernard Lewis as "most degrading"[332] was the requirement of distinctive clothing, not found in the Quran or hadith but invented in early medieval Baghdad; its enforcement was highly erratic.[332] On the other hand, Jews rarely faced martyrdom or exile, or forced compulsion to change their religion, and they were mostly free in their choice of residence and profession.[333]

Notable exceptions include the massacre of Jews and forcible conversion of some Jews by the rulers of the Almohad dynasty in Al-Andalus in the 12th century,[334] as well as in Islamic Persia,[335] and the forced confinement of Moroccan Jews to walled quarters known as mellahs beginning from the 15th century and especially in the early 19th century.[336] In modern times, it has become commonplace for standard antisemitic themes to be conflated with anti-Zionist publications and pronouncements of Islamic movements such as Hezbollah and Hamas, in the pronouncements of various agencies of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and even in the newspapers and other publications of Turkish Refah Partisi."[337][better source needed]

Throughout history, many rulers, empires and nations have oppressed their Jewish populations or sought to eliminate them entirely. Methods employed ranged from expulsion to outright genocide; within nations, often the threat of these extreme methods was sufficient to silence dissent. The history of antisemitism includes the First Crusade which resulted in the massacre of Jews;[327] the Spanish Inquisition (led by Tomás de Torquemada) and the Portuguese Inquisition, with their persecution and autos-da-fé against the New Christians and Marrano Jews;[338] the Bohdan Chmielnicki Cossack massacres in Ukraine;[339] the Pogroms backed by the Russian Tsars;[340] as well as expulsions from Spain, Portugal, England, France, Germany, and other countries in which the Jews had settled.[328] According to a 2008 study published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, 19.8 percent of the modern Iberian population has Sephardic Jewish ancestry,[341] indicating that the number of conversos may have been much higher than originally thought.[342][343]

Jews in Minsk, 1941. Before World War II, some 40 percent of the population was Jewish. By the time the Red Army retook the city on 3 July 1944, there were only a few Jewish survivors.

The persecution reached a peak in Nazi Germany's Final Solution, which led to the Holocaust and the slaughter of approximately 6 million Jews.[344] Of the world's 16 million Jews in 1939, almost 40% were murdered in the Holocaust.[345] The Holocaust—the state-led systematic persecution and genocide of European Jews (and certain communities of North African Jews in European controlled North Africa) and other minority groups of Europe during World War II by Germany and its collaborators—remains the most notable modern-day persecution of Jews.[346] The persecution and genocide were accomplished in stages. Legislation to remove the Jews from civil society was enacted years before the outbreak of World War II.[347] Concentration camps were established in which inmates were used as slave labour until they died of exhaustion or disease.[348] Where the Third Reich conquered new territory in Eastern Europe, specialized units called Einsatzgruppen murdered Jews and political opponents in mass shootings.[349] Jews and Roma were crammed into ghettos before being transported hundreds of kilometres by freight train to extermination camps where, if they survived the journey, the majority of them were murdered in gas chambers.[350] Virtually every arm of Germany's bureaucracy was involved in the logistics of the mass murder, turning the country into what one Holocaust scholar has called "a genocidal nation."[351]

Migrations

[edit]
Expulsions of Jews in Europe from 1100 to 1600

Throughout Jewish history, Jews have repeatedly been directly or indirectly expelled from both their original homeland, the Land of Israel, and many of the areas in which they have settled. This experience as refugees has shaped Jewish identity and religious practice in many ways, and is thus a major element of Jewish history.[352] In summary, the pogroms in Eastern Europe,[340] the rise of modern antisemitism,[353] the Holocaust,[354] as well as the rise of Arab nationalism,[355] all served to fuel the movements and migrations of huge segments of Jewry from land to land and continent to continent until they arrived back in large numbers at their original historical homeland in Israel.[356]

The patriarch Abraham is described as a migrant to the land of Canaan from Ur of the Chaldees[357] after an attempt on his life by King Nimrod.[358] His descendants, the Children of Israel, in the Biblical story (whose historicity is uncertain) undertook the Exodus (meaning "departure" or "exit" in Greek) from ancient Egypt, as recorded in the Book of Exodus.[359]

Residents of Lachish, Judah, being deported into exile following the conquest of the city by the Assyrians, c. 701 BCE

Centuries later, Assyrian policy was to deport and displace conquered peoples, and it is estimated some 4,500,000 among captive populations suffered this dislocation over three centuries of Assyrian rule.[360] With regard to Israel, Tiglath-Pileser III claims he deported 80% of the population of Lower Galilee, some 13,520 people.[361] Some 27,000 Israelites, 20 to 25% of the population of the Kingdom of Israel, were described as being deported by Sargon II, and were replaced by other deported populations and sent into permanent exile by Assyria, initially to the Upper Mesopotamian provinces of the Assyrian Empire.[362][363] Between 10,000 and 80,000 people from the Kingdom of Judah were similarly exiled by Babylonia,[360] but these people were then returned to Judea by Cyrus the Great of the Persian Achaemenid Empire.[364]

Many Jews were exiled again by the Roman Empire.[365] The 2,000 year dispersion of the Jewish diaspora beginning under the Roman Empire,[366] as Jews were spread throughout the Roman world and, driven from land to land,[367] settled wherever they could live freely enough to practice their religion. Over the course of the diaspora the center of Jewish life moved from Babylonia[368] to the Iberian Peninsula[369] to Poland[370] to the United States[371] and, as a result of Zionism, back to Israel.[356]

Etching of the expulsion of the Jews from Frankfurt in 1614. The text says: "1380 persons old and young were counted at the exit of the gate".

There were also many expulsions of Jews during the Middle Ages and Enlightenment in Europe, including: 1290, 16,000 Jews were expelled from England, (see the Statute of Jewry); in 1396, 100,000 from France; in 1421, thousands were expelled from Austria. Many of these Jews settled in East-Central Europe, especially Poland.[372] Following the Spanish Inquisition in 1492, the Spanish population of around 200,000 Sephardic Jews were expelled by the Spanish crown and Catholic church, followed by expulsions in 1493 in Sicily (37,000 Jews) and Portugal in 1496. The expelled Jews fled mainly to the Ottoman Empire, the Netherlands, and North Africa, others migrating to Southern Europe and the Middle East.[373] During the 19th century, France's policies of equal citizenship regardless of religion led to the immigration of Jews (especially from Eastern and Central Europe).[374] This contributed to the arrival of millions of Jews in the New World. Over two million Eastern European Jews arrived in the United States from 1880 to 1925.[375]

Jews fleeing pogroms, 1882

In the latest phase of migrations, the Islamic Revolution of Iran caused many Iranian Jews to flee Iran. Most found refuge in the US (particularly Los Angeles, California, and Long Island, New York) and Israel. Smaller communities of Persian Jews exist in Canada and Western Europe.[376] Similarly, when the Soviet Union collapsed, many of the Jews in the affected territory (who had been refuseniks) were suddenly allowed to leave. This produced a wave of migration to Israel in the early 1990s.[302]

Growth

[edit]
Praying at the Western Wall

Israel is the only country with a Jewish population that is consistently growing through natural population growth, although the Jewish populations of other countries, in Europe and North America, have recently increased through immigration. In the Diaspora, in almost every country the Jewish population in general is either declining or steady, but Orthodox and Haredi Jewish communities, whose members often shun birth control for religious reasons, have experienced rapid population growth.[377]

Orthodox and Conservative Judaism discourage proselytism to non-Jews, but many Jewish groups have tried to reach out to the assimilated Jewish communities of the Diaspora in order for them to reconnect to their Jewish roots. Additionally, while in principle Reform Judaism favours seeking new members for the faith, this position has not translated into active proselytism, instead taking the form of an effort to reach out to non-Jewish spouses of intermarried couples.[378]

There is also a trend of Orthodox movements reaching out to secular Jews in order to give them a stronger Jewish identity so there is less chance of intermarriage. As a result of the efforts by these and other Jewish groups over the past 25 years, there has been a trend (known as the Baal teshuva movement) for secular Jews to become more religiously observant, though the demographic implications of the trend are unknown.[379] Additionally, there is also a growing rate of conversion to Jews by Choice of gentiles who make the decision to head in the direction of becoming Jews.[380]

Contributions

[edit]

Jewish individuals have played a significant role in the development and growth of Western culture,[61][62] advancing many fields of thought, science and technology,[53] both historically and in modern times,[381] including through discrete trends in Jewish philosophy, Jewish ethics[55] and Jewish literature,[53] as well as specific trends in Jewish culture, including in Jewish art, Jewish music, Jewish humor, Jewish theatre, Jewish cuisine and Jewish medicine.[57][58] Jews have established various Jewish political movements,[53] religious movements, and, through the authorship of the Hebrew Bible and parts of the New Testament,[382][383] provided the foundation for Christianity and Islam.[59][60] More than 20 percent[384][385][386][387][388][389] of the awarded Nobel Prize have gone to individuals of Jewish descent.[390] Philanthropic giving is a widespread core function among Jewish organizations.[391]

