Logo

Besides the religion, what's the difference between Arabs and Jews, if they are the same people from the same part of the Middle East?

Last Updated: 28.06.2025 06:06

Besides the religion, what's the difference between Arabs and Jews, if they are the same people from the same part of the Middle East?

In a nutshell, the Arabs are the exact opposite…

Religion is far from being a major player in the Middle Eastern conflict and this follows the biggest difference between Jews and the peoples of the Middle East, colloquially named “Arabs.”

Besides, while the world “Jews” is both a religious and ethnic term, the word “Arab” is a cultural term.

Which new book genres have emerged in the past decade?

They are not the same people.

There is good reason why they bear distinctive names…

Pluralism - as defined by Cambridge dictionary: “the belief that the existence of different types of people within the same society is a good thing”

What was the most inappropriate thing your parent caught you doing as a teen? Was in the bedroom, I thought nobody else was home. My sister and I shared that bedroom but I knew she was gone. I didn’t know my dad was home though.

Positive social mobility - and back to Cambridge dictionary: “the ability to move from one level of society to another”, namely and in practical terms, the ability of any person of any social level to change his or her level, based on personal skills and ambition.

Israel, being a Jewish majority country (and because of this), is typified by:

Liberalism - as defined by Merriam-Webster: “a political philosophy based on belief in progress and stressing the essential goodness of the human race, freedom for the individual from arbitrary authority, and protection and promotion of political and civil liberties.”

Honestly! Do you people actually watch all that nonsense produced by the nitwit network television stations or do they just claim you do?

Jews are a part of the Western Civilization and adhere to Western values. Actually, a great deal of these values stem from Jewish ethics.