Ashkanazim
English
Etymology
Identical with Ashkenazim, but spelt closer to the Hebrew transliteration of אַשְׁכֲּנָזִים (ashkanazím).
Noun
Ashkanazim
- Alternative spelling of Ashkenazim
- 1999, Charles W. Joyner, Shared Traditions: Southern History and Folk Culture, University of Illinois Press, →ISBN, page 190:
- Reform Judaism, which has been called “the folk religion of the German-American Jew,” represented a crisis in the longstanding linguistic and religious differences dividing Sephardim and Ashkanazim.
- 2002, Frank Heynick, Jews and Medicine: An Epic Saga, KTAV Publishing House, →ISBN, page 437, →ISBN:
- It is in the distribution of the Rh (rhesus) factor that the blood of the various Jewish communities of Europe shows some significant differences compared to their gentile neighbors — apparently due to an old core of Mediterranean ancestry among the Ashkanazim.
- 2002, Clive Jones, Emma Murphy, Israel: Challenges to Identity, Democracy, and the State, Routledge, →ISBN, page 27:
- Ben-Gurion's legacy has been an enduring one. The projection of a national consensus, the domination of the state over other political actors, and the hegemony exercised over decision-making by a largely Ashkanazim élite remain features of Israeli politics today.
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