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:''Distinguish from [[Ju]] (an abbreviation, and a division of Korea) and [[Jiu]] (a Romanian river, and a Chinese beverage).''
{{otheruses}}
'''Jews''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: יהודים, ''Yehudim''; [[Yiddish language|Yiddish]]: ייִדן, ''Yiden'') are followers of [[Judaism]] or, more generally, members of the Jewish people (also known as the Jewish nation, or the [[Children of Israel]]), an [[ethnic group|ethno]]-[[religion|religious]] group descended from the ancient [[Israelite]]s and from converts who joined their religion. The term also includes those who have undergone an officially recognized formal process of religious conversion to Judaism. The current Jewish population is over 14.5 million, the majority of whom live in [[Israel]] and the [[U.S.A.]]
{{Infobox Country |
native_name = ''Estados Unidos Mexicanos''|
conventional_long_name = United Mexican States |
common_name = Mexico |
image_flag = Flag_of_Mexico.svg |
image_coat = Mexico coat of arms.png |
symbol_type=Coat of arms |
image_map = MexicoWorldMap.png |
national_anthem = "[[Mexicanos, al grito de guerra]]" |
national_motto = |
official_languages = None at federal level<br/>[[Spanish language|Spanish]] and 62 native languages are "national languages"<ref>Mexican Law of Lingusitic Rights.</ref> |
capital = [[Mexico City]] |
latd=19|latm=03|latNS=N|longd=99|longm=22|longEW=W|
government_type = [[Federal Republic]] |
leader_titles = &nbsp;• [[President of Mexico|President]] |
leader_names = [[Vicente Fox|Vicente Fox Quesada]] |
largest_city = [[Mexico City]] |
area = 1,972,550 |
areami²= 758,249 <!-- Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]] -->|
area_rank = 13th |
area_magnitude = 1 E12 |
percent_water = 2.5% |
population_estimate = 107,029,000 |
population_estimate_year = 2005 |
population_estimate_rank = 11th |
population_census = 101,879,171 |
population_census_year = 2000 |
population_density = 54.3 |
population_densitymi² =136 <!-- Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]] -->|
population_density_rank = 117th |
GDP_PPP_year = 2006 |
GDP_PPP = $1.122 trillion|
GDP_PPP_rank = 13th |
GDP_PPP_per_capita = $10,474 |
GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 70th |
HDI_year = 2003 |
HDI = 0.814 |
HDI_rank = 53rd |
HDI_category = <font color="#009900">high</font> |
sovereignty_type = [[Mexican War of Independence|Independence]] |
established_events = &nbsp;• Declared<br>&nbsp;• Recognized |
established_dates = From [[Spain]]<br>[[September 16]], [[1810]]<br>[[September 27]], [[1821]] |
currency = [[Mexican peso|Peso]] |
currency_code = MXN |
time_zone = |
utc_offset = -8 to -6 |
time_zone_DST = varies |
utc_offset_DST = |
cctld = [[.mx]] |
calling_code = 52 |
footnotes= |
}}
'''Mexico''' ([[Spanish language|Spanish]]: ''México'') is a [[country]] located in [[North America]], bordered at the north by the [[United States]], and at the south with [[Guatemala]] and [[Belize]] in [[Central America]]. It is the northernmost and westernmost country in [[Latin America]], and also the most populous Spanish-speaking country in the world.


This article describes some ethnic, [[Jewish history|historic]], and [[Jewish culture|cultural]] aspects of the Jewish identity; for a consideration of the Jewish religion, refer to the article [[Judaism]].
The official name is the '''United Mexican States''' (Spanish: ''Estados Unidos Mexicanos''). The term [[Mexico (state)|State of Mexico]] (''Estado de Mexico'') does ''not'' refer to the country, but only to one state within Mexico, located near the center of the country adjacent to the Federal District.
{{Jew}}


