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  2. Conversion to Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversion_to_Judaism

    Conversion to Judaism (Hebrew: גִּיּוּר, romanized: giyur or Hebrew: גֵּרוּת, romanized: gerut) is the process by which non-Jews adopt the Jewish religion and become members of the Jewish ethnoreligious community. It thus resembles both conversion to other religions and naturalization.

  3. Letters from Rifka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letters_from_Rifka

    With an intended young adult audience, the book aims to inform and validate. [4] Letters from Rifka details a Jewish family's emigration from Russia in 1919, to Belgium and ultimately to the U.S. The protagonist's name, Rifka, is the East European Jewish version of Rebecca (Rivká in Modern Israeli Hebrew).

  4. Refugee (Gratz novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refugee_(Gratz_novel)

    In becoming a Jewish adult, he now has many responsibilities that he is forced to take on. Since he feels like a man now, he feels it's his responsibility to take care of his family. With his father's mental health deteriorating quickly, Josef threatens him to ensure that he can pass the medical inspection to get into Cuba, reversing their ...

  5. Bar and bat mitzvah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_and_Bat_Mitzvah

    After this point, children are also held responsible for knowing Jewish ritual law, tradition, and ethics, and are able to participate in all areas of Jewish community life to the same extent as adults. In some Jewish communities, men's and women's roles differ in certain respects.

  6. The Chosen (Potok novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Chosen_(Potok_novel)

    The Chosen is a novel written by Chaim Potok.It was first published in 1967. It follows the narrator, Reuven Malter, and his friend Daniel Saunders, as they grow up in the Williamsburg neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York, in the 1940s.

  7. Emanuel Litvinoff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emanuel_Litvinoff

    Falls the Shadow (1983) was a controversial novel, written because Litvinoff had become concerned at how he considered Israel to be invoking the memory of the Holocaust to justify its own outrages. Its narrative concerns an apparently distinguished and benign Israeli citizen who is assassinated in the street, then found to have been a ...

  8. The Old New Land - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Old_New_Land

    Herzl believed that the Jewish community was a nation and needed a state of its own to survive in the modern world. This idea became a pillar of Zionism and was later instrumental in the need for the establishment of the State of Israel. [9] Herzl picked the name of the novel being inspired by his repeated visits to the Old-New Synagogue in Prague.

  9. Off the derech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off_the_derech

    Off the derech (Hebrew: דֶּרֶךְ, pronounced: / ˈ d ɛ r ɛ x /, meaning: "path"; OTD) is a Yeshiva-English expression used to describe the state of a Jew who has left an Orthodox way of life or community, and whose new lifestyle is secular, non-Jewish, or of a non-Orthodox form of Judaism, as part of a contemporary social phenomenon tied to the digital, [2] postmodern and post ...