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  2. List of Mexican Jews - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mexican_Jews

    The book Estudio histórico de la migración judía a México 1900–1950 has records of almost 18,300 who emigrated to Mexico between 1900 and 1950. Most (7,023) were Ashkenazi Jews whose ancestors had settled in Eastern Europe, mainly Poland.

  3. History of the Jews in Mexico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Mexico

    In 1992, a study of Jewish communities in Mexico was published by UNAM in collaboration with the Tribuna Israelita and the Comite Central Israelita de Mexico, called Imágenes de un Encuentro: La Presencia Judía en México Durante La Primera Mitad del Siglo XX (Images of an Encounter: The Jewish Presence in Mexico during the First Half of the ...

  4. List of Jewish ethnonyms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_ethnonyms

    An ethnonym is the name applied to a given ethnic group. Ethnonyms can be divided into two categories: exonyms (where the name of the ethnic group has been created by another group of people) and autonyms or endonyms (self-designation; where the name is created and used by the ethnic group itself).

  5. Comité Central de la Comunidad Judía de México - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comité_Central_de_la...

    Comité Central de la Comunidad Judía de México (CCCJM) is the main Jewish community organization in Mexico. [1] The organization has a long-standing cooperative relationship with Tribuna Israelita, an outreach group it first formed in 1944. The CCCJM is also a member of the World Jewish Congress. [2]

  6. List of Jewish Nobel laureates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_Nobel_laureates

    Sign on Nobel Laureates Boulevard in Rishon LeZion saluting Jewish Nobel laureates. Of the 965 individual recipients of the Nobel Prize and the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences between 1901 and 2023, [1] at least 216 have been Jews or people with at least one Jewish parent, representing 22% of all recipients.

  7. History of the Jews in Chile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Chile

    In colonial times, the most prominent Jewish character in Chile was the surgeon Francisco Maldonado da Silva, one of the first directors of the San Juan de Dios Hospital [citation needed]. Maldonado da Silva was an Argentine Jew born in San Miguel de Tucumán into a Sephardic family from Portugal. He was accused to the Tribunal of the ...

  8. History of the Jews in the Dominican Republic - Wikipedia

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

    There are three synagogues and one Sephardic Jewish Educational Center. One is the Centro Israelita de República Dominicana in Santo Domingo, another is a Chabad outreach center also in Santo Domingo, and another is in the country's first established community in Sosúa. [15]

  9. List of Jewish messiah claimants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_messiah...

    The Messiah in Judaism means anointed one; it included Jewish priests, prophets and kings such as David and Cyrus the Great. [1] Later, especially after the failure of the Hasmonean Kingdom (37 BCE) and the Jewish–Roman wars (66–135 CE), the figure of the Jewish Messiah was one who would deliver the Jews from oppression and usher in an Olam HaBa ("world to come"), the Messianic Age.

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