==Jews and Judaism==
==History==
The origin of the Jews <ref>Some uses of the term "Jew" are tainted by historic anti-Jewish bigotry. The correct adjectival form is "Jewish"; the use of "Jew" as an adjective (as in "Jew lawyer" rather than "Jewish lawyer") is associated with bigotry. The use of "Jew" or "jew" as a verb (as in "to jew someone down": to bargain for a lower price) is generally seen as an extremely offensive expression based on stereotypes. Even when used in a grammatically correct manner as a noun, the term "Jew" has been used to [[objectification|objectify]] and separate Jews from the remainder of the population, often by referring to the majority population by the name of the country ("Countrymen") but referring to Jewish citizens as "Jews."</ref> is traditionally dated to around 1800 [[Common Era|BCE]] {{fact}} with the biblical account of the birth of Judaism.
{{main|History of Mexico}}
===Prehistoric times===
Although fragments of evidence suggest human habitation of Mexico started more than 20,000 years ago, ancient Mexicans began to selectively breed corn plants around 8,000 [[Anno Domini|B.C.]] Evidence shows the explosion of pottery works by 2300 B.C. and the beginning of intensive farming between 1800 and 1500 B.C.


The [[Merneptah Stele]], dated at [[1200 BCE]], is one of the earliest archaeological records of the Jewish people in the [[Land of Israel]], where they further developed a [[monotheism|monotheistic]] religion and enjoyed periods of [[self-determination]]. As a result of foreign conquests and expulsions starting in the [[8th century BCE]], a [[Jewish diaspora]] was formed. Defeats in the [[Jewish-Roman Wars]] in the years [[70]] [[Common Era|CE]] and [[135]] notably contributed to the numbers and [[geography]] of the diaspora, as significant numbers of the Jewish population of the Land of Israel were expelled and sold to [[slavery]] throughout the empire. Since then, Jews lived throughout [[Europe]] and the greater [[Middle East]], surviving discrimination, oppression, poverty, and even [[genocide]] (see the article [[anti-Semitism]]), with occasional periods of cultural, economic, and individual prosperity.
===Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations===
[[Image:Yaxchilan 1.jpg|thumb|right||250px|An image of one of the pyramids in the upper level of [[Yaxchilan]]]]
[[Image:Telamones Tula.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Atlantes at [[Tula, Hidalgo|Tula]], [[Hidalgo]]]]
Between 1800 and 300 BC, complex cultures began to form. Some matured into advanced [[Pre-Columbian]] [[Mesoamerica]]n civilizations such as the: [[Olmec]], [[Teotihuacan]], [[Maya civilization|Maya]], [[Zapotec]], [[Mixtec]], [[Huaxtec]], [[Purepecha]], [[Toltec]], and [[Aztec|Mexica]] (a.k.a.''Aztecs''). All of them flourished in various stages of development for nearly 4,000 years before first contact with Europeans.


Until the late 18th century, the terms ''Jews'' and ''adherents of Judaism'' were practically synonymous, and Judaism was the prime binding factor among the Jews, although it was not strictly required to be followed in order to belong to the Jewish people. Following the [[Age of Enlightenment]] and its Jewish counterpart [[Haskalah]], a gradual transformation occurred where many Jews came to view being a member of the Jewish nation as separate from adhering to the Jewish faith.
These indigenous civilizations are credited with many inventions in [[mathematics]], [[astronomy]], [[medicine]], [[writing]], highly accurate [[calendar]]s, fine [[arts]], intensive [[agriculture]], [[engineering]], building [[pyramid]]-[[temple]]s, an [[abacus]] calculation, a complex [[theology]], and the [[wheel]]. Without any draft animals, however, the wheel was used only as a toy.


