hikehikebaby t1_iz370rr wrote
Reply to comment by ConsciousLiterature in Ashkenazi Jews Have Become More Genetically Similar Over Time – A new study of skeletons from a cemetery in Germany reveals a hidden history of Jews in the Middle Ages. by SebRLuck
More accurately, it's an ethno religious group or "people". You can convert into Judaism if you are accepted by a court of Jewish law - like applying for membership. Judaism is very old and is much older than modern concepts of race and religion.
Ashkenaz issues are a subset of Jews, but all Jewish groups are ethnically distinct and have more in common with one another than with other groups - we all have common DNA from before we were concord and exiled.
China_Lover t1_iz44doa wrote
What is the proof that Jews were exiled, other than fictitious accounts such as the Bible?
one_shattered_ego t1_iz59vpn wrote
There’s literally so much genealogical and historical evidence my dude. How else would you explain how Jews ended up all over, but still retain a narrow middle-eastern genetic lineage?
Also if you want more recent examples of Jewish exile you could look to the English expulsion of Jews in 1290, or the Spanish Inquisition in 1492. Jews have a long history of diaspora.
fellow_enthusiast t1_iz49oi2 wrote
Did he, at any point in his statement, write anything about exile?
hikehikebaby t1_iz58adn wrote
I did - and there's a lot of genetic and historic evidence. Not only do we know that it happened, we know exactly when and how. I'm not going to summarize all of it here, but there's a ton of information online including on Wikipedia and there's a ton of information in mainstream historic sources.
fellow_enthusiast t1_izd7p5e wrote
> More accurately, it’s an ethno religious group or “people”. You can convert into Judaism if you are accepted by a court of Jewish law - like applying for membership. Judaism is very old and is much older than modern concepts of race and religion.
>Ashkenaz issues are a subset of Jews, but all Jewish groups are ethnically distinct and have more in common with one another than with other groups - we all have common DNA from before we were concord and exiled.
. Umm, no. no you did not. im not arguing wherher jews were or were not exiled, it just seemed like his question was a weird, antisemitic attack about something that you hadnt mentioned.
one_shattered_ego t1_j10gdgz wrote
Sorry I’m super late to reply, but I just wanted to ask if you even read the comment you quoted? Read the last word of the quote in your own comment. I agree the person was being weirdly anti-Semitic and you were trying to have hitchhikebaby’s back, but the last word of their comment was literally “exiled”
[deleted] t1_j10w8uy wrote
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FoundationNarrow6940 t1_iz4wuig wrote
No but he needs to show PROOF!
ConsciousLiterature t1_iz38hxk wrote
>More accurately, it's an ethno religious group or "people".
Isn't every group of people an ethnoreligious group?
>Ashkenaz issues are a subset of Jews, but all Jewish groups are ethnically distinct and have more in common with one another than with other groups - we all have common DNA from before we were concord and exiled.
You share 99% of your DNA with a banana. Is there some gene that only jews have or something?
onan4843 t1_iz3o0ax wrote
Are you being purposefully obtuse or do you not know that certain ethnic groups have particular religions associated exclusively with them?
[deleted] t1_iz3v74j wrote
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suvlub t1_iz425cv wrote
>Isn't every group of people an ethnoreligious group?
Like, every every? Are the people standing at bus stop an ethno-religious group?
>You share 99% of your DNA with a banana
No. Only 50%. You are confusing it with chimps.
>Is there some gene that only jews have or something?
Pretty much, and not just one. You can tell whether someone has Jewish ancestry by doing a DNA test.
[deleted] t1_iz42lfo wrote
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Fhujeth t1_iz4qmo1 wrote
You would probably defend a native American tribe as its own religion and everything as its own ethnoreligion, Jews are no different. :)
[deleted] t1_iz67khr wrote
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