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  2. Groups claiming affiliation with Israelites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groups_claiming...

    The Bene Israel claim a lineage to the kohanim, descendants of Aaron. [13] [14] According to Bene Israel tradition, the Bene Israel arrived in India after a shipwreck stranded fourteen Jewish survivors, seven men and seven women, [15] [16] at Navagaon near Alibag, just south of Mumbai in the first century BCE.

  3. Land of Israel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_of_Israel

    It is defined in detail in the exilic Book of Ezekiel as a land where both the twelve tribes and the "strangers in (their) midst", can claim inheritance. [20] The name "Israel" first appears in the Hebrew Bible as the name given by God to the patriarch Jacob (Genesis 32:28).

  4. Proposals for a Jewish state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proposals_for_a_Jewish_state

    But efforts in this direction ended, with the doctors' plot, the establishment of Israel as a Jewish state, and Stalin's second wave of purges shortly before his death. Again the Jewish leadership was arrested and efforts were made to stamp out Yiddish culture—even the Judaica collection in the local library was burned. In the ensuing years ...

  5. History of the Jews and Judaism in the Land of Israel

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_and...

    Israel's Jewish population continued to grow at a very high rate for years, fed by waves of Jewish immigration from round the world, including the massive immigration wave of Soviet Jews, who arrived in Israel in the early 1990s, according to the Law of Return. Some 380,000 Jewish immigrants from the Soviet Union arrived in 1990–91 alone.

  6. Jews as the chosen people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jews_as_the_chosen_people

    Biblical references as well as rabbinic literature support this view: Moses refers to the "God of the spirits of all flesh", [4] the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) also identifies prophets outside the community of Israel and the prophet Jonah is explicitly told to go prophesize to the non-Jewish people of Nineveh. Jewish tradition is clear that there ...

  7. Greater Israel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Israel

    The Land of Israel (Hebrew: אֶרֶץ יִשְׂרָאֵל, Modern: ʾEreṣ Yīsraʾel, Tiberian: ʾEreṣ Yīsrāʾēl) is the traditional Jewish name for an area of the Southern Levant. Related biblical, religious and historical English terms include the Land of Canaan, the Promised Land, the Holy Land, and Palestine.

  8. Law of Return - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Return

    According to the halakhic definition, a person is Jewish if their mother is Jewish, or if they convert to Judaism. Orthodox Jews do not recognize conversions performed by Reform or Conservative Judaism. However, the Law provides that any Jew regardless of affiliation may migrate to Israel and claim citizenship.

  9. Promised Land - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promised_Land

    The Promised Land (Hebrew: הארץ המובטחת, translit.: ha'aretz hamuvtakhat; Arabic: أرض الميعاد, translit.: ard al-mi'ad) is Middle Eastern land in the Levant that Abrahamic religions (which include Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and others) claim God promised and subsequently gave to Abraham (the legendary patriarch in Abrahamic religions) and several more times to his ...