The Hebrew name ''Yehudi'' (plural ''Yehudim'') came into being when the [[Kingdom of Israel]] was split between the northern [[Kingdom of Israel]] and the southern [[Kingdom of Judah]]. The term originally referred to the people of the southern kingdom, although the term ''B'nei Yisrael'' (Israelites) was still used for both groups. After the Assyrians conquered the northern kingdom leaving the southern kingdom as the only Israelite state, the word ''Yehudim'' gradually came to refer to people of the Jewish faith as a whole, rather than those specifically from Judah. The English word ''Jew'' is ultimately derived from ''Yehudi'' (see [[Jew#Etymology|Etymology]]). Its first use in the [[Tanakh|Bible]] to refer to the Jewish people as a whole is in the [[Book of Esther]].
===Spanish conquest===
{{main|Spanish Conquest of Mexico}}
In 1519, the native civilizations of Mexico were invaded by [[Spain|Spanish]] troops numbering about 600 soldiers, who brought with them superior weaponry and old world diseases. Two years later in 1521, the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan ([[Mexico City]]) was conquered. It is said that the dead from [[smallpox]] filled the streets and canals. Hundreds of thousands of Aztecs died of disease. [[Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (discoverer of Yucatán)|Francisco Hernández de Córdoba]] explored the shores of southern Mexico in [[1517]], followed by [[Juan de Grijalva]] in [[1518]]. The most important of the early [[Conquistador]]es was [[Hernán Cortés]], who entered the country in [[1519]] from a native coastal town which he renamed "Puerto de la Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz" (today's [[Veracruz, Veracruz|Veracruz]]).


==Etymology==
Contrary to popular opinion, Spain did not conquer all of Mexico when Cortés conquered [[Tenochtitlan]] in 1521. It would take another two centuries after the [[Siege of Tenochtitlan]] before the [[Conquest of Mexico]] would be complete, as sporadic and ineffective rebellions, attacks, and wars continued against the Spanish by other native people. Disease ran rampant throughout Mexico, dropping the population from about eight million to two million by 1600.
{{main|Etymology of the word Jew}}


There are many different views as to the origin of the [[English language]] word ''Jew''. The most common view is that the [[Middle English]] word ''Jew'' is from the [[Old French]] ''giu'', earlier ''juieu'', from the [[Latin]] ''iudeus'' from the [[Greek language|Greek]] ''Ioudaios'' (Ιουδαίος). The Latin simply means ''Judaean'', from the land of ''[[Judea|Judaea]]''. The Hebrew for Jew, יהודי , is pronounced ye-hoo-DEE. The Hebrew letter [[Yodh]] (or Yud), י, used as a 'y' in the Hebrew language (as in the word ye-hoo-DEE), becomes a 'j' in languages using the Latin-based alphabet when the Yodh is used as a consonant rather than as a vowel. Therefore, a rough transliteration of יהודי in English would be ''Jew''.
===Colonial period===
{{main|Colonial Mexico}}
The [[Spanish Conquest of Mexico|Spanish defeat of the Mexica]] in 1521 marked the beginning of the 300 year-long colonial period of Mexico.
About 30 million people died in the war{{cite needed}}.
After the fall of Tenochtitlan [[Mexico City]], it would take decades of sporadic warfare to pacify the rest of Mesoamerica. Particularly fierce were the "[[Chichimeca]] wars" in the north of Mexico (1576–1606).


The etymological equivalent is in use in other languages, e.g., "Jude" in [[German language|German]], "jøde," in [[Norwegian language|Norwegian]], etc., but derivations of the word "Hebrew" are also in use to describe a Jewish person, e.g., in [[Italian language|Italian]] (Ebreo) and {{lang-ru|Еврей}}, (''Yevrey''). (See [[Jewish ethnonym]]s for a full overview.)
During the colonial period, which lasted from 1521 to 1810, Mexico was known as "Nueva España" or "[[New Spain]]", whose territories included today's Mexico, [[Central America]] as far south as [[Costa Rica]], and the area comprising today's southwestern [[United States]].<