Notes

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Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ American Jewish Year Book 2022. Vol. 122. 2023. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-33406-1. ISBN 978-3-031-33405-4.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Dashefsky, Arnold; Della-Pergola, Sergio; Sheskin, Ira, eds. (2021). World Jewish Population (PDF) (Report). Berman Jewish DataBank. Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d "World's Jewish population hits 15.8 million, on eve of Rosh Hashanah". The Times of Israel. 2 October 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Global Jewish population hits 15.7 million ahead of new year, 46% of them in Israel". The Times of Israel.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Cohen, Shaye J.D. (2001). The Beginnings of Jewishness: Boundaries, Varieties, Uncertainties. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-22693-7.
  6. ^ a b c "Links". Beth Hatefutsoth. Archived from the original on 26 March 2009. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  7. ^ "New Poll Shows Atheism on Rise, With Jews Found to Be Least Religious". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 19 July 2018. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  8. ^ Kiaris, Hippokratis (2012). Genes, Polymorphisms and the Making of Societies: How Genetic Behavioral Traits Influence Human Cultures. Universal Publishers. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-61233-093-8.
  9. ^ a b Shen, Peidong; Lavi, Tal; Kivisild, Toomas; Chou, Vivian; Sengun, Deniz; Gefel, Dov; Shpirer, Issac; Woolf, Eilon; Hillel, Jossi; Feldman, Marcus W.; Oefner, Peter J. (September 2004). "Reconstruction of patrilineages and matrilineages of Samaritans and other Israeli populations from Y-Chromosome and mitochondrial DNA sequence Variation". Human Mutation. 24 (3): 248–260. doi:10.1002/humu.20077. ISSN 1059-7794. PMID 15300852. S2CID 1571356.
  10. ^ Ridolfo, Jim (2015). Digital Samaritans: Rhetorical Delivery and Engagement in the Digital Humanities. University of Michigan Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-472-07280-4.
  11. ^ Wade, Nicholas (9 June 2010). "Studies Show Jews' Genetic Similarity". The New York Times.
  12. ^ Nebel, Almut; Filon, Dvora; Weiss, Deborah A.; Weale, Michael; Faerman, Marina; Oppenheim, Ariella; Thomas, Mark G. (December 2000). "High-resolution Y chromosome haplotypes of Israeli and Palestinian Arabs reveal geographic substructure and substantial overlap with haplotypes of Jews". Human Genetics. 107 (6): 630–641. doi:10.1007/s004390000426. PMID 11153918. S2CID 8136092.
  13. ^ "Jews Are the Genetic Brothers of Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese". Sciencedaily.com. 9 May 2000. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  14. ^ a b Atzmon, Gil; Hao, Li; Pe'er, Itsik; Velez, Christopher; Pearlman, Alexander; Palamara, Pier Francesco; Morrow, Bernice; Friedman, Eitan; Oddoux, Carole; Burns, Edward; Ostrer, Harry (June 2010). "Abraham's Children in the Genome Era: Major Jewish Diaspora Populations Comprise Distinct Genetic Clusters with Shared Middle Eastern Ancestry". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 86 (6): 850–859. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2010.04.015. PMC 3032072. PMID 20560205.
  15. ^ a b
  16. ^ *M. Nicholson (2002). International Relations: A Concise Introduction. NYU Press. pp. 19–. ISBN 978-0-8147-5822-9. The Jews are a nation and were so before there was a Jewish state of Israel
  17. ^ *Facts On File, Incorporated (2009). Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East. Infobase Publishing. pp. 337–. ISBN 978-1-4381-2676-0. The people of the Kingdom of Israel and the ethnic and religious group known as the Jewish people that descended from them have been subjected to a number of forced migrations in their history
  18. ^ "Jew | History, Beliefs, & Facts". Britannica. Archived from the original on 1 September 2022. Retrieved 20 August 2022. any person whose religion is Judaism. In the broader sense of the term, a Jew is any person belonging to the worldwide group that constitutes, through descent or conversion, a continuation of the ancient Jewish people, who were themselves descendants of the Hebrews of the Bible (Old Testament).
  19. ^ Jew. Cambridge Dictionary. Archived from the original on 6 July 2021. a member of a people whose traditional religion is Judaism
    Jew. Oxford Dictionary. Archived from the original on 13 February 2023. a member of the people and cultural community whose traditional religion is Judaism and who come from the ancient Hebrew people of Israel; a person who believes in and practises Judaism
    Jew. Collins. Archived from the original on 22 July 2023. a person whose religion is Judaism", "a member of the Semitic people who claim descent from the ancient Hebrew people of Israel, are spread throughout the world, and are linked by cultural or religious ties
  20. ^ Eli Lederhendler (2001). Studies in Contemporary Jewry: Volume XVII: Who Owns Judaism? Public Religion and Private Faith in America and Israel. Oxford University Press. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-0-19-534896-5. Historically, the religious and ethnic dimensions of Jewish identity have been closely interwoven. In fact, so closely bound are they, that the traditional Jewish lexicon hardly distinguishes between the two concepts. Jewish religious practice, by definition, was observed exclusively by the Jewish people, and notions of Jewish peoplehood, nation, and community were suffused with faith in the Jewish God, the practice of Jewish (religious) law and the study of ancient religious texts
  21. ^ Tet-Lim N. Yee (2005). Jews, Gentiles and Ethnic Reconciliation: Paul's Jewish identity and Ephesians. Cambridge University Press. pp. 102–. ISBN 978-1-139-44411-8. This identification in the Jewish attitude between the ethnic group and religious identity is so close that the reception into this religion of members not belonging to its ethnic group has become impossible.
  22. ^ M. Nicholson (2002). International Relations: A Concise Introduction. NYU Press. pp. 19–. ISBN 978-0-8147-5822-9. The Jews are a nation and were so before there was a Jewish state of Israel
  23. ^ Alan Dowty (1998). The Jewish State: A Century Later, Updated With a New Preface. University of California Press. pp. 3–. ISBN 978-0-520-92706-3. Jews are a people, a nation (in the original sense of the word), an ethnos
  24. ^ a b Ernest Krausz; Gitta Tulea (1997). Jewish Survival: The Identity Problem at the Close of the Twentieth Century; [... International Workshop at Bar-Ilan University on the 18th and 19th of March, 1997]. Transaction Publishers. pp. 90–. ISBN 978-1-4128-2689-1. A person born Jewish who refutes Judaism may continue to assert a Jewish identity, and if he or she does not convert to another religion, even religious Jews will recognize the person as a Jew
  25. ^ "Belonging without believing: British Jewish identity and God". Institute for Jewish Policy Research. 20 March 2024. Only a third of Jews living in the UK have faith in God, as described in the Bible, yet 'non-believers' make up more than half of paid-up synagogue memberships, according to data from the JPR National Jewish Identity Survey
  26. ^ "Jews in U.S. are far less religious than Christians and Americans overall, at least by traditional measures". Pew Research Center. 13 May 2021.
  27. ^ "BBC - Religions - Judaism: Converting to Judaism". BBC. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  28. ^ a b John Day (2005), In Search of Pre-Exilic Israel, Bloomsbury Publishing, pp. 47.5 [48] 'In this sense, the emergence of ancient Israel is viewed not as the cause of the demise of Canaanite culture but as its upshot'.
  29. ^ a b Cf. Marcus Jastrow's Dictionary of the Targumim, Talmud Babli, Talmud Yerushalmi and Midrashic Literature, and the source he used: Megilla 13a:2 (Talmud).
  30. ^ a b c Amy-Jill Levine. The Misunderstood Jew: The Church and the Scandal of the Jewish Jesus. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 2006, page 162
  31. ^ a b c "Jew", Oxford English Dictionary.
  32. ^ a b c "Jew | History, Beliefs, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 3 July 2024. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  33. ^ David P Mindell (2009). The Evolving World. Harvard University Press. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-674-04108-0.
  34. ^ "Knowledge Resources: Judaism". Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs. Archived from the original on 27 August 2011. Retrieved 22 November 2011.
  35. ^ a b Lau, Peter H.W. (2009). "Gentile Incorporation into Israel in Ezra - Nehemiah?". Peeters Publishers. 90 (3): 356–373. JSTOR 42614919.
  36. ^ Thiessen, Matthew (2011). Contesting Conversion: Genealogy, Circumcision, and Identity in Ancient Judaism and Christianity. Oxford University Press. pp. 87–110. ISBN 978-0-19-991445-6.
  37. ^ Goodman, Martin (2006). Judaism in the Roman World. Brill. ISBN 978-90-47-41061-4.
  38. ^ Thiessen, Matthew (2011). Contesting Conversion: Genealogy, Circumcision, and Identity in Ancient Judaism and Christianity. Oxford University Press. pp. 87–110. ISBN 978-0-19-991445-6.
  39. ^ Josephus, The Jewish War iv. 4, § 5
  40. ^ a b Todd Penner; Davina Lopez (2015). De-Introducing the New Testament: Texts, Worlds, Methods, Stories. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 71–74. ISBN 978-1-118-43296-9.
  41. ^ a b Schwartz, Daniel R. (2014). Judeans and Jews: Four Faces of Dichotomy in Ancient Jewish History. University of Toronto Press. pp. 3–10. ISBN 978-1-4426-4839-5. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt1287s34.
  42. ^ a b Schwartz, Daniel R. (2021). "Judea versus Judaism: Between 1 and 2 Maccabees". TheTorah.com. Archived from the original on 16 March 2024.
  43. ^ a b Yarden, Ophir (10 March 2022). "Jewish Not Judean: The Diaspora in the Book of Esther". TheTorah.com. Archived from the original on 30 May 2025.
  44. ^ * Marvin Perry (2012). Western Civilization: A Brief History, Volume I: To 1789. Cengage Learning. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-111-83720-4.
    • Botticini, Maristella; Eckstein, Zvi (1 September 2007). "From Farmers to Merchants, Conversions and Diaspora: Human Capital and Jewish History". Journal of the European Economic Association. 5 (5): 885–926. doi:10.1162/JEEA.2007.5.5.885. "The death toll of the Great Revolt against the Roman empire amounted to about 600,000 Jews, whereas the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 caused the death of about 500,000 Jews. Massacres account for roughly 40 percent of the decrease of the Jewish population in Palestine. Moreover, some Jews migrated to Babylon after these revolts because of the worse economic conditions. After accounting for massacres and migrations, there is an additional 30 to 40 percent of the decrease in the Jewish population in Palestine (about 1–1.3 million Jews) to be explained" (p. 19).
    • Boyarin, Daniel, and Jonathan Boyarin. 2003. Diaspora: Generation and the Ground of Jewish Diaspora. p. 714 Archived 11 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine "...it is crucial to recognize that the Jewish conception of the Land of Israel is similar to the discourse of the Land of many (if not nearly all) "indigenous" peoples of the world. Somehow the Jews have managed to retain a sense of being rooted somewhere in the world through twenty centuries of exile from that someplace (organic metaphors are not out of place in this discourse, for they are used within the tradition itself). It is profoundly disturbing to hear Jewish attachment to the Land decried as regressive in the same discursive situations in which the attachment of native Americans or Australians to their particular rocks, trees, and deserts is celebrated as an organic connection to the Earth that "we" have lost" p. 714.
    • Cohen, Robin (1997), Global Diasporas: An Introduction. p. 24 London: UCL Press. "...although the word Babylon often connotes captivity and oppression, a rereading of the Babylonian period of exile can thus be shown to demonstrate the development of a new creative energy in a challenging, pluralistic context outside the natal homeland. When the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in AD 70, it was Babylon that remained as the nerve- and brain-centre for Jewish life and thought...the crushing of the revolt of the Judaeans against the Romans and the destruction of the Second Temple by the Roman general Titus in AD 70 precisely confirmed the catastrophic tradition. Once again, Jews had been unable to sustain a national homeland and were scattered to the far corners of the world" (p. 24).
    • Johnson, Paul A History of the Jews "The Bar Kochba Revolt," (HarperPerennial, 1987) pp. 158–61: Paul Johnson analyzes Cassius Dio's Roman History: Epitome of Book LXIX para. 13–14 (Dio's passage cited separately) among other sources: "Even if Dio's figures are somewhat exaggerated, the casualties amongst the population and the destruction inflicted on the country would have been considerable. According to Jerome, many Jews were also sold into slavery, so many, indeed, that the price of Jewish slaves at the slave market in Hebron sank drastically to a level no greater than that for a horse. The economic structure of the country was largely destroyed. The entire spiritual and economic life of the Palestinian Jews moved to Galilee. Jerusalem was now turned into a Roman colony with the official name Colonia Aelia Capitolina (Aelia after Hadrian's family name: P. Aelius Hadrianus; Capitolina after Jupiter Capitolinus). The Jews were forbidden on pain of death to set foot in the new Roman city. Aelia thus became a completely pagan city, no doubt with the corresponding public buildings and temples... We can...be certain that a statue of Hadrian was erected in the centre of Aelia, and this was tantamount in itself to a desecration of Jewish Jerusalem." p. 159.
    • Cassius Dio's Roman History: Epitome of Book LXIX para. 13–14: "13 At first the Romans took no account of them. Soon, however, all Judaea had been stirred up, and the Jews everywhere were showing signs of disturbance, were gathering together, and giving evidence of great hostility to the Romans, partly by secret and partly by overt acts; 2 many outside nations, too, were joining them through eagerness for gain, and the whole earth, one might almost say, was being stirred up over the matter. Then, indeed, Hadrian sent against them his best generals. First of these was Julius Severus, who was dispatched from Britain, where he was governor, against the Jews. 3 Severus did not venture to attack his opponents in the open at any one point, in view of their numbers and their desperation, but by intercepting small groups, thanks to the number of his soldiers and his under-officers, and by depriving them of food and shutting them up, he was able, rather slowly, to be sure, but with comparatively little danger, to crush, exhaust and exterminate them. Very few of them in fact survived. Fifty of their most important outposts and nine hundred and eighty-five of their most famous villages were razed to the ground. Five hundred and eighty thousand men were slain in the various raids and battles, and the number of those that perished by famine, disease and fire was past finding out. 2 Thus nearly the whole of Judaea was made desolate, a result of which the people had had forewarning before the war. For the tomb of Solomon, which the Jews regard as an object of veneration, fell to pieces of itself and collapsed, and many wolves and hyenas rushed howling into their cities. 3 Many Romans, moreover, perished in this war. Therefore Hadrian in writing to the senate did not employ the opening phrase commonly affected by the emperors, 'If you and our children are in health, it is well; I and the legions are in health'" (para. 13–14).
    • Safran, William (2005). "The Jewish Diaspora in a Comparative and Theoretical Perspective". Israel Studies. 10 (1): 36–60. doi:10.2979/ISR.2005.10.1.36. JSTOR 30245753. S2CID 144379115. Project MUSE 180371. "...diaspora referred to a very specific case—that of the exile of the Jews from the Holy Land and their dispersal throughout several parts of the globe. Diaspora [galut] connoted deracination, legal disabilities, oppression, and an often painful adjustment to a hostland whose hospitality was unreliable and ephemeral. It also connoted the existence on foreign soil of an expatriate community that considered its presence to be transitory. Meanwhile, it developed a set of institutions, social patterns, and ethnonational and/or religious symbols that held it together. These included the language, religion, values, social norms, and narratives of the homeland. Gradually, this community adjusted to the hostland environment and became itself a center of cultural creation. All the while, however, it continued to cultivate the idea of return to the homeland." (p. 36).
    • Sheffer, Gabriel (2005). "Is the Jewish Diaspora Unique? Reflections on the Diaspora's Current Situation". Israel Studies. 10 (1): 1–35. doi:10.2979/ISR.2005.10.1.1. JSTOR 30245752. S2CID 143958201. Project MUSE 180374. "...the Jewish nation, which from its very earliest days believed and claimed that it was the "chosen people," and hence unique. This attitude has further been buttressed by the equally traditional view, which is held not only by the Jews themselves, about the exceptional historical age of this diaspora, its singular traumatic experiences its singular ability to survive pogroms, exiles, and Holocaust, as well as its "special relations" with its ancient homeland, culminating in 1948 with the nation-state that the Jewish nation has established there... First, like many other members of established diasporas, the vast majority of Jews no longer regard themselves as being in Galut [exile] in their host countries....Perceptually, as well as actually, Jews permanently reside in host countries of their own free will, as a result of inertia, or as a result of problematic conditions prevailing in other hostlands, or in Israel. It means that the basic perception of many Jews about their existential situation in their hostlands has changed. Consequently, there is both a much greater self- and collective-legitimatization to refrain from making serious plans concerning "return" or actually "making Aliyah" [to emigrate, or "go up"] to Israel. This is one of the results of their wider, yet still rather problematic and sometimes painful acceptance by the societies and political systems in their host countries. It means that they, and to an extent their hosts, do not regard Jewish life within the framework of diasporic formations in these hostlands as something that they should be ashamed of, hide from others, or alter by returning to the old homeland" (p. 4).
    • Davies, William David; Finkelstein, Louis; Katz, Steven T. (1984). The Cambridge History of Judaism: Volume 4, The Late Roman-Rabbinic Period. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-77248-8. Although Dio's figure of 985 as the number of villages destroyed during the war seems hyperbolic, all Judaean villages, without exception, excavated thus far were razed following the Bar Kochba Revolt. This evidence supports the impression of total regional destruction following the war. Historical sources note the vast number of captives sold into slavery in Palestine and shipped abroad. ... The Judaean Jewish community never recovered from the Bar Kochba war. In its wake, Jews no longer formed the majority in Palestine, and the Jewish center moved to the Galilee. Jews were also subjected to a series of religious edicts promulgated by Hadrian that were designed to uproot the nationalistic elements with the Judaean Jewish community, these proclamations remained in effect until Hadrian's death in 138. An additional, more lasting punitive measure taken by the Romans involved expunging Judaea from the provincial name, changing it from Provincia Judaea to Provincia Syria Palestina. Although such name changes occurred elsewhere, never before or after was a nation's name expunged as the result of rebellion.
    • Dalit Rom-Shiloni, Exclusive Inclusivity: Identity Conflicts Between the Exiles and the People who Remained (6th–5th Centuries BCE), A&C Black, 2013 p. xv n.3: 'it is argued that biblical texts of the Neo-Babylonian and the early Persian periods show a fierce adversarial relationship(s) between the Judean groups. We find no expressions of sympathy to the deported community for its dislocation, no empathic expressions towards the People Who Remained under Babylonian subjugation in Judah. The opposite is apparent: hostile, denigrating, and denunciating language characterizes the relationships between resident and exiled Judeans throughout the sixth and fifth centuries.' (p. xvii)
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  101. ^ * "In the broader sense of the term, a Jew is any person belonging to the worldwide group that constitutes, through descent or conversion, a continuation of the ancient Jewish people, who were themselves the descendants of the Hebrews of the Old Testament."
    • "The Jewish people as a whole, initially called Hebrews (ʿIvrim), were known as Israelites (Yisreʾelim) from the time of their entrance into the Holy Land to the end of the Babylonian Exile (538 BC)."
    Jew at Encyclopædia Britannica
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  388. ^ Lawrence E. Harrison (2008). The Central Liberal Truth: How Politics Can Change a Culture and Save It. Oxford University Press. p. 102. That achievement is symbolized by the fact that 15 to 20 percent of Nobel Prizes have been won by Jews, who represent two tenths of one percent of the world's population.
  389. ^ Jonathan B. Krasner; Jonathan D. Sarna (2006). The History of the Jewish People: Ancient Israel to 1880s America. Behrman House, Inc. p. 1. These accomplishments account for 20 percent of the Nobel Prizes awarded since 1901. What a feat for a people who make up only .2 percent of the world's population!
  390. ^ "Jewish Nobel Prize Winners". Jinfo.org. Retrieved 16 March 2016. At least 194 Jews and people of half- or three-quarters-Jewish ancestry have been awarded the Nobel Prize, accounting for 22% of all individual recipients worldwide between 1901 and 2015, and constituting 36% of all US recipients during the same period. In the scientific research fields of Chemistry, Economics, Physics, and Physiology/Medicine, the corresponding world and US percentages are 26% and 38%, respectively. Among women laureates in the four research fields, the Jewish percentages (world and US) are 33% and 50%, respectively. Of organizations awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, 22% were founded principally by Jews or by people of half-Jewish descent. Since the turn of the century (i.e., since the year 2000), Jews have been awarded 25% of all Nobel Prizes and 28% of those in the scientific research fields.
  391. ^ Nissim, Hanna; Rooney, Patrick (July 2023). "American Jewish Philanthropy: Overview of Research between 2000 and 2020". Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, Indiana University.

