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  1. The vast majority of modern ethnic Jews (who make up the vast majority of modern religious Jews) share the bulk of their ancestry with populations from these regions and not with their (former) non-Jewish neighbors.

  2. Jews who are atheists or Jews who follow other religions may have a Jewish identity. While the absolute majority of people with this identity are of Jewish ethnicity, people of a mixed Jewish and non-Jewish background or gentiles of Jewish ancestry may still have a sense of Jewish self-identity.

  3. 29 gru 2023 · Jews are increasingly choosing to use the ethnicity question – which fundamentally asks people to self-identify as White, Black, Asian, Mixed or 'Other' – to declare that they are Jewish. There is no Jewish tick box in that question, but 12,000 Jews wrote in that they were ethnically Jewish in the 2001 Census, and that number climbed to ...

  4. 26 wrz 2011 · Sephardic Jews originate from Spain and North Africa; old, even ancient, Jewish groups live or have lived in Georgia, the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa (yes, there are black Jews), and even...

  5. 12 gru 2019 · What are Jews? Members of a religious group? A race or an ethnicity? A nation? Some mixture of them all, or something else entirely?

  6. 11 maj 2021 · About 1% of Jewish adults are non-Hispanic Black and Ashkenazi, though some Black respondents give other answers, such as that the heritage labels don’t apply to them or that they are “just Jewish.” And 3% of Jewish adults identify with other races or ethnicities (such as Asian) or are multiracial, including 2% who also say they are ...

  7. 3 cze 2010 · For more than a century, historians and linguists have debated whether the Jewish people are a racial group, a cultural and religious entity, or something else. More recently, scientists have been weighing in on the question with genetic data.

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