===Mexican war of independence===
==Who is a Jew?==
{{main|Mexican War of Independence}}
{{main|Who is a Jew?}}
[[Image:Gottlieb-Jews Praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur.jpg|thumb|left|Jews praying in the [[Synagogue]] on [[Yom Kippur]]. (1878 painting by [[Maurice Gottlieb]])]]
[[Image:Miguel de Hidalgo y Castillo.JPG|right|200px|thumb|Father Miguel de Hidalgo y Castillo, father of the movement for Mexican independence]]
[[Image:Map of Mexico 1847.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Map of Mexico, 1847]]
[[Image:Acta_de_Independencia_del_Imperio_Mexicano.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Act of Independence of the Mexican Empire (1821) donated by [[Pedro Thomas Ruiz de Velasco]] to the citizens of Mexico.]]
After [[Napoleon I]] invaded [[Spain]] and put his brother on the Spanish throne, Mexican Conservatives and rich land-owners who supported Spain's [[House of Bourbon|Bourbon]] royal family objected to the comparatively more liberal Napoleonic policies. Thus an unlikely alliance was formed in Mexico: '''liberales''', or Liberals, who favored a democratic Mexico, and '''conservadores''', or Conservatives, who favored Mexico ruled by a Bourbon monarch who would restore the old status quo. These two elements agreed only that Mexico must achieve independence and determine her own destiny.


[[Judaism]] shares some of the characteristics of a [[nation]], an [[ethnicity]], a [[religion]], and a [[culture]], making the definition of who is a Jew vary slightly depending on whether a religious or national approach to identity is used. For discussions of the religious views on who is a Jew and how these views differ from each other, please see [[Who is a Jew?]]. Generally, in modern secular usage, Jews include three groups: people who practice Judaism and have a Jewish ethnic background (sometimes including those who do not have strictly matrilineal descent), people without Jewish parents who have converted to Judaism; and those Jews who, while not practicing Judaism as a religion, still identify themselves as Jewish by virtue of their family's Jewish descent and their own cultural and historical identification with the Jewish people.
[[Image:Emperor Agustin I.JPG|left|200px|thumb|Agustin I, Constitutional Emperor of Mexico]]


Historical definitions of Jewish identity have traditionally been based on [[Halakha|Halakhic]] definitions of matrilineal descent, and halachic conversions. Historical definitions of who is a Jew date back to the codification of the oral tradition into the [[Talmud|Babylonian Talmud]]. Biblical interpretations of sections in the [[Tanach]], such as [[Deuteronomy]] 7:1-5, by learned Jewish sages, is used as a warning against intermarriage between Jews and non Jews because "[the non-Jewish male spouse] will cause your child to turn away from Me and they will worship the gods of others." [[Leviticus]] 24:10 speaks of the son in a marriage between a Hebrew woman and an Egyptian man to be "of the community of Israel.", which contrasts with [[Ezra]] 10:2-3, where Israelites returning from Egypt, vowed to put aside their gentile wives and their children. Since the [[Haskalah]], these halakhic interpretations of Jewish identity have been challenged.
Taking advantage of the fact that Spain was severely handicapped under the occupation of Napoleon's army, [[Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla]], a Catholic priest of Spanish descent and progressive ideas, declared Mexico's independence from Spain in the small town of [[Dolores Hidalgo|Dolores]] on [[September 16]], [[1810]]. This act started the long [[Mexican War of Independence|war]] that eventually led to the official recognition of independence from Spain in 1821. As with many early leaders in the movement for Mexican independence, Hidalgo was captured by opposing forces and executed. After no European monarch accepted its throne, the [[First Mexican Empire|newly independent Mexico]] was ruled by [[Agustín de Iturbide]]. After his coronation as [[Emperor]] of Mexico he became known as Agustin I, and ruled until his overthrow by republican forces led by [[Guadalupe Victoria]] and [[Antonio López de Santa Anna]].


<div style="clear: both"></div>


==Jewish culture==
===War with the United States===
{{main|Secular Jewish culture|Judaism}}
[[Image:Santaanna1.JPG|thumb|200px|right|[[Antonio López de Santa Anna]], Former President of Mexico]]
[[Image:Image-Chagall Fiddler.jpg|thumb|''The Fiddler'' by [[Marc Chagall]]]]
{{main|Mexican-American War}}
Many presidents, emperors, and dictators came and went, which brought a long period of instability that lasted most of the [[19th century]]. A dominant figure of the second quarter of that century was the dictator [[Antonio López de Santa Anna]] who was president seven different times, many of his terms were unsuccessful.