Sources

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from Grokipedia

Jews (Hebrew: יהודים, romanized: Yehudim) constitute an ancient ethnoreligious group and nation originating from the Israelites and Hebrews of the Iron Age kingdoms in the Levant, united by shared descent from biblical patriarchs, adherence to Judaism—a monotheistic Abrahamic religion centered on the Torah—and genetic markers indicating primary Middle Eastern ancestry with subsequent admixtures in diaspora communities.
Their global population stands at approximately 15.8 million as of 2025, representing about 0.2% of the world's inhabitants, with the largest concentrations in Israel (around 7.2 million) and United States (roughly 6-7 million). Despite comprising a minuscule fraction of humanity, Jews have achieved disproportionate intellectual and scientific prominence, earning about 22% of all Nobel Prizes since their inception, including outsized shares in physics, chemistry, medicine, economics, and literature. Historically marked by cycles of sovereignty in ancient Israel and Judah, followed by exiles, expulsions from numerous countries over two millennia, and genocidal persecutions such as the Holocaust, Jewish resilience has sustained a distinctive diaspora culture emphasizing education, communal solidarity, and ethical monotheism.

Terminology and Etymology

Origins of the Term

The Hebrew term Yehudi (יְהוּדִי), from which "Jew" derives, originally denoted a member of the tribe of Judah, one of the twelve tribes descended from Jacob, or an inhabitant of the Kingdom of Judah established after the division of the united Israelite monarchy around 930 BCE. Following the Assyrian conquest of the Northern Kingdom of Israel in 722 BCE and the Babylonian destruction of the Kingdom of Judah in 586 BCE, with subsequent exile and return, Yehudi expanded in the 6th century BCE to encompass all surviving descendants of the Israelites, as the Judahite population formed the core of the restored community in Yehud Medinata (the Province of Judah), a province of the Achaemenid Persian Empire. In contrast, "Hebrew" (Ivri in Hebrew) predates Yehudi as an ethnic or linguistic descriptor, likely originating in the second millennium BCE and applied to Abraham's descendants or speakers of the Hebrew language, without specific tribal or territorial connotation. "Israelite," derived from "Israel" (the name given to Jacob in Genesis 32:28), functioned primarily as a pre-exilic national term for the collective people of the twelve tribes under the united or divided kingdoms, emphasizing covenantal descent rather than post-exilic geography. The term entered Greek as Ioudaios (Ἰουδαῖος) via Aramaic yehudhai, appearing in the Septuagint translation of the Hebrew Bible (3rd–2nd centuries BCE) to render Yehudi, where it denoted both Judean residents and adherents to associated practices. Latin adopted it as Iudaeus or Judaeus, which influenced Old French giu and Middle English Gyw or Jew by the 12th century CE, solidifying Western usage for the people formerly known as Israelites.

Modern Usage and Variants

In contemporary English usage, the term "Jews" serves as the standard noun for the ethnic and religious group, while "Jewish people" or "Jewish individuals" is sometimes preferred in self-description to soften perceived connotations from historical antisemitic slurs, though many Jewish writers and organizations maintain that "Jew" remains a neutral and appropriate noun without inherent offense. This shift gained traction in the 20th century amid efforts to counter derogatory associations, yet surveys and communal discourse indicate broad acceptance of "Jews" in formal and academic contexts, with avoidance often linked to external sensitivities rather than internal prohibition. The word "Jew" is conventionally capitalized in English as a proper noun denoting adherents of Judaism or members of the Jewish ethnos, consistent with styling for other religious or ethnic groups like "Christian" or "Muslim," though debates persist in style guides over consistency with uncapitalized generics such as "gentile." Modern variants include ethnic subgroup identifiers that emerged post-medieval dispersions: "Ashkenazi" refers to Jews tracing descent from medieval communities in the Rhineland and later Central and Eastern Europe, comprising the majority of today's global Jewish population; "Sephardi" denotes those from the Iberian Peninsula prior to the 1492 expulsion, subsequently resettling in North Africa, the Ottoman Empire, and the Americas; and "Mizrahi" applies to Jews indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa, with roots in ancient Near Eastern communities predating Arab conquests but adapted in modern nomenclature to distinguish from Sephardi liturgical traditions. In legal contexts, Israel's Law of Return (enacted July 5, 1950, and amended in 1970) defines a "Jew" as a person born to a Jewish mother or who has converted to Judaism, provided they are not a member of another religion, thereby extending immigration rights (aliyah) and automatic citizenship to those meeting this matrilineal or conversion criterion, reflecting Orthodox halakhic standards while including descendants up to grandchildren for broader eligibility. This definition diverges from patrilineal recognitions in some Reform Jewish circles but prioritizes verifiable maternal lineage or formal conversion to prevent fraudulent claims amid post-Holocaust repatriation goals.

Identity

Ethnic and Genetic Dimensions

Jewish populations exhibit genetic continuity traceable to ancient Levantine origins, as evidenced by shared Y-chromosome haplogroups J1 and J2, which predominate in paternal lineages across Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Mizrahi, and other subgroups. These haplogroups, common in Middle Eastern non-Jewish populations such as Palestinians and Jordanians, indicate a common ancestral pool in the inland Levant, with networks linking Jewish samples to Syrian, Lebanese, and Jordanian profiles. Genome-wide analyses confirm that Jewish groups cluster genetically nearer to northern Fertile Crescent populations (e.g., Kurds, Armenians) than to neighboring Arabs, underscoring paternal descent from Bronze Age Levantine sources. Maternal lineages, traced via mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), reveal subgroup-specific admixture patterns diverging from the paternal profile. In Ashkenazi Jews, approximately 40% of mtDNA variation derives from four major founders with prehistoric European ancestry, particularly from Southern Europe including the Italian Peninsula, as confirmed by sequencing of haplogroups K and N1b. Recent 2025 analyses of mtDNA further align Ashkenazi maternal lines with Southern and Western European profiles, supporting gene flow from Italian-like sources during early medieval migrations rather than Near Eastern continuity on the female side. Sephardi and Mizrahi maternal pools show less European input, retaining higher Levantine and regional Middle Eastern/North African components, while North African Jewish groups display clusters intermediate between European Jews and local Berber populations. Autosomal DNA studies quantify overall admixture against a Middle Eastern core: Ashkenazi Jews average 50-80% Levantine ancestry with 20-50% Southern European admixture, varying by model but consistently rejecting substantial Eastern European or Caucasian contributions. Sephardi Jews incorporate Iberian and North African elements (up to 20-30%), Mizrahim maintain near-exclusive Middle Eastern profiles with minimal dilution, and Ethiopian Jews show distinct East African integration alongside Levantine signals. African ancestry appears in traces (3-5%) across multiple groups, dating to ~2,000 years ago, likely via ancient trade routes. Genome-wide data from medieval Ashkenazi remains (14th century Erfurt) affirm this structure, with ~33% Eastern European input in early samples evolving to modern compositions through endogamy. The Khazar hypothesis, positing Turkic-Caucasian origins for Ashkenazim, lacks support from genetic evidence; principal component analyses and linkage disequilibrium mapping place Ashkenazi samples proximal to Italians and other Southern Europeans, distant from Khazar-proximate groups like Armenians or Georgians, with no detectable Khazar-specific ancestry. This refutes claims of non-Levantine mass conversion, aligning instead with diaspora admixture models preserving a Bronze/Iron Age Jewish genetic signature amid host population intermixing. Subgroup distinctions persist due to founder effects and endogamy, enabling cluster identification in global datasets despite admixtures of 30-60% non-Levantine ancestry varying by geography.

Religious and Cultural Definitions

In halakha, the corpus of traditional Jewish law, Jewish identity is defined by matrilineal descent—meaning a child born to a Jewish mother is considered Jewish, irrespective of the father's status—or by undergoing a formal conversion process that includes acceptance of the mitzvot, ritual immersion, and, for males, circumcision. This principle, rooted in Talmudic rulings such as Kiddushin 68b, emphasizes maternal lineage as the determinative factor for religious status, with conversion serving as the primary alternative pathway. Orthodox and Conservative Judaism adhere strictly to this halakhic standard, viewing it as binding for communal recognition and participation in rituals like marriage or aliyah to Israel under the Law of Return's religious criteria. Reform Judaism diverges by recognizing patrilineal descent under specific conditions, as outlined in the Central Conference of American Rabbis' 1983 resolution on patrilineal descent, which grants Jewish status to children of a single Jewish parent (mother or father) if they are raised as Jews through education, home practice, and public identification with the faith. This policy aims to accommodate interfaith families prevalent in modern diaspora communities, though it lacks universal acceptance outside Reform circles and has sparked ongoing denominational disputes over authenticity. Culturally, Jewish identity extends beyond strict halakhic adherence to include observance of mitzvot—commandments such as Shabbat rest from Friday sunset to Saturday night, kosher dietary laws, and lifecycle events like bar/bat mitzvah—which serve as markers of affiliation even among those lacking orthodox belief. These practices, numbering 613 in traditional enumeration (248 positive and 365 negative), foster communal cohesion and ethnic continuity, often persisting in secular contexts as symbols of heritage rather than divine obligation. However, this creates tensions with secular ethnic self-identification, where individuals may claim Jewishness based on ancestry or culture without mitzvot observance, challenging halakha's ritual-centric framework. Unlike proselytizing faiths such as Christianity or Islam, Judaism maintains low historical conversion rates, with active recruitment discouraged by halakhic stringency—requiring sincere commitment and often a rabbinic court review—and external factors like medieval bans on Jewish proselytism under Christian and Muslim rule. Conversions, while possible and documented in antiquity (e.g., during the Hellenistic period), comprised a negligible fraction of Jewish population growth, estimated at under 10% in pre-modern eras, prioritizing endogenous transmission over expansion.

