When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of the Jews in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_the...

    In 1870, the city's elite German Jews founded Temple Sinai, the first synagogue in New Orleans founded as a Reform congregation. Most Jews in New Orleans were loyal supporters of the Confederacy but Orthodox Eastern European Jews never outnumbered the Reform "German Uptown" Jews. Elizabeth D. A. Cohen was the first female physician in Louisiana.

  3. American Jews - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Jews

    Jews in America also overwhelmingly oppose current United States marijuana policy. [needs update] In 2009, eighty-six percent of Jewish Americans opposed arresting nonviolent marijuana smokers, compared to 61% for the population at large and 68% of all Democrats. Additionally, 85% of Jews in the United States opposed using federal law ...

  4. Jewish diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_diaspora

    Umar allowed and encouraged Jews to settle in Jerusalem. It was the first time in about 500 years that Jews were allowed to freely enter and worship in their holiest city. In 717, new restrictions were imposed against non-Muslims that negatively affected the Jews. Heavy taxes on agricultural land forced many Jews to migrate from rural areas to ...

  5. Historical Jewish population - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_Jewish_population

    By the first century, the Jewish community in Babylonia, to which Jews were exiled after the Babylonian conquest as well as after the Bar Kokhba rebellion in 135 CE, already held a speedily growing [3] population of an estimated one million Jews, which increased to an estimated two million [4] between the years 200 CE and 500 CE, both by ...

  6. Jewish arrival in New Amsterdam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_arrival_in_New...

    The Jewish arrival in New Amsterdam of September 1654 was the first organized Jewish migration to North America. It comprised 23 Sephardi Jews , refugees "big and little" of families fleeing persecution by the Portuguese Inquisition after the conquest of Dutch Brazil .

  7. Jews - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jews

    Today, around 26,000 Jews live in Arab countries [285] 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. [286] The exodus from Arab and Muslim countries took place primarily from 1948.

  8. History of the Jews in the Southern United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_the...

    The first congregation was established in Wilmington in 1852. Between 1870 and 1910, the Jewish population in North Carolina skyrocketed. While anti-Semitism rose in the rest of the country following the Civil War, North Carolinian Jews did not seem to feel the same effects, and even seemed to be welcomed by the state. There were instances of ...

  9. History of the Jews in the American West - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_the...

    In the nineteenth-century, Jews began settling throughout the American West. The majority were immigrants, with German Jews comprising most of the early nineteenth-century wave of Jewish immigration to the United States and therefore to the Western states and territories, while Eastern European Jews migrated in greater numbers and comprised most of the migratory westward wave at the close of ...