[[Judaism]] guides its adherents in both practice and belief, and has been called not only a religion, but also a "way of life," which has made drawing a clear distinction between Judaism, Jewish culture, and Jewish nationality rather difficult. In many times and places, such as in the ancient [[Ancient Greece|Hellenic]] world, in [[Europe]] before and after the [[The Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] (see [[Haskalah]]), and in contemporary United States and Israel, cultural phenomena have developed that are in some sense characteristically Jewish without being at all specifically religious. Some factors in this come from within Judaism, others from the interaction of Jews with others around them, others from the inner social and cultural dynamics of the community, as opposed to religion itself.
During this period, many of the mostly unsettled territories in the north were lost to the [[United States]]. Santa Anna was Mexico's leader during the conflict with [[Texas]], which declared itself independent from Mexico in 1836 by defeating Santa Anna and the Mexican army. As president, Santa Anna tried to rule during the disastrous [[Mexican-American War]] (1846–48). The U.S. government sent troops to Texas in order to secure the territory ignoring Mexican demands for U.S. withdrawal. Mexico saw this as a U.S. intervention in internal affairs by supporting a "rebel" province. In the war that ensued, the [[United States]] kept over half of Mexico's territory, including land comprising the present states of [[Arizona]], [[California]], [[Colorado]], [[New Mexico]], [[Nevada]], and [[Utah]]. Mexico lost nearly 2,000.000 km² after the war and received $15 million for the lands from the U.S.


==Ethnic divisions==
===French intervention and an emperor===
{{main|Jewish ethnic divisions}}
[[Image:Juarez.JPG|thumb|right|180px|[[Benito Juárez]], The only [[Indigenous]] President of Mexico]]
{{main|French intervention in Mexico}}
In the 1860s, the country again suffered a military occupation, this time by [[France]], seeking to establish the [[Habsburg]] Archduke [[Maximilian of Mexico|Ferdinand Maximilian of Austria]] as Emperor of Mexico, with support from the [[Roman Catholic]] [[clergy]] and conservative elements of the upper class as well as some indigenous communities. The [[Second Mexican Empire]] was then overthrown by President [[Benito Juárez]], with diplomatic and logistical support from the United States and the military expertise of General [[Porfirio Díaz]]. General [[Ignacio Zaragoza]] defeated the largely unsupported French Army in Mexico at the city of [[Puebla, Puebla|Puebla]] on [[May 5]], [[1862]], celebrated as ''[[Cinco de Mayo]]'' ever since. However, after his death, the city was lost in early 1863, following a renewed French attack which penetrated as far as Mexico City, forcing Juárez to organize a new itinerant government.


The most commonly used terms to describe ethnic divisions among Jews currently are: ''[[Ashkenazi]]'' (meaning "[[Germany|German]]" in Hebrew, denoting the Central European base of Jewry); and ''[[Sephardi]]'' (meaning "[[Spain|Spanish]]" or "[[Iberian peninsula|Iberia]]" in Hebrew, denoting their Spanish, Portuguese and [[North Africa]]n location). They refer to both religious and ethnic divisions.
===Order, progress, and the Díaz dictatorship===
[[Image:PDiaz.JPG|right|thumb|left|180px|[[Porfirio Díaz]], President of Mexico]]
After the victory, there was resentment by Conservatives against Juárez (who they thought concentrated too much power and desired to be re-elected) that an army general, [[Porfirio Díaz]], rebelled against the government with the proclamation of the [[Plan de Tuxtepec]] in [[1876]].