Debates on Inclusion and Conversion

Orthodox Judaism adheres strictly to the traditional halakhic definition of Jewish identity through matrilineal descent, requiring that a person's Jewish mother confers status, while rejecting patrilineal descent as a valid criterion. In contrast, Reform Judaism, since its 1983 resolution, recognizes a child as Jewish if either parent is Jewish and the child is raised with Jewish education and identification, aiming to accommodate modern family structures amid rising intermarriage. Conservative Judaism maintains the matrilineal standard, aligning with Orthodox views on descent but sometimes accepting patrilineal cases under stringent conditions of Jewish upbringing. These divergences fuel ongoing disputes, with Orthodox authorities arguing that patrilineal recognition undermines the integrity of Jewish law and invites assimilation by broadening criteria beyond empirical maternal lineage traceable in historical texts like the Talmud. Conversion processes exacerbate these tensions, as Orthodox standards demand rigorous study of Jewish texts, circumcision for males, immersion in a mikveh, and demonstrated acceptance of all mitzvot before a beit din, rejecting non-Orthodox conversions as insufficiently committed. In Israel, rabbinical courts under the Chief Rabbinate enforce these Orthodox protocols for personal status matters like marriage and burial, often invalidating Reform or Conservative conversions despite Israel's Law of Return granting citizenship to those with Jewish ancestry regardless of observance. Critics from progressive streams contend this exclusivity alienates potential Jews and ignores sincere intent, while Orthodox proponents, citing historical precedents of insincere conversions leading to communal discord, prioritize verifiable transformation to preserve doctrinal coherence. High intermarriage rates in the United States, reaching 58% for Jews married between 2005 and 2013 according to Pew Research Center data—up from 43% in 1990—have intensified debates, with non-Orthodox Jews intermarrying at 71%, contributing to eroded religious cohesion as intermarried households show lower rates of synagogue affiliation and ritual observance among children. Empirical studies indicate that while about two-thirds of intermarried couples raise children with some Jewish identity, these offspring exhibit diluted practice, with only 33% of such families ensuring formal Jewish education compared to higher retention in endogamous ones. Proponents of stricter inclusion criteria argue this trend causally weakens the ethnic-religious core, as inclusive policies correlate with numerical growth but substantive loss of distinctiveness, echoing first-principles concerns over boundary maintenance in minority preservation. Historically, forced conversions, such as those imposed during the Spanish Inquisition from 1478 onward, compelled tens of thousands of Jews to nominally adopt Christianity, resulting in conversos who often maintained crypto-Jewish practices amid persecution, yet bred suspicion and communal fragmentation rather than genuine integration. Unlike these coerced entries, which diluted trust and spurred expulsions like Spain's 1492 edict affecting up to 200,000 Jews, contemporary voluntary inclusivity debates grapple with whether lax standards risk similar erosion by admitting those without full commitment, prompting Orthodox insistence on rigorous vetting to safeguard against historical patterns of external pressure undermining internal vitality.

Origins

Biblical Accounts

The Book of Genesis narrates the origins of the Israelites through the patriarch Abraham, whom God calls from Ur of the Chaldeans to migrate to Canaan, establishing an unconditional covenant promising land possession, protection, and descendants as numerous as the stars. This covenant, reiterated to Abraham's son Isaac and grandson Jacob (renamed Israel), forms the basis of Israelite identity as a chosen people bound by divine election for monotheistic fidelity. According to Exodus, the descendants of Jacob multiply in Egypt, facing enslavement under a new pharaoh, until God raises Moses to lead their deliverance through ten plagues and the parting of the Red Sea, traditionally dated to 1446 BCE based on biblical chronology linking it 480 years prior to Solomon's temple construction. At Mount Sinai, God formalizes the covenant with the revelation of the Torah, including the Ten Commandments, emphasizing exclusive worship of Yahweh (יהוה, Paleo-Hebrew: 𐤉𐤄𐤅𐤄) as the sole deity and ethical obligations tied to the land grant. The Book of Joshua describes the subsequent conquest of Canaan under Joshua's leadership, involving divine interventions such as the fall of Jericho's walls and battles against city-states, fulfilling the Abrahamic land promise through targeted judgments on Canaanite idolatry. This era of judges follows, marked by cyclical apostasy and deliverance, underscoring covenantal themes of obedience yielding prosperity and disobedience inviting discipline. Subsequent narratives in Samuel and Kings depict the establishment of a united monarchy around 1000 BCE, with Saul as first king, followed by David, who conquers Jerusalem and defeats Philistines, and Solomon, who builds the First Temple as a monotheistic worship center. Prophets like Isaiah and Jeremiah reinforce these accounts by stressing Yahweh's unique sovereignty, Israel's election for ethical witness, and the covenant's enduring validity amid threats of exile for idolatry.

Archaeological Evidence

The earliest extrabiblical reference to Israel appears on the Merneptah Stele, an Egyptian victory inscription dated to approximately 1208 BCE, which describes a campaign in Canaan and states that "Israel is laid waste; his seed is not," portraying Israel as a seminomadic or rural people rather than a centralized state. This artifact, housed in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, provides the first material attestation of an entity called Israel in the southern Levant, situated among other defeated groups like Ashkelon and Gezer. Archaeological surveys indicate that Israelite identity emerged gradually in the central hill country of Canaan during the late 13th to 12th centuries BCE, marked by the appearance of over 250 new settlements characterized by simple four-room houses, collar-rim jars, and absence of pig bones, distinguishing them from coastal Philistine sites. This ethnogenesis reflects indigenous development from local Canaanite populations rather than a massive external invasion or conquest, with continuity in material culture such as pottery styles and settlement patterns. Excavations reveal no evidence of widespread destruction layers attributable to a sudden Israelite incursion, and mainstream archaeological consensus holds that there is no material trace of a large-scale exodus from Egypt involving hundreds of thousands, as such an event would leave detectable demographic or economic disruptions in Egyptian records or Sinai sites, which are absent. By the 9th century BCE, inscriptions confirm the existence of Israelite polities, including the Tel Dan Stele, an Aramaic victory monument from around 840 BCE erected by an Aramean king (likely Hazael), which boasts of defeating the "king of Israel" and the "king of the House of David," providing the first extrabiblical evidence for a Davidic dynasty in Judah. Destruction layers at sites like Lachish and Jerusalem, dated to 586 BCE via pottery, seals, and Babylonian arrowheads, corroborate the Neo-Babylonian conquest under Nebuchadnezzar II, which razed the First Temple and much of the city, as evidenced by burned structures and ash deposits analyzed through magnetic and stratigraphic methods. The Second Temple's destruction in 70 CE by Roman forces under Titus is attested by debris layers in Jerusalem, including melted artifacts and weapon finds, and commemorated in the Arch of Titus in Rome, which depicts the spoils of the Temple, such as the menorah, being paraded in triumph.

Genetic Studies

Genetic studies on Jewish populations, utilizing autosomal DNA analysis since the early 2000s, have demonstrated a shared ancestral component tracing to the ancient Levant, with varying degrees of admixture from host populations during diasporic dispersals. These molecular approaches, distinct from archaeological or textual evidence, model ancestry through genome-wide markers and principal component analysis, revealing that Jewish groups cluster intermediately between Levantine and regional Eurasian or African populations. For instance, a 2010 study of diverse Jewish cohorts found substantial Middle Eastern genetic signatures across Ashkenazi, Sephardic, and Mizrahi samples, supporting continuity from Bronze Age Levantine sources amid post-exilic gene flow. Recent analyses, including a 2020 high-resolution inference of Jewish structure spanning Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa, confirm this pattern, with admixture events dated to medieval periods rather than wholesale population replacements. Ashkenazi Jews exhibit approximately 50% Levantine-derived autosomal ancestry, complemented by 30-40% Southern European contributions, primarily Italian-like, as inferred from admixture modeling in studies post-2010. This composition reflects endogamous expansion from a bottlenecked founder group estimated at 350 individuals around 600-800 CE, a demographic constriction evidenced by elevated runs of homozygosity and linkage disequilibrium decay patterns. The bottleneck, corroborated by sequencing of Ashkenazi reference panels, underlies the prevalence of recessive disorders such as Tay-Sachs and Gaucher disease, with carrier frequencies up to 1 in 25 for certain alleles. Maternal lineages show higher European input, with ~40% of Ashkenazi mtDNA tracing to four prehistoric European founders, yet paternal Y-chromosome data align more closely with Near Eastern profiles, indicating sex-biased admixture during early medieval migrations. Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews display closer genetic affinity to Middle Eastern and North African populations, with autosomal profiles showing 70-90% regional continuity and minimal European admixture outside Iberian influences post-1492. A 2012 analysis of North African Jews highlighted distinctive gene pools with shared Levantine-Maghreb components, distinct from non-Jewish Berber groups, underscoring limited conversion-driven origins. Mizrahi cohorts, from Iraq to Yemen, cluster nearest to ancient Levantine proxies in global PCA plots. Hypotheses positing Ashkenazi origins via mass conversions of Europeans or Khazars have been refuted by autosomal and uniparental marker data; for example, Khazar-specific Turkic or Caucasian signals are absent, with principal components instead aligning Ashkenazim nearer to other Jews than to putative source groups. While outlier studies like Elhaik's 2013 model invoked Khazar admixture, subsequent critiques and larger datasets, including 2013 Y-chromosome analyses of Levites, affirm Levantine paternal continuity over alternative ethnogenesis narratives. Endogamy preserved core ancestry despite dispersals, as quantified by Fst distances remaining low among Jewish subgroups relative to outgroups.

History

Ancient Kingdoms and Exile

The united monarchy under Kings David and Solomon, dated approximately to 1020–930 BCE, fragmented following Solomon's death, resulting in the division into the northern Kingdom of Israel, comprising ten tribes with capitals at Samaria, and the southern Kingdom of Judah, centered on Jerusalem and encompassing the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. This schism, attributed to heavy taxation and forced labor under Solomon's successor Rehoboam, led to persistent rivalry and independent political trajectories for the two entities. The northern Kingdom of Israel endured Assyrian incursions starting in 732 BCE under Tiglath-Pileser III, who deported populations from annexed territories, culminating in the conquest of Samaria by Shalmaneser V and Sargon II in 722 BCE. Assyrian annals record the deportation of approximately 27,000 inhabitants, resettling foreigners in their place, which contributed to the assimilation of many Israelites and the legend of the "Ten Lost Tribes." Archaeological evidence, including destroyed sites like Hazor and Megiddo, corroborates the campaign's devastation, though the scale of deportation remains debated among historians due to reliance on Assyrian royal inscriptions that may exaggerate victories. Judah survived longer as a vassal state, paying tribute to Assyria as evidenced by the Black Obelisk depicting King Jehu's submission around 841 BCE, but faced Babylonian pressure after the Assyrian Empire's decline. Nebuchadnezzar II besieged Jerusalem in 597 BCE, deporting King Jehoiachin and elites numbering about 10,000, including artisans and priests, followed by the city's full conquest and the First Temple's destruction in 586 BCE. Babylonian chronicles and archaeological finds, such as ash layers and arrowheads on Mount Zion, confirm the siege's ferocity and the deportation of roughly 832 more captives, targeting primarily urban and skilled populations while leaving rural peasants. The Babylonian Exile, spanning 597–539 BCE, involved these phased deportations to Mesopotamia, where exiles maintained communal structures and religious practices, fostering textual preservation and prophetic literature amid cultural adaptation. Persian king Cyrus the Great's conquest of Babylon in 539 BCE led to a 538 BCE edict permitting Jewish return and Temple reconstruction, supported by the Cyrus Cylinder's general policy of repatriating displaced peoples and restoring cults, though specifics on Jews are inferred from later accounts. Under Persian rule, returnees under leaders like Zerubbabel rebuilt the Second Temple by 516 BCE, restoring limited autonomy in Yehud province, but many exiles remained in Babylon, diversifying Jewish communities. Alexander the Great's conquest of the Achaemenid Empire reached Judea in 332 BCE, incorporating it into Hellenistic domains without major resistance, as local leaders submitted during his campaign from Tyre to Egypt. Post-Alexander, Ptolemaic and Seleucid rule alternated until Antiochus IV Epiphanes' edicts in 167 BCE banned Jewish practices, desecrated the Temple with a Zeus altar, and enforced Hellenization, sparking the Maccabean Revolt led by Judah Maccabee. Guerrilla tactics secured victories, rededicating the Temple in 164 BCE and establishing Hasmonean independence by 140 BCE, marking a brief resurgence of Jewish sovereignty amid Hellenistic pressures.

Early Diaspora

The First Jewish-Roman War erupted in 66 CE amid tensions over Roman taxation and governance in Judaea, culminating in the siege and destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple by Roman forces under Titus in 70 CE. This conflict resulted in massive casualties, with contemporary historian Flavius Josephus estimating over 1.1 million deaths and 97,000 Jews enslaved and dispersed across the Roman Empire. The loss of the Temple ended sacrificial worship and centralized authority, forcing Jewish communities to adapt through synagogue-based practices and textual study, accelerating the shift away from Temple-centric Judaism. The Bar Kokhba Revolt from 132 to 135 CE, led by Simon bar Kokhba against Emperor Hadrian's policies including the founding of Aelia Capitolina on Jerusalem's ruins and a ban on circumcision, represented the final major bid for Judean independence. Roman suppression under generals like Julius Severus inflicted severe losses, with estimates of 580,000 Jewish combatants killed according to Cassius Dio, alongside widespread enslavement and exile that further depopulated Judaea and bolstered diaspora populations. Hadrian's renaming of the province to Syria Palaestina aimed to erase Jewish ties to the land, entrenching permanent dispersion. In response to these catastrophes, rabbinic Judaism emerged as a portable framework for Jewish continuity, with Yochanan ben Zakkai establishing an academy at Yavneh around 70 CE to preserve Pharisaic traditions of oral law and interpretation. This institution standardized prayers as substitutes for sacrifices and compiled early Mishnah elements, enabling Judaism's survival without sovereignty or Temple. Diaspora Jews, already present in Mediterranean hubs like Alexandria and Antioch, expanded into Italy, southern Gaul, and Hispania, while eastern communities in Parthian Mesopotamia offered refuge from Roman persecution. Early evidence of organized Jewish life in northern Europe appears in Cologne by the 4th century CE, documented in a 321 CE decree by Constantine requiring Jewish representatives in the curia, though claims of 1st-century presence lack conclusive archaeology. In North Africa, communities in Cyrenaica and Carthage, predating the wars but reinforced by post-revolt migrations, integrated into Roman provincial life while maintaining distinct practices. These networks facilitated trade and cultural exchange, sustaining Jewish identity amid host societies until medieval shifts.

