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??? what is that?philo-Semitic,
This is actually a very insightful observation. Most people (including Jews) don't know that there is a difference. I am half Jewish. My mother is Jewish and my father was Caucasian christian; 1/2 English and 1/2 Scottish. I can only trace my fathers gene line concretely as third generation American but it could be significantly higher. My grandmother on my mother's side is a Spehardic Jew. They are the biblical Jews descendant from the 12 tribes of Israel and consequently look Arabic. My grandfather is Ashkanezi, Ashkenazi outnumber Sehphardic 9:1. There is no consensus on where or when Askenazis converted to Judaism (the only trusted information I've found is we are genetically similar to Turks, southern Italians, and Greeks). Mel Brooks and Woody Allen are Ashkanazi. Also there is a small contingent of Ethiopian Jews; the Israelis are xenophobic towards their immigration so they get put in refugee camps. An Ethiopian Jew picked me out of a crowd when I was an undergraduate and that was my first knowledge of their existence. So I'm an ethnic Jew but I have never practiced the Jewish religion. I'm third generation Jewish American; three great grandparents came from Russia and one from the Ukraine. All within the time period of 1900-1915. One extended member of the family wrote a genealogy of my one ancestor from the Ukraine. This included my great grandmother. While most of the family was emigrating to America her brother choose to move to France. He was a soldier in the war so when he was captured he got put in a POW camp instead of a concentration camp and was treated like any other POW. His wife was in hospital at the time and stayed there. Nazis would come 2x per week to see if anyone was healthy enough to leave. She later remarked a French doctor preformed unnecessary surgeries on her to keep her just sick enough to not go to a concentration camp. They put their children in hiding in various places in France. The youngest son hid on a farm in rural France and he is the one who told the story in 1997.It still confuses me when people use it as both a race and a religion. People say "Are you Jewish?" and I say "Are you talking about my bloodline or my religious practice?" and they immediately are stumped. Even some Jewish people can't answer me that.
I've been told by everyone I meet, especially the Jewish people I meet, that I am Jewish. I've been to a Messianic synagog and liked it way more than any Christian Church I've been to.
It still confuses me when people use it as both a race and a religion. People say "Are you Jewish?" and I say "Are you talking about my bloodline or my religious practice?" and they immediately are stumped. Even some Jewish people can't answer me that.
I do get along with Jewish people more so than Gentiles. I have pretty much every feature in the stereotype. But have no way of checking for the lineage. *shrug*
if for instance you are of ashkenazi group common skin Colour white they have a known record of being diagnosed with tay-Sachs disease its muscle wasting -horrendousI was told recently that I'm supposedly Jewish because of some relation from however far back on my Mum's side. I did try looking into it as it'd be interesting to know more about my Mum's family. They're weird so I don't know a lot about them past my Mum's parents. It makes no difference to me either way other than finding out about ancestors.
I LOVE IT WHEN I HEAR THE WORD ALIYAH OR HAVE MADE ALIYAH FOR SOME REASON HEBREW MEANS MORE TO ME THAN ENGLISHShalom. I'm not Jewish, but philo-Semitic, and anything to do with Jewish people and Judaism is one of my obsessions.
Your Jewish heritage is part of your identity. Be proud of it and explore it. Go to Israel if you can. Read the Bible, both testaments, and see where it takes you.