Other Jewish ethnic groups include [[Mizrahi Jew]]s (a term overlapping ''Sephardi'', but emphasizing North African and Middle Eastern rather than Spanish history, and including the [[Maghrebim]]); [[Teimanim]] ([[Yemen]]ite and [[Oman]]i Jews); and such smaller groups as the [[Gruzim]] and [[Juhurim]] from the [[Caucasus (geographic region)|Caucasus]], the [[Bene Israel]], [[Bnei Menashe]], [[Cochin Jews|Cochin]] and [[Telugu Jews|Telugu]] [[Jews in India|Jews of India]], the [[Romaniotes]] of [[Greece]], the [[Italkim]] (Bené Roma) of [[Italy]], various [[African Jew]]s (most notably the [[Beta Israel]] or [[Ethiopia]]n Jews), the [[Bukharan Jews]] of Central Asia, and the [[Persian Jews]] of Iran.
Díaz became the new president. During a period of more than thirty years (1876&ndash;1911) while he was the strong man in Mexico, the country's infrastructure improved greatly thanks to investments from other countries. This period of relative prosperity and peace is known as the ''Porfiriato''. However there was discontentment amongst the people during the Porfiriato due foreign investors paying workers very small wages, which produced a very steep social division: only a small group of investors (domestic and foreign) were getting rich, but the vast majority of the people remained in abject poverty. Democracy was completely suppressed, and dissent was dealt with in repressive, often brutal ways ''(see, for example, [[Nogales, Veracruz]])''.


==Population==
===Mexican Revolution===
{{main|Mexican Revolution}}
{{main|Jewish population}}
The Mexican Revolution, sometimes called the Mexican Revolution of 1910, was a violent social and cultural movement, colored by socialist, nationalist, and anarchist tendencies. It began with the popular rejection of dictator Porfirio Díaz Mori in 1910 and continued even after the promulgation of a new constitution in 1917.
{{sect-stub}}


Prior to [[World War II]] the world population of Jews was approximately 18 million. [[The Holocaust]] reduced this number to approximately 12 million. Today, there are an estimated 13 million <ref name="jppistudy">Data based on a [http://www.jpppi.org.il/JPPPI/SendFile.asp?TID=67&amp;FID=2377 study] by ''Jewish People Policy Institute'' (JPPI). See ''[http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/Printer&amp;cid=1088046787193&amp;p=1008596975996 Jewish people near zero growth]'' by Tovah Lazaroff, [[Jerusalem Post]], June 24, 2004.</ref> to 14.6 million<ref>See, for example [[Jews by country]] page for higher estimates.</ref> Jews worldwide in over 134 countries.
===Zimmerman telegram===
Towards the end of [[World War I]] a secret proposal was devised by Germany, articulated in a diplomatic message that became known as the [[Zimmerman telegram]]. The proposal, which was intercepted and decoded by British intelligence, asked Mexico to join the German war effort in exchange for German support in reclaiming Mexico's former territories in the southwestern United States. Its discovery became one of the many contributing factors to eventual U.S. involvement in the war. Mexico declined the offer.


===Significant geographic populations===
===Mexican economic miracle===
{{main|Jews by country}}
During the next four decades, Mexico experienced impressive economic growth (from a very low base), and historians call this period "El Milagro Mexicano", the Mexican Miracle. This was in spite of falling foreign confidence in investment during the worldwide [[great depression]]. The assumption of mineral rights and subsequent nationalization of the oil industry into [[Pemex|PEMEX]] during the presidency of [[Lázaro Cárdenas del Río]] was a popular move.
Please note that these populations represent low-end estimates of the worldwide Jewish population, accounting for around 0.2% of the [[World population|world's population]]. Higher estimates place the worldwide Jewish population at over 14.5 million.


{| class="wikitable"
===NAFTA===
!Country or Region
On [[January 1]] [[1994]], Mexico became a full member of the [[North American Free Trade Agreement]], joining the [[United States of America]] and [[Canada]] in a large and prosperous economic bloc. On [[March 23]] [[2005]], the [[Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America]] was signed by the elected leaders of those countries.
!Jewish population

!Notes
===The end of the PRI's hegemony===
Even though it was frequently accused of corruption, influence peddling and blatant election fraud, the PRI managed to retain a firm grip on political power in Mexico until the end of the 20th century. Almost all public offices were held by members of the PRI.