Medieval Developments

During the medieval period from approximately 500 to 1500 CE, Jewish communities evolved distinctly in Christian Europe and Islamic lands, shaped by varying degrees of tolerance, economic restrictions, and intellectual pursuits. In Europe, Ashkenazi Jews established communities in the Rhineland region of western Germany around the 10th century, forming a distinct cultural group amid the Holy Roman Empire. These settlements faced periodic segregation, as church councils like the Lateran Councils of 1179 and 1215 urged separation of Jews from Christians to prevent intermingling, leading to the development of enclosed Jewish quarters that prefigured later ghettos. Economic necessities drove many European Jews into moneylending, as the Christian Church prohibited usury—lending at interest—among Christians, creating a niche that Jews could fill under Jewish law permitting interest from non-Jews. This role, while enabling survival amid guild exclusions from crafts and land ownership bans, fueled resentment and accusations, culminating in the first recorded blood libel in 1144 in Norwich, England, where Jews were falsely accused of ritually murdering a Christian boy named William. Such libels spread, exacerbating violence, and contributed to mass expulsions: King Edward I of England issued the Edict of Expulsion on July 18, 1290, banishing approximately 3,000 Jews and confiscating their property to fund wars and alleviate debts. Similarly, in 1306, King Philip IV of France expelled around 100,000 Jews, seizing their assets to bolster royal finances amid fiscal crises. In contrast, Jewish communities in Islamic territories, particularly Sephardi Jews in Al-Andalus under Umayyad rule from the 8th century, experienced phases of relative prosperity as dhimmis—protected non-Muslims required to pay the jizya poll tax in exchange for autonomy in religious and communal affairs. This status enabled intellectual flourishing, with Talmudic academies in Baghdad serving as global centers of Jewish scholarship under the Geonim until the 11th century, producing authoritative responsa and preserving Babylonian Talmud traditions. In Cordoba, Hasdai ibn Shaprut established a prominent academy in the 10th century, importing libraries from Baghdad and fostering study of Talmud, philosophy, and medicine amid a "golden age" of Jewish-Arab cultural synthesis from the 10th to 12th centuries. Prominent figures exemplified this era's scholarship; Moses Maimonides (1138–1204), born in Cordoba, codified Jewish law in the Mishneh Torah and authored philosophical works like Guide for the Perplexed, reconciling Aristotelian reason with Torah, after fleeing Almohad persecution to Egypt in 1168. However, tolerance in Islamic lands was inconsistent; the Almohad invasion of 1147 ended much of the Spanish golden age, forcing conversions or exile, while dhimmi protections offered no immunity from periodic zealotry or economic exploitation. Overall, these developments highlighted causal tensions: economic utility bred dependence and backlash in Europe, while intellectual integration in the Islamic world depended on rulers' pragmatic policies rather than inherent equality.

Early Modern Period

The Early Modern Period began with the culmination of medieval anti-Jewish policies in Western Europe, particularly the expulsion of Jews from Spain under the Alhambra Decree issued on March 31, 1492, by Ferdinand II and Isabella I, which required all Jews to convert to Christianity or leave by July 31 of that year, affecting an estimated 200,000 individuals who departed, many perishing en route due to hardship. In Portugal, King Manuel I initially decreed expulsion in 1496 but enforced mass forced conversions in 1497, preventing departure and leading to widespread crypto-Judaism among survivors, with subsequent inquisitorial pressures prompting further flight. These events dispersed Sephardic Jews across the Mediterranean, North Africa, and into the Ottoman Empire, where Sultan Bayezid II actively welcomed refugees, dispatching ships to evacuate them and granting settlement rights, viewing their arrival as an economic boon despite internal opposition. In Italy, while some regions like the Papal States and Naples saw expulsions or restrictions, Venice established the first formal ghetto in 1516 on March 29, confining Jews to a segregated island in the Cannaregio district under decree of the Senate, limiting their residence, commerce, and movement while permitting moneylending and trade to benefit the Republic. This model of residential segregation spread to other Italian cities, marking a shift from outright expulsion to controlled coexistence amid economic utility. Concurrently, Eastern Europe emerged as a major refuge; the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, under tolerant policies from the 14th century onward, attracted Ashkenazi and Sephardic migrants, fostering a population growth to over 450,000 by 1600, with Jews dominating leaseholding, trade, and artisanry in a "golden age" of relative autonomy under the Council of Four Lands. This prosperity shattered during the Khmelnytsky Uprising of 1648, led by Cossack hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky against Polish rule in Ukraine, resulting in massacres targeting Jewish estate managers and communities, with contemporary accounts estimating up to 100,000 Jewish deaths from violence, starvation, and disease across over 300 settlements, decimating the population and prompting theological crises. Religious ferment followed, exemplified by the Sabbatean movement, when Ottoman Jew Sabbatai Zevi proclaimed himself Messiah in 1665, gaining fervent followers across Europe and the Levant through kabbalistic prophecies disseminated by Nathan of Gaza, only for Zevi's 1666 conversion to Islam under threat to fracture the movement into antinomian sects challenging rabbinic orthodoxy. These upheavals underscored the period's volatility, blending refuge with recurrent peril and internal schisms.

Emancipation and Nationalism

The emancipation of Jews began with the French Revolution, when the National Assembly granted full citizenship to Jews on September 27, 1791, marking the first time a European state extended equal rights to its Jewish population without requiring religious conversion. This decree applied the principles of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen to approximately 40,000 Jews in France, abolishing special taxes and occupational restrictions, though implementation varied regionally until fully realized by 1799. The French model influenced gradual emancipation elsewhere in Western Europe, with the Netherlands following in 1796, Prussia partially in 1812, and full equality achieved in the unified German Empire in 1871, enabling Jews to enter professions, universities, and civil service previously barred to them. Intellectual movements accompanied these legal changes, notably the Haskalah, or Jewish Enlightenment, which emerged in the mid-18th century in German-speaking lands under figures like Moses Mendelssohn, who advocated rationalism, secular education, and cultural integration while upholding Jewish observance. This fostered secularization and adaptation, giving rise to Reform Judaism in early 19th-century Germany, where rabbis like Abraham Geiger modified rituals—such as introducing vernacular sermons and organ music—to align with modern sensibilities and promote ethical universalism over strict traditionalism. Emancipation thus spurred both assimilation and internal reform, with Jews achieving prominence in finance, science, and arts in Western Europe, yet often facing social exclusion that reinforced communal ties. Persistent antisemitism, however, undermined the promise of integration, as evidenced by the Dreyfus Affair of 1894, in which French army captain Alfred Dreyfus, convicted on fabricated treason charges amid widespread anti-Jewish sentiment, exposed how emancipation failed to eradicate prejudice even among the assimilated elite. In Eastern Europe, where emancipation lagged, tsarist Russia's restrictions fueled pogroms, including waves in 1881–1882 and the Kishinev massacre of April 1903, where mobs killed 49 Jews, wounded hundreds, and destroyed property, incited by blood libel rumors and official inaction. These events prompted political responses, notably Theodor Herzl's 1896 pamphlet Der Judenstaat, which argued that assimilation was illusory and proposed a sovereign Jewish state in Palestine as the only safeguard against recurrent violence. As an alternative to Zionism, mass emigration surged, with approximately two million Jews fleeing Eastern Europe's pogroms and economic restrictions for the United States between 1881 and 1914, reshaping global Jewish demographics and fostering new communities centered on labor activism and cultural preservation. This period's tensions—between emancipation's opportunities and nationalism's imperatives—highlighted causal realities: legal equality did not neutralize deep-seated ethnic animosities, driving Jews toward either territorial self-determination or geographic escape.

20th Century Crises

Following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, Jews were disproportionately represented in the early Soviet leadership relative to their share of the population, comprising about 4-5% of Bolshevik Party members but holding key positions such as Leon Trotsky as People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs and War, and Yakov Sverdlov as the first head of the Soviet state. This prominence, amid widespread civil war and Red Terror executions estimated at 50,000-200,000, contributed to the emergence of the "Judeo-Bolshevism" narrative, an antisemitic theory positing communism as a Jewish plot, which spread across Europe and was amplified by White Russian émigrés and later Nazi ideologues despite lacking evidence of coordinated ethnic conspiracy. In Mandatory Palestine, heightened Jewish immigration during the Fifth Aliyah (1929-1939), driven by European antisemitism, exacerbated tensions with Arab populations, culminating in the 1929 riots sparked by disputes over access to the Western Wall in Jerusalem. These attacks killed 133 Jews and wounded 339, including massacres in Hebron where 67 Jews were murdered and Safed where 18-20 died, prompting the British to deploy troops and leading Jewish communities to bolster self-defense through the Haganah militia. The 1936-1939 Arab Revolt followed, involving widespread strikes, bombings, and assaults that claimed over 500 Jewish lives and 5,000 Arab deaths (many from intra-Arab or British clashes), with Jewish responses including the formation of special night squads under British officer Orde Wingate to protect settlements. In Europe, the Nazi ascent to power on January 30, 1933, initiated systematic persecution, with boycotts of Jewish businesses on April 1, 1933, and the Nuremberg Laws of September 15, 1935, revoking Jewish citizenship and prohibiting intermarriage. Kristallnacht on November 9-10, 1938, saw 91 Jews killed, 30,000 arrested, and over 1,000 synagogues burned, accelerating emigration attempts by approximately 300,000 German and Austrian Jews by 1939, though restricted by global quotas and the failed Évian Conference of July 1938 where 32 nations largely refused increased intake. World War II escalated these crises into the Holocaust, with Nazi invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, confining Jews to ghettos like Warsaw (holding 400,000 by 1941) and Einsatzgruppen mobile killings murdering over 1 million Jews by late 1941. The Wannsee Conference on January 20, 1942, coordinated the "Final Solution" for systematic extermination, leading to death camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau where 1.1 million perished, primarily via gas chambers; overall, approximately 6 million Jews were murdered by May 1945 through shootings, starvation, and gassing.

Post-1948 Developments

The State of Israel was established on May 14, 1948, following the United Nations Partition Plan and the end of the British Mandate, marking the realization of Zionist aspirations for a Jewish homeland amid post-Holocaust displacement and regional conflicts. In the subsequent decades, Israel absorbed approximately 3.2 million Jewish immigrants by 2017, including mass waves from Arab countries in the 1950s, Ethiopia in the 1980s and 1990s, and the former Soviet Union, transforming its population from around 650,000 Jews in 1948 to over 7 million by the 2020s. This ingathering, known as aliyah, was driven by persecution, economic opportunity, and ideological commitment, though it strained resources and integrated diverse ethnic groups amid ongoing security threats. Israel faced existential military challenges in the Six-Day War of June 5–10, 1967, launching preemptive strikes against Egypt, Jordan, and Syria after escalations including Egyptian troop mobilizations in Sinai and blockade of the Straits of Tiran, resulting in Israeli capture of the Sinai Peninsula, Golan Heights, West Bank, and Gaza Strip. The Yom Kippur War began on October 6, 1973, with a coordinated surprise assault by Egypt and Syria on the Jewish holy day, initially penetrating Israeli defenses before Israel counterattacked, leading to heavy casualties on both sides—over 2,500 Israeli dead—and eventual cease-fires that paved the way for later peace treaties like Camp David in 1979. These conflicts underscored Israel's strategic vulnerabilities and reliance on rapid mobilization, while fostering domestic debates over security policies and territorial concessions. In the diaspora, the United States hosted the largest Jewish community, estimated at 7.7 million in 2024, comprising about 2.3% of the national population, with concentrations in states like New York and California. Soviet Jewish emigration surged in the 1970s, with around 165,000 arriving in Israel by 1988 amid refusenik activism and international pressure, followed by over 1 million from the former Soviet Union in the 1990s after the USSR's collapse, bolstering Israel's high-tech sector but challenging social integration. The October 7, 2023, Hamas-led terrorist attack on southern Israel killed approximately 1,200 people—mostly civilians—and resulted in 251 hostages taken to Gaza, prompting Israel's military operation to dismantle Hamas infrastructure, which has faced international scrutiny over civilian casualties in densely populated areas. Post-attack, antisemitic incidents in the U.S. spiked, with the Anti-Defamation League recording a surge in campus harassment, including over 25% of Jewish students reporting faculty promoting anti-Jewish hostility and 507 tracked incidents in the 2025–2026 academic year alone, often linked to anti-Israel protests that blurred into Jew-hatred despite claims of distinguishing criticism from bigotry. This rise, documented across advocacy and congressional reports, reflects causal links between radicalized activism and emboldened prejudice, with university administrations criticized for inadequate responses amid ideological capture in academia.

Religion

Core Tenets and Practices

Judaism affirms strict monotheism, asserting the existence of one incorporeal, eternal, and omnipotent God who is the uncaused cause of all creation and who entered into an eternal covenant with the Jewish people through Abraham and at Sinai. This belief, devoid of anthropomorphic form or plurality, rejects idolatry and mandates exclusive worship of this singular deity, as articulated in the Shema prayer from Deuteronomy 6:4: "Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one." Maimonides' Thirteen Principles of Faith, codified in the 12th century, systematize these tenets, including God's omniscience, the immutability of the Torah as divine revelation to Moses, prophetic authenticity limited to Moses' unparalleled status, divine reward and punishment based on deeds, the eventual arrival of the Messiah to usher in universal peace and ingathering of exiles, and bodily resurrection in the world to come. Observance of the 613 mitzvot—248 affirmative commandments and 365 prohibitions—forms the practical core of Jewish life, derived directly from the Five Books of Moses and encompassing ethical, ritual, and civil laws binding upon Jews as a perpetual covenantal obligation. Paramount among these are Shabbat, a weekly cessation of creative labor from sunset Friday to nightfall Saturday to emulate divine rest after creation (Exodus 20:8-11), kashrut dietary restrictions prohibiting consumption of pork, shellfish, and blood while separating meat from dairy (Leviticus 11; Deuteronomy 14), and brit milah, the covenantal circumcision of male infants on the eighth day after birth (Genesis 17:10-14), which takes precedence even over Shabbat observance in halakhic rulings. Daily prayer, ideally thrice daily in a quorum of ten adult males (minyan) at a synagogue, substitutes for Temple sacrifices and fosters communal recitation of the Amidah, reinforcing submission to God's will. The High Holidays anchor annual repentance and judgment: Rosh Hashanah, commencing the civil new year on the first two days of Tishrei with shofar blasts symbolizing awakening and coronation of God as King, initiates the Ten Days of Awe leading to Yom Kippur, a 25-hour fast from sunset to nightfall involving exhaustive confession, prayer, and atonement rituals to secure divine forgiveness for transgressions against God and fellow humans. Judaism posits that human actions, particularly Torah-compliant mitzvot, effect tikkun olam—"world rectification"—by aligning creation with divine intent through spiritual elevation of sparks of holiness scattered in the material realm, a kabbalistic concept emphasizing particular Jewish duties over generalized ethical universalism. Modern appropriations broadening tikkun olam into secular social justice advocacy diverge from this traditional framework, which prioritizes halakhic fidelity as the causal mechanism for cosmic repair rather than policy activism untethered from covenantal law.

Denominations and Schisms

The divisions within Judaism intensified following the Haskalah, the Jewish Enlightenment movement of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, which exposed Jewish communities to rationalist critiques and calls for cultural adaptation, prompting departures from traditional rabbinic authority. This era birthed non-Orthodox streams emphasizing compatibility with modernity, while Orthodox Judaism reaffirmed halakha—Jewish law derived from Torah and Talmud—as eternally binding and non-negotiable, rejecting innovations that alter ritual observance. Reform Judaism emerged in Germany around 1810, prioritizing individual autonomy, ethical imperatives over ceremonial laws, and synagogue reforms like vernacular services and gender-egalitarian practices to align with Enlightenment values. Conservative Judaism arose in the United States by the 1880s as a centrist response, affirming halakha's authority while permitting adaptations through historical-critical analysis, such as egalitarian ordination and modified dietary rules. Reconstructionist Judaism, initiated by Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan in the 1920s, redefines Judaism as a dynamic human civilization evolving through democratic community decisions, downplaying supernatural elements and emphasizing cultural identity. Intra-Orthodox schisms predated full Enlightenment impacts, notably the 18th-century rift between Hasidism—founded by Israel Baal Shem Tov around 1730, stressing joyful mysticism, prayer, and rebbes as spiritual intermediaries—and the Mitnagdim, led by the Vilna Gaon, who championed rigorous Talmudic scholarship and viewed Hasidic emotionalism as superstitious deviation from normative law. Though initially banning each other, these factions reconciled somewhat by the 19th century within broader Orthodoxy, yet Hasidic dynasties persist as influential subgroups. Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) Judaism, encompassing many Hasidic and non-Hasidic strict adherents, has surged demographically, reaching 2.1 million globally by 2022—14% of world Jewry—with annual growth of 3.5-4% driven by fertility rates of 6-7 children per woman. In Israel, where Haredim numbered 1.28 million (13.5% of the population) in 2023, their expansion to projected 16% by 2030 fuels conflicts with secular Jews over exemptions from military conscription, state-funded yeshiva education, and integration into the workforce. Secular Israelis, who prioritize national identity over religious observance, often view Haredi insularity as economically burdensome and politically obstructive, widening societal cleavages evident in polls showing 73% of Jews ranking the ultra-Orthodox-secular tension among Israel's top divides.

Philosophical and Ethical Contributions

The biblical prophets, such as Amos and Isaiah, articulated ethical imperatives centered on social justice, condemning exploitation of the vulnerable and demanding righteousness as integral to divine worship. Amos, active around 760 BCE, proclaimed that God despises insincere rituals while requiring justice to "roll down like waters," emphasizing hatred of evil and love of good to establish equity in societal gates. Isaiah echoed this by linking true fasting to loosing chains of injustice and sharing food with the hungry, framing ethical conduct as a covenantal obligation rather than mere observance. These teachings prioritized causal accountability—where societal harms stem from moral failings—and influenced later Jewish ethics by subordinating ritual to interpersonal justice. Rabbinic Judaism advanced ethical reasoning through Talmudic dialectics, a method of rigorous debate that dissects legal and moral dilemmas via thesis, antithesis, and resolution, fostering nuanced positions on issues like business fairness and human dignity. Compiled between the 3rd and 6th centuries CE, the Talmud imposes ethical constraints on discourse, prohibiting slander while balancing individual rights with communal responsibilities, as seen in discussions of joint ownership and moral hypotheticals. This approach contrasts with more dogmatic traditions by privileging logical scrutiny, yielding principles like the indivisibility of ethical integrity in private and public spheres. In the early modern period, thinkers like Baruch Spinoza and Moses Mendelssohn exemplified tensions between traditional faith and rational inquiry. Spinoza, excommunicated by Amsterdam's Jewish community on July 27, 1656, for heretical views, developed a pantheistic philosophy equating God with nature, rejecting anthropomorphic divinity and advocating deterministic ethics derived from reason over revelation. Mendelssohn, in contrast, harmonized Judaism with Enlightenment ideals, arguing in Jerusalem (1783) that Jewish law constitutes a rational, divinely sanctioned framework compatible with civic tolerance and natural religion, promoting ethical universalism without abandoning ritual. Judaism's ethical framework, emphasizing monotheistic accountability and precepts like care for the stranger, profoundly shaped Christianity and Islam, transmitting concepts of moral law and Sabbath rest that informed their legal traditions. The notion of chosenness, rooted in the Mosaic covenant, posits Jews as elected for moral responsibility—to exemplify ethical monotheism—rather than inherent superiority, though philosophical debates critique it as fostering separatism by imposing unique obligations amid universal duties. Thinkers like Emmanuel Levinas interpret it as a call to ethical priority for the other, underscoring causal realism in human relations. Twentieth-century Orthodox philosopher Joseph B. Soloveitchik addressed the faith-reason dialectic in works like The Lonely Man of Faith (1965), portraying humanity's dual nature—majestic conqueror via reason and humble covenantal partner via faith—as irreconcilable yet complementary, rejecting synthesis in favor of existential tension that enriches ethical depth without empirical contradiction. Abraham Joshua Heschel, blending mysticism and activism, viewed faith as an active "leap" rooted in divine pathos—God's sympathetic involvement in human suffering—driving ethics beyond speculative philosophy to prophetic indignation against injustice, as in his civil rights engagements. These contributions highlight Judaism's enduring dialectic between revelation and intellect, informing ethical systems that prioritize empirical moral realism over abstract universalism.

Culture

Languages and Literature

Ancient Jewish linguistic heritage centered on Hebrew, a Northwest Semitic language attested from the late second millennium BCE, which served as both a vernacular and literary medium until the Babylonian Exile in the 6th century BCE. Following the exile, Aramaic, a closely related Semitic tongue, gained prominence as the administrative and spoken language among Jews in the Persian Empire and beyond, influencing Hebrew syntax and vocabulary while Hebrew persisted in scholarly and sacred contexts. The Dead Sea Scrolls, discovered between 1947 and 1956 near Qumran and dating primarily to the 3rd century BCE to 1st century CE, preserve the oldest extant Hebrew manuscripts, revealing linguistic evolution from biblical to mishnaic Hebrew and underscoring continuity in profane and legal documentation. In the diaspora, Jewish communities developed hybrid vernaculars blending Hebrew elements with local languages. Yiddish, a High German-derived fusion with Hebrew and Slavic components, emerged around the 9th-10th centuries CE among Ashkenazi Jews in the Rhineland and expanded eastward, reaching a peak of 11-13 million speakers by the 1930s before catastrophic losses in the Holocaust reduced it to approximately 600,000 speakers today, mainly in ultra-Orthodox enclaves in the United States and Israel. Ladino (Judeo-Spanish), rooted in medieval Castilian Spanish with Hebrew and Ottoman Turkish admixtures, arose after the 1492 expulsion from Spain among Sephardic Jews, sustaining a community of around 100,000-175,000 speakers historically, though now dwindling to fewer than 100,000, concentrated in Israel, Turkey, and the Balkans. These languages facilitated secular literature, folklore, and commerce, distinct from liturgical Hebrew. The late 19th-century revival of Hebrew as a modern spoken language, spearheaded by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda from the 1880s onward, transformed it from a dormant liturgical tongue into Israel's official vernacular, incorporating neologisms for contemporary concepts while drawing on biblical and mishnaic roots. Ben-Yehuda's efforts, including his comprehensive dictionary published posthumously in 1922, enabled Hebrew's adaptation for daily use among Zionist immigrants, culminating in its status as a living language by the 1920s Mandate period. Jewish literature in these languages spans profane genres, from medieval secular poetry to modernist prose. Yehuda Halevi (c. 1075–1141), a Spanish-Jewish polymath, composed Hebrew verses on themes of exile, nature, and philosophy, blending Arabic poetic forms with Hebrew metrics in works like his Diwan, influencing subsequent Iberian-Jewish expression. In the modern era, Hayim Nachman Bialik (1872–1934) pioneered revived Hebrew poetry, addressing diaspora alienation and national revival in collections such as Sefer ha-Aggadah (1908–1911), which compiled folk narratives and elevated Hebrew prose. Franz Kafka (1883–1924), writing in German amid Prague's multilingual milieu, infused his novels like The Trial (1925) with Jewish existential motifs drawn from Yiddish theater influences, bridging Central European Jewish vernaculars to universal themes without direct Hebrew composition. Yiddish literature, exemplified by Sholem Aleichem's tales of shtetl life in the late 19th century, similarly captured profane social realities before the language's decline.

Customs and Social Norms

Jewish lifecycle customs mark key transitions with ritual obligations derived from biblical commandments. For male infants, brit milah (circumcision) occurs on the eighth day of life, performed by a mohel and including naming, even if it falls on Shabbat. At age 13 for boys (and 12 or 13 for girls in non-Orthodox traditions), bar mitzvah or bat mitzvah signifies religious adulthood, entailing responsibility for mitzvot (commandments) and often public Torah reading. Marriage involves a ketubah, a contract outlining the groom's duties to the bride, publicly read under the chuppah to affirm mutual commitments. Endogamy has historically reinforced community cohesion, though rates vary by region and denomination. Globally, intermarriage prevalence stands at 26% as of 2023, with Israel's rate at 5% contrasting the Diaspora's 42%, where assimilation pressures contribute to higher out-marriage. In the U.S., 72% of non-Orthodox Jews marrying between 2010 and 2020 chose non-Jewish spouses, per Pew data, often correlating with reduced Jewish practice in offspring. Orthodox communities maintain near-total endogamy through social structures like shidduch (matchmaking). Kashrut, the dietary code prohibiting pork, shellfish, and mixing meat with dairy, structures daily meals and enforces communal boundaries. Observance differs sharply: 95% of U.S. Orthodox Jews maintain kosher homes, versus 24% Conservative and 5% Reform. In Israel, 46% adhere strictly while 23% partially, with rabbinic certification (hechsher) verifying compliance in food production. Selective practice, such as avoiding non-kosher meat but permitting dairy mixing, prevails among many non-Orthodox, reflecting adaptation to modern contexts without full abandonment. Gender roles exhibit continuity and divergence across denominations. In traditional Orthodox settings, men assume public ritual leadership—leading prayers and counting in minyanim—while women focus on domestic spheres, exempt from time-bound mitzvot to prioritize family, a division rooted in Talmudic interpretations prioritizing complementary functions over equality. Reform and Conservative branches, however, promote egalitarianism, ordaining women as rabbis since 1972 in Reform and integrating mixed seating and shared obligations, driven by 20th-century feminist influences and reinterpretations of halakhah. A longstanding norm emphasizes universal literacy and education, originating from the requirement for males to study Torah daily, fostering near-total male literacy by the medieval period when European rates hovered below 10%. Boys historically began memorizing Scripture in elementary cheders from age five, extending to girls in modern Orthodox day schools, underpinning communal resilience through knowledge transmission. Tzedakah, framed as obligatory justice rather than voluntary charity, mandates aiding the needy—prioritizing fellow Jews, loans over handouts—to sustain community interdependence, with Talmudic scales ranking anonymous giving highest to preserve dignity. Family units remain central, with multigenerational support norms reinforcing identity amid dispersion.