It was not until the 1980s that the PRI lost the first [[List of Mexican state governors|state governorship]], an event that marked the beginning of the party's loss of hegemony. Through the electoral reforms started by president [[Carlos Salinas de Gortari]] and consolidated by president [[Ernesto Zedillo]], by the mid 1990s the PRI had lost its majority in [[Congress of Mexico|Congress]]. In 2000, after seventy years, the PRI lost a presidential election to a candidate of the [[National Action Party (Mexico)|National Action Party]] (PAN), [[Vicente Fox]]. He was the 69th president of Mexico. The continued non-PAN majority in the Congress of Mexico prevented him from implementing most of his proposed reforms.

==Government and politics==
<!--Please add new information into relevant articles of the series-->
[[Image:Vicente_Fox_2006.jpg|right|thumb|180px|[[Vicente Fox Quesada]], [[President_of_Mexico|president]] of [[Mexico]].]]
{{more|country=Mexico}}

Government and politics of Mexico takes place in a framework of a [[federation|federal]] [[presidential system|presidential]] [[representative democracy|representative democratic]] [[republic]], whereby the [[President of Mexico]] is both [[head of state]] and [[head of government]], and of a pluriform multi-party system. [[Executive power]] is exercised by the government. [[Legislative power]] is vested in both the [[government]] and the two chambers of the [[Congress of Mexico|Congress of the Union]].
The [[Judiciary]] is independent of the executive and the legislature.
New hopes for economic development were given rise by the overthrow of the long governing political party, [[PRI]], in 2000, by Vicente Fox from the center-right party [[PAN]]. The presidential election in [[2006]] is the most discussed topic in Mexico now, where candidates from the center-right (PAN) and left ([[PRD]]) parties are the favorites.

==Political divisions==
{{main|States of Mexico}} ''See also: [[Mexican state name etymologies]].''

Mexico is divided into 31 [[state]]s (''estados'') and a [[federal district]]. Each state has its own constitution and its citizens elect a [[List of Mexican state governors|governor]] as well as representatives to their respective state congresses.

{| align="center" cellpadding="1"
|-
|-
|[[United States]]
|
|style="text-align: right"|5,671,000
*1.[[Aguascalientes]]
| (est.) <ref name="jppistudy" />
*2.[[Baja California]]
|-
*3.[[Baja California Sur]]
*4.[[Campeche]]
|[[Israel]]
|style="text-align: right"|5,466,800
*5.[[Chiapas]]
| (est.)<ref>Data based on a study by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. See ''[http://www.cbs.gov.il/sidrnge.cgi?sid=3764&amp;stid=1&amp;tid=2]'' (Updated to June 2005).</ref> (about 79% of Israel's population)
*6.[[Chihuahua]]
|-
*7.[[Coahuila]]
*8.[[Colima]]
|[[Europe]]
|style="text-align: right"|2,000,000
|
| (fewer than)
*9.[[Durango]]
|-
*10.[[Guanajuato]]
|style="text-indent: 2em"|[[France]]
*11.[[Guerrero]]
|style="text-align: right"|600,000
*12.[[Hidalgo]]
| (est.) <ref name="jppistudy" />
*13.[[Jalisco]]
|-
*14.[[Estado de México|México]]
|style="text-indent: 2em"|[[Russian Federation|Russia]]
*15.[[Michoacán]]
|style="text-align: right"|400,000
*16.[[Morelos]]
|(Territory of the former [[Soviet Union]]. Some estimates are much higher.)<ref>1993 Russian census. Some estimates are much higher; the US State Department Religious Freedom Report [http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2004/35480.htm] estimates the number of Jews in Russia alone at 600,000 to 1 million.</ref>
|
*17.[[Nayarit]]
*18.[[Nuevo León]]
*19.[[Oaxaca]]
*20.[[Puebla]]
*21.[[Querétaro]]
*22.[[Quintana Roo]]
*23.[[San Luis Potosí]]
*24.[[Sinaloa]]
|
*25.[[Sonora]]
*26.[[Tabasco]]
*27.[[Tamaulipas]]
*28.[[Tlaxcala]]
*29.[[Veracruz]]
*30.[[Yucatán]]
*31.[[Zacatecas]]
*[[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]]
|-
|-
|style="text-indent: 2em"|[[United Kingdom|United&nbsp;Kingdom]]
|}
|style="text-align: right"|267,000
<br clear="all">
|(2001 census)