Arts and Intellectual Traditions

Jewish intellectual traditions emphasize rigorous debate and analytical reasoning, particularly through pilpul, a method of Talmudic study involving sharp dialectical disputation to resolve textual contradictions and apparent inconsistencies. Originating in the 15th–16th centuries among Ashkenazi scholars, pilpul sharpened logical distinctions and fostered a culture of verbal precision in yeshivas, where students engaged in intense, adversarial arguments to uncover deeper meanings in rabbinic texts. This tradition prioritized intellectual agility over consensus, contributing to a legacy of forensic argumentation that extended beyond religious study into broader philosophical discourse. In music, Jewish contributions include klezmer, an instrumental folk tradition of Ashkenazi Jews from Eastern Europe, derived from the Yiddish term klezmer (from Hebrew kli zemer, "instrument of song"), performed by professional musicians at weddings and celebrations. Characterized by dance rhythms, modal scales influenced by Eastern European and Middle Eastern sounds, and improvisational solos, klezmer peaked in the 19th and early 20th centuries before declining after World War II due to the Holocaust's devastation of communities, only to revive in the United States during the late 1970s. Complementing this, cantorial music (hazzanut) represents the emotive, florid chanting of synagogue liturgy, akin to classical vocal traditions, with a "Golden Age" in the early 20th century featuring virtuoso cantors like Yossele Rosenblatt whose recordings preserved hyper-emotional renditions of prayers. Visual arts among Jews historically adhered to aniconic principles rooted in biblical prohibitions against graven images, limiting figurative representation in religious contexts until the modern era. Post-19th century emancipation enabled secular Jewish artists to engage mainstream movements, with Marc Chagall (1887–1985) exemplifying the integration of Jewish motifs—such as shtetl life, Hasidic figures, and Yiddish symbolism—into dreamlike, cubist-influenced paintings. Responding to the Holocaust, Chagall produced works like White Crucifixion (1938), depicting Jewish suffering amid Christian iconography to symbolize universal persecution, and Yellow Crucifixion (1943), conveying anguish through fiery tones and fragmented scenes of pogroms and exile. In performing arts, Jewish comedians pioneered irreverent, anarchic humor in early 20th-century American film, as seen in the Marx Brothers—Chico, Harpo, Groucho, Gummo, and Zeppo—whose vaudeville-derived routines mocked authority and social norms in films like Duck Soup (1933). Later figures like Woody Allen extended this through neurotic, self-deprecating narratives in films such as Annie Hall (1977), drawing on Borscht Belt traditions where humor served as a defense against antisemitism by preemptively exaggerating Jewish stereotypes of anxiety and inadequacy. Critics have noted that such self-deprecation, while resilient, risks reinforcing tropes at the expense of unvarnished merriment, potentially limiting broader comedic vitality.

Demographics

Population Estimates

The core global Jewish population, defined as individuals who self-identify as Jewish above all else and do not adhere to another religion, stands at approximately 15.8 million as of 2025. This figure derives from annual projections by demographer Sergio DellaPergola, which aggregate national censuses, community surveys, and vital statistics while applying consistent eligibility criteria to avoid double-counting or inclusion of non-core affiliates. Enlarged estimates, incorporating persons of partial Jewish ancestry or non-Jewish household members connected by marriage or descent, exceed 20 million but are less standardized due to varying definitions of affiliation. This population has grown modestly from 15 million in 2010, reflecting a 6% increase over the subsequent decade, primarily through higher fertility rates in Israel (averaging 3 children per woman among Jewish women) and net immigration (aliyah) from diaspora communities, particularly post-2022 amid regional instability. These gains are partially offset by low diaspora birth rates (below replacement levels outside Orthodox subgroups), elevated intermarriage, and assimilation, which reduce self-identification in subsequent generations. Israel's Central Bureau of Statistics reports 7.2 million Jewish residents as of 2024, comprising nearly half the world total and driving most net growth via domestic births and inbound migration. Methodological challenges persist, as diaspora counts often rely on outdated surveys or indirect indicators like synagogue membership, potentially understating or overstating active identification; DellaPergola's approach prioritizes empirical self-reports over ancestry alone to maintain comparability across countries. Projections indicate sustained slow growth at 0.5-1% annually, contingent on stabilizing assimilation rates and continued Israeli demographic momentum.

Ethnic Subgroups

Ashkenazi Jews, comprising approximately 70-80% of the global Jewish population, trace their origins to medieval Jewish communities in the Rhineland region of Germany and northern France, from where they migrated eastward into Poland, Lithuania, and Russia following expulsions and pogroms beginning in the 11th century. Their distinct genetic profile reflects a population bottleneck around 600-800 years ago, with studies indicating 50-80% Levantine ancestry admixed with European components, alongside elevated frequencies of certain mutations like those for Tay-Sachs disease due to endogamy. Culturally, they developed Yiddish as a fusion of Hebrew, German, and Slavic elements, and their liturgical traditions emphasize distinct pronunciations and melodies in prayer. Sephardi Jews descend primarily from communities in the Iberian Peninsula prior to the 1492 Alhambra Decree, which expelled those refusing conversion to Christianity, leading to dispersions across North Africa, the Ottoman Empire, and parts of Europe. Genetically, they exhibit a mix of Middle Eastern, Iberian, and North African ancestries, with less European admixture than Ashkenazim but shared Levantine markers confirming ancient Israelite roots. Their cultural hallmarks include the Judeo-Spanish language known as Ladino, preserved through ballads and proverbs, and a rite of prayer influenced by medieval Spanish scholars like Maimonides, differing from Ashkenazi customs in synagogue melodies and holiday observances. Mizrahi Jews, often distinguished from Sephardim despite occasional overlap in adopting Sephardic legal rites, represent indigenous Jewish communities of the Middle East and North Africa with continuous presence since antiquity, including groups in Iraq, Yemen, Syria, and Persia. Genetic analyses reveal the highest proportions of unmixed Middle Eastern ancestry among Jewish subgroups, with minimal European input and local admixtures reflecting prolonged regional residence, such as Persian or Arab influences. They maintain diverse dialects like Judeo-Arabic and Judeo-Persian, alongside unique customs such as Yemenite henna ceremonies or Iraqi piyyutim (liturgical poems) that predate Iberian Sephardic traditions. Smaller subgroups include Beta Israel, Ethiopian Jews whose oral traditions claim descent from the Tribe of Dan or ancient migrants via Egypt, practicing a pre-rabbinic form of Judaism without Talmudic influence until modern recognition, supported by genetic evidence of substantial Levantine paternal lineages amid African maternal lines. Mountain Jews, or Juhuro, from the Caucasus region of Azerbaijan and Dagestan, speak Juhuri (a Judeo-Tat language akin to Persian) and trace origins to ancient Persian Jewish exiles, with genetics showing Iranian Jewish affinities and martial traditions adapted to highland life. These groups highlight genetic clustering around a common ancient Judean core, per autosomal DNA studies, yet diverge through historical isolation and admixture, fostering subgroup-specific disease prevalences and cultural practices. Since Israel's founding in 1948, intermarriages between these subgroups have increased, particularly in Israel where Ashkenazi-Sephardi/Mizrahi unions rose from negligible rates in the early state years to over 20% of marriages by the 1990s, driven by urbanization and shared national identity, though endogamy persists in ultra-Orthodox circles. This blending has begun homogenizing certain genetic and cultural traits across subgroups without erasing core distinctions rooted in millennia of separate evolutions.

Geographic Distribution

Israel hosts the largest Jewish population, with approximately 7.76 million Jews as of September 2025, representing a significant concentration driven by immigration and natural growth since the state's founding in 1948. The United States follows with around 7.7 million Jews, primarily Ashkenazi in origin, scattered across urban centers but forming the second-largest diaspora community. France maintains the third-largest Jewish population at about 440,000, largely Sephardi and North African in background, though recent emigration due to security concerns has led to declines. Canada and the United Kingdom each have Jewish populations exceeding 300,000, with Canada's around 398,000 mostly in Toronto and Montreal, and the UK's approximately 312,000 concentrated in London. Argentina holds about 170,000 Jews, predominantly in Buenos Aires, marking it as the largest community in Latin America. Australia sustains a community of roughly 120,000, mainly in Sydney and Melbourne, reflecting post-World War II migration patterns. Europe's Jewish population has sharply declined since the Holocaust, dropping from nearly 9.5 million in 1939 to about 1.3 million today, with remnants in countries like Germany (around 118,000) and Russia (under 150,000), amid emigration to Israel and assimilation. Jewish communities exhibit strong urban clustering globally; for instance, the New York City metropolitan area contains over 1.5 million Jews, while Israel's Gush Dan region (encompassing Tel Aviv) houses more than 3 million. Such concentrations facilitate communal institutions but also heighten vulnerability to local disruptions. The global Jewish population has experienced slow growth since the mid-20th century, largely propelled by higher fertility rates in Israel, while diaspora communities face stagnation or decline due to sub-replacement fertility and assimilation pressures. In Israel, the total fertility rate (TFR) among Jewish women stood at 3.06 children per woman in 2024, exceeding replacement level and outpacing Muslim women's TFR of 2.86 for the first time on record; this rate has remained stable around 3.0 for decades, driven by cultural norms favoring larger families even among secular Jews, though it shows signs of gradual decline amid delayed marriages and rising non-marriage. In contrast, diaspora Jewish TFR typically ranges from 1.5 to 2.0, aligning with broader low-fertility trends in developed nations and exacerbated by secularization, reduced religious traditionalism, and intermarriage, which correlate with fewer children raised Jewish. Assimilation poses a primary causal driver of diaspora population erosion, with intermarriage rates reaching 61% among U.S. Jews wed between 2010 and 2020, up from 45% for those married 2000-2009; overall, 42% of married U.S. Jews are intermarried, with non-Orthodox rates at 47%, often leading to children not identifying as Jewish by religion or ethnicity. Secularization compounds this, as declining observance reduces transmission of Jewish identity across generations, resulting in negative internal population dynamics despite some immigration offsets. World War II inflicted a demographic catastrophe, halving the global Jewish population from approximately 16.6 million pre-war to 11 million postwar through the systematic murder of 6 million Jews, primarily in Europe where 9.5 million had resided in 1933; this loss, concentrated in Eastern Europe, created a persistent shortfall unrecovered to this day. Recent trends include net-positive migration to Israel, with aliyah from France averaging around 3,000 annually in recent years amid rising antisemitism, surging over 500% in interest post-October 7, 2023; similarly, the Ukraine conflict since 2022 has spurred evacuations and relocations, though such inflows replace fewer than half of Israeli emigrants and do little to counter diaspora assimilation losses.

Achievements and Influence

Scientific and Intellectual Contributions

Jews have received approximately 22% of all Nobel Prizes awarded from 1901 to 2020, despite comprising less than 0.2% of the global population. In scientific categories, this overrepresentation is particularly pronounced: Jews account for about 26% of prizes in physics, chemistry, and physiology or medicine since 2000. This disparity equates to roughly 110 times their population share, based on empirical tallies of laureates identified as Jewish by heritage or upbringing. In physics, notable contributions include Albert Einstein's 1921 Nobel for the photoelectric effect, building on his 1905 special theory of relativity and 1915 general theory, which revolutionized understanding of space-time and gravity. Niels Bohr received the 1922 prize for quantum theory structure of atoms, influencing atomic models, while Richard Feynman shared the 1965 award for quantum electrodynamics, advancing particle physics computations. In medicine, Ernst Chain's 1945 Nobel recognized penicillin's therapeutic use, enabling mass antibiotic production post-1940s discovery. Jonas Salk developed the first effective polio vaccine in 1955, reducing U.S. cases from 35,000 annually to near eradication by 1961 through widespread immunization. Economics Nobels show similar patterns, with Jews comprising around 40% of winners since 1969, including Milton Friedman's 1976 award for consumption analysis and monetary policy impacts. Figures like Paul Samuelson (1970) formalized modern economic theory via mathematical models. Empirical studies have documented elevated average intelligence among Ashkenazi Jews, estimated at 107-115 IQ points, or 0.75-1 standard deviation above European norms. This cognitive edge, particularly in verbal abilities (around 125), correlates with innovation in abstract fields. Researchers such as Cochran, Hardy, and Harpending have proposed a hypothesis attributing this to historical selection pressures, including medieval European restrictions that directed Jews toward cognitively demanding occupations like finance and scholarship, combined with genetic bottlenecks from persecutions, potentially amplifying heritable intelligence through natural selection favoring problem-solving traits. The causal mechanisms remain subject to ongoing academic debate, though such factors offer an explanation for disproportionate achievements alongside cultural influences.

Economic and Societal Roles

In medieval Europe, Jews were frequently restricted from owning land, joining trade guilds, and practicing many crafts due to Christian laws and societal barriers, leading many to engage in moneylending, which was prohibited for Christians under canon law against usury. This role, while enabling economic survival, often fueled resentment and expulsions, as debts to Jewish lenders burdened nobility and clergy. Over time, accumulated financial expertise contributed to the development of modern banking practices among Jewish families. A prominent example is the Rothschild dynasty, established by Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744–1812) in Frankfurt, who began as a coin dealer and court factor before expanding into international finance through his five sons in major European cities by the early 19th century. Their network financed governments, wars, and infrastructure, such as British subsidies during the Napoleonic Wars, exemplifying how historical financial roles scaled into influential banking houses. In contemporary times, Jews, comprising about 2% of the U.S. population, hold disproportionate economic positions, with estimates indicating they account for 20–30% of American billionaires as of 2024–2025 lists. Examples include tech moguls like Larry Ellison (net worth $213.7 billion in 2025) and Mark Zuckerberg ($202.4 billion), whose wealth stems from software and social media enterprises. Jewish immigrants founded key Hollywood studios in the early 20th century, including Universal by Carl Laemmle (1912), Paramount by Adolph Zukor (1912), MGM by Louis B. Mayer (1924), and Warner Bros. by the Warner brothers (1923), leveraging excluded status from East Coast industries to build the U.S. film capital. This foundational role persists in executive leadership, contributing to ongoing influence in entertainment production and distribution. Prominent Jewish philanthropists wield societal impact through targeted giving; George Soros has donated billions via the Open Society Foundations since 1979 to promote democracy and human rights initiatives globally. Sheldon Adelson and his wife Miriam contributed over $200 million annually in later years to Jewish causes, including $25 million to Yad Vashem in 2011 and major funding for Birthright Israel trips. In politics, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) exemplifies lobbying influence, spending $51.8 million on contributions and $3.3 million on direct lobbying in the 2024 election cycle to advocate for U.S.-Israel policies. This financial leverage has shaped congressional outcomes, such as defeating critics of Israel through targeted primary challenges exceeding $23 million against two incumbents in 2024.

Explanatory Factors

Ashkenazi Jews exhibit an average IQ estimated between 107 and 115, significantly higher than the general population mean of 100, with particular strengths in verbal intelligence. One hypothesis, proposed by researchers such as Cochran, Hardy, and Harpending, attributes this disparity to natural selection pressures during the medieval period in Europe, where Jews were largely restricted to cognitively demanding occupations such as moneylending, trade, and management, which rewarded intelligence while exposing carriers of certain sphingolipid storage disease alleles—like those causing Tay-Sachs—to heterozygote advantages in neural development; this remains a subject of ongoing academic debate. Endogamy, practiced consistently within Jewish communities for centuries, reinforced genetic isolation and founder effects, preserving these traits by limiting gene flow from host populations. Religious imperatives from the second century CE onward mandated male literacy for Torah study, shifting Jewish populations from agriculture to urban skilled trades, finance, and commerce—a transition that facilitated diaspora networks and economic specialization. The yeshiva system, emphasizing Talmudic debate, honed analytical reasoning, verbal acuity, and scholarly discipline, contributing to sustained high educational attainment; Jews average 13.4 years of schooling globally, exceeding other major religious groups. These cultural norms interacted with genetic predispositions, amplifying outcomes through intergenerational transmission of human capital. Clannish cohesion enabled network effects, where mutual trust and information sharing within communities lowered transaction costs and accelerated economic mobility; preindustrial European cities hosting Jewish communities grew approximately 30% faster than comparable ones without. While critics invoke nepotism to explain success, empirical patterns align more closely with merit-based selection in high-IQ niches, paralleling diaspora groups like overseas Chinese, who leverage analogous emphases on education, endogamy, and intra-group commerce to achieve disproportionate economic influence despite minority status. Such parallels underscore causal realism in group-level adaptations rather than isolated cultural exceptionalism.

Controversies

Historical Persecutions and Responses

During the First Crusade in 1096, popular crusading bands in the Rhineland targeted Jewish communities in cities such as Speyer, Worms, and Mainz, killing an estimated 2,000 to 5,000 Jews through massacres motivated by religious zeal and accusations of deicide—the charge that Jews bore collective responsibility for the crucifixion of Jesus. In Mainz alone, approximately 600 to 1,000 Jews perished, with attackers forcing conversions or slaughtering resisters in synagogues and homes. These events stemmed from theological animosity amplified by the crusading fervor against perceived enemies of Christendom, though papal authorities condemned the violence against non-combatants. The Black Death pandemic of 1348–1351 triggered widespread pogroms across Europe, with Jews accused of poisoning wells to spread the plague, leading to the destruction of approximately 200 to 350 Jewish communities, particularly in the Holy Roman Empire, Switzerland, and the Low Countries. Entire populations in cities like Strasbourg (where 2,000 Jews were burned alive) and Basel were annihilated, while communities in Antwerp and Brussels were fully exterminated by 1350, leaving few Jews in Germany or the Low Countries by 1351. These libels built on prior blood accusations and economic grievances, as Jews' roles in moneylending—permitted to them due to Christian usury bans—fostered resentment among debtors amid the crisis. Confessions extracted under torture fueled the violence, despite papal bulls in 1348 exonerating Jews and attributing the plague to natural causes. Medieval expulsions compounded these massacres, driven by a mix of fiscal motives, religious conformity pressures, and social exclusion. In England, Edward I expelled all Jews—numbering about 3,000—in 1290 after heavy taxation and usury restrictions eroded their economic utility, confiscating their property to fund wars. France followed with expulsions in 1306 under Philip IV, who seized Jewish assets to alleviate royal debts, and repeated them in 1322 and 1394. Similar decrees struck southern Italy in the early 14th century and various German principalities through the 15th century, often tied to accusations of ritual murder or failure to assimilate by converting. These actions reflected causal factors like Jews' occupational niche in finance, which barred landownership and guilds, breeding envy and scapegoating during downturns, alongside enduring deicide myths from patristic theology. Jewish responses emphasized communal solidarity and religious defiance, with many choosing martyrdom (kiddush hashem) over forced baptism during the 1096 massacres, viewing death as hastening messianic redemption. Survivors rebuilt through internal cohesion, relocating to eastern Europe or Italy where protections were temporarily offered, while persecutions spurred kabbalistic and messianic literature anticipating divine intervention. Mobility and endogamy preserved identity amid diaspora, though sporadic conversions occurred under duress; overall, refusal to integrate fully—rooted in halakhic prohibitions on intermarriage and idolatry—intensified perceptions of otherness. These patterns of resilience contrasted with host societies' episodic intolerance, enabling Jewish continuity despite recurrent violence.

Claims of Disproportionate Influence

Claims of disproportionate Jewish influence in various sectors have persisted for centuries, often rooted in historical occupational restrictions that channeled Jews into finance and trade. In medieval Europe, Christian doctrine prohibited usury among Christians, while Jews were excluded from guilds, land ownership, and many trades, directing them toward moneylending as one of the few permitted avenues. This specialization fostered expertise in finance, which persisted after emancipation, contributing to overrepresentation in banking and commerce despite Jews comprising less than 1% of Europe's population at the time. In the contemporary United States, where Jews constitute approximately 2.4% of the population, they are overrepresented in elite financial roles by factors exceeding population share. For instance, Jewish individuals founded numerous prominent Wall Street firms, including Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers, and continue to hold key positions, such as the CEO of BlackRock (Laurence Fink) and Goldman Sachs (David Solomon). Jews account for about 8% of U.S. billionaires and 19% of the Forbes 200 richest list, reflecting sustained influence in investment and business leadership. Achievement quotients in professions like finance show Jews overrepresented by 3-5 times relative to population, attributed to cultural emphasis on education and urban skilled occupations. Similar patterns appear in media and entertainment, where Jews played foundational roles in establishing Hollywood studios such as Paramount, MGM, and Warner Bros., driven by exclusion from other industries and opportunities in emerging film production. Today, disproportionate Jewish involvement persists in executive and creative positions, though major conglomerates like Disney and Comcast own these entities, diluting direct control narratives. Claims of monolithic "media control" often invoke tropes like the fabricated Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a 1903 Russian forgery plagiarized from earlier satires and exposed as such in 1921 by The Times of London, yet patterns of overrepresentation fuel perceptions of coordinated influence absent evidence of conspiracy. Accusations of dual loyalty arise from observable diaspora affinities to Israel, including financial and political support, with surveys indicating 39-56% of respondents in Western countries endorsing the view that Jews prioritize Israel over host nations. These claims, historically leveled since Roman times, highlight tensions between ethnic solidarity and national allegiance but lack substantiation of disloyalty in policy influence beyond standard lobbying. Empirical overrepresentation in power centers—such as Ivy League enrollment (historically 10-20 times population share)—stems from high educational attainment and selective migration, not inherent cabals, though it invites scrutiny of causal networks like familial and communal ties.

Ideological Entanglements

Jews exhibited notable overrepresentation in early Bolshevik leadership relative to their share of the Russian population, which stood at approximately 4-5% in the early 20th century. For instance, Leon Trotsky (born Lev Bronstein), Grigory Zinoviev, and Lev Kamenev held key positions such as People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs and members of the first Politburo, while Yakov Sverdlov served as the initial head of the Soviet state. This prominence stemmed from factors including high literacy rates among Jews—fostered by religious study and urban concentration—and systemic exclusion from tsarist professions, positioning them as outsiders receptive to ideologies promising equality and emancipation from pogroms and the Pale of Settlement restrictions. Such patterns extended to broader socialist movements in Europe and America during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, where Jews comprised a disproportionate share of activists in parties advocating class struggle and internationalism. Historians attribute this to causal dynamics of marginalization: repeated expulsions and discriminatory quotas channeled intellectual energies toward universalist revolutions that rejected ethnic hierarchies, contrasting with assimilationist paths blocked by host societies. Yet, this involvement drew critiques from contemporaries and later analysts, who argued it facilitated radical ideologies undermining traditional orders, with some estimating Jewish figures in early Cheka security roles exceeding 30% despite population parity. In American liberalism, Jewish figures played foundational roles in organizations advancing civil rights for minorities, exemplified by Joel Elias Spingarn, who became chairman of the NAACP board from 1913 to 1939 and helped shape its early legal strategies against segregation. Pre-1945 efforts included funding and advocacy for anti-lynching legislation, driven by parallels drawn between Jewish persecution and African American oppression, though some observers contend this promotion of multiculturalism eroded cohesive national identities in host countries by prioritizing group rights over assimilation. Such views, articulated in evolutionary and historical analyses, posit that diaspora strategies favoring pluralism mitigated immediate threats but imposed long-term costs on majority cultures. Counterexamples in conservatism highlight variability, as urban intellectualism—prevalent among Jews due to mercantile and scholarly traditions—did not uniformly yield leftism. Irving Kristol and Norman Podhoretz, former Trotskyists turned critics of New Deal excesses, allied with William F. Buckley Jr. in the 1950s-1960s through National Review, influencing anti-communist fusionism and early neoconservatism. This shift reflected reactions to radical overreach and Soviet antisemitism, underscoring how historical outsider status could foster either universalist radicalism or defensive traditionalism depending on contextual threats. Overall, 19th- and early 20th-century Jewish ideological tilts toward the left arose from empirical patterns of exclusion and intellectual concentration, yet exceptions reveal no monocausal determinism.

Contemporary Conflicts

Following the Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023, which killed approximately 1,200 people and took over 250 hostages, antisemitic incidents in the United States surged to record levels. The FBI reported that anti-Jewish hate crimes accounted for nearly 70% of all religion-based hate crimes in 2023, marking the highest number since tracking began, with a significant portion occurring after October 7. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) documented over 10,000 antisemitic incidents in 2023, including a 103% increase excluding protest-related events compared to 2022, with assaults rising 45% and vandalism 69%. This resurgence included both far-right tropes, such as conspiracy theories about Jewish control, and far-left expressions framing Jews collectively as complicit in Israeli policies, often blurring into anti-Zionism that denies Jewish self-determination. On U.S. college campuses, anti-Israel protests intensified post-October 7, with encampments, chants calling for Israel's elimination, and incidents targeting Jewish students, such as blocking access to events or harassment. ADL tracked over 1,200 such incidents in 2023-2024, many involving anti-Zionist rhetoric that ADL and congressional investigations classified as antisemitic, including endorsements of Hamas or comparisons of Israel to Nazi Germany. Federal hearings in December 2023 exposed university leadership failures to address these, leading to resignations at institutions like Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania. While some protests focused on policy critiques, empirical data from Jewish student surveys indicated heightened fear, with 9 in 10 American Jews perceiving increased campus antisemitism. The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, launched in 2005 to pressure Israel economically and politically, gained traction amid these tensions, targeting companies and universities for divestment. Despite claims by BDS advocates of contributing to Israel's economic strain, a 2015 Israeli government analysis estimated annual losses at under $1.4 billion, or less than 0.5% of GDP, with negligible overall impact on trade or investment due to Israel's diversified economy. In Jewish diaspora communities, BDS has fueled internal divisions, with supporters viewing it as legitimate activism and opponents arguing it delegitimizes Jewish statehood, echoing historical boycotts; adoption remains limited, rejected by major U.S. states and the European Union. Debates over the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism, adopted by the U.S. State Department in 2010 and over 40 countries, intensified, as it includes examples like denying Jewish self-determination as potentially antisemitic. Proponents cite it for clarifying boundaries amid rising incidents, while critics, including some human rights groups, argue it stifles legitimate Israel criticism, though empirical adoption has correlated with better hate crime tracking without suppressing speech, per government reports. In Europe, similar disputes arose, with left-leaning governments resisting full endorsement amid accusations of protecting anti-Zionist extremism. In U.S. politics, Jewish donors exhibited splits, with traditional liberal leanings challenged by post-October 7 security concerns; pro-Israel PACs like AIPAC spent over $100 million in 2024 primaries targeting Democrats critical of Israel, such as Cori Bush, while some donors shifted rightward amid perceptions of Democratic tolerance for far-left antisemitism. Orthodox and younger conservative Jews increasingly aligned with Republicans on Israel and border security, contrasting with Reform Jews' support for progressive causes. Diaspora Jewish advocacy for open immigration policies clashed with Israeli emphases on security vetting, informed by data linking unchecked migration to terrorism; in Europe, Jewish communities reported spikes in antisemitic attacks by Islamist extremists among migrants, with France seeing 1,000+ incidents in 2023 tied to such sources. Israeli policy prioritizes empirical risks, as seen in strict border controls preventing infiltration, while U.S. diaspora groups, per Pew surveys, often prioritize humanitarianism over terrorism statistics showing disproportionate involvement from certain regions.

References

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