|-
[[Image:Meximap01.PNG|center|450px|States of Mexico (excluding the islands)]]
|style="text-indent: 2em"|[[Germany]]

|style="text-align: right"|100,000
<br clear="all">
|(2004 est.) or 60,000 (est.) <ref name="jppistudy" />

The [[Mexican Federal District|Federal District]] is a special political division in Mexico, where the national capital, Mexico City, is located. It enjoys more limited local rule than the nation's "free and sovereign states": only since 1997 have its citizens been able to elect a [[Head of Government of the Federal District|Head of Government]]. Much of the capital city's metropolitan area overflows the limits of the Federal District.

===Largest cities===
The following is a list of the principal [[Metropolitan Areas of Mexico]] in order of population as reported in the 2005 census [http://www.inegi.gob.mx/est/contenidos/espanol/proyectos/conteos/conteo2005/bd/consulta2/pt.asp?c=6796]:

[[Image:Angel_of_Independence.jpg|right|200px|thumb|[[Mexico City]]]]
[[Image:Plzliber.PNG|right|200px|thumb|[[Guadalajara, Jalisco]]]]
[[Image:Mty139.JPG|right|thumb|200px|[[Monterrey]], [[Nuevo Leon]]]]

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right; margin-right:60px"
|-
|-
|style="text-indent: 2em"|[[Turkey]]
! Rank
|style="text-align: right"|30,000
! City
|(2001 census)
! State
! Population
! Region
|-
|-
|style="text-indent: 2em"|[[Italy]]
| 01 ||align=left | [[Mexico city]] ||align=left | [[Distrito Federal]] ||19.23 million ||align=center | Center South
|style="text-align: right"|30,000
|(Jewish communities est.)
|-
|-
|[[Canada]]
| 02 ||align=left | [[Guadalajara, Jalisco|Guadalajara]] ||align=left | [[Jalisco]] || 4.10 million ||align=center | West
|style="text-align: right"|371,000
|(est.) <ref name="jppistudy" />
|-
|-
|[[Argentina]]
| 03 ||align=left | [[Monterrey]] ||align=left | [[Nuevo Leon]] || 3.66 million ||align=center | North East
|style="text-align: right"|250,000
|(est.) <ref name="jewishvirtuallibrary">[http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Judaism/jewpop.html Jewish Virtual Library], [http://www.jewfaq.org/populatn.htm JewFAQ]</ref>
|-
|-
|[[Brazil]]
| 04 ||align=left | [[Puebla, Puebla|Puebla]] ||align=left | [[Puebla]] || 2.11 million ||align=center | East
|style="text-align: right"|130,000
|(est.) <ref name="jewishvirtuallibrary" />
|-
|-
|[[South Africa]]
| 05 ||align=left | [[Toluca]] ||align=left | [[Mexico (state)|México]] || 1.61 million ||align=center | Center South
|style="text-align: right"|106,000
|(est.) <ref name="jewishvirtuallibrary" />
|-
|-
|[[Australia]]
| 06 ||align=left | [[Tijuana]] ||align=left | [[Baja California]] || 1.48 million ||align=center | North West
|style="text-align: right"|100,000
|(est.) <ref name="jewishvirtuallibrary" />
|-
|-
|[[Asia]] (excl. Israel)
| 07 ||align=left | [[León, Guanajuato|León]] ||align=left | [[Guanajuato]] || 1.43 million ||align=center | Center
|style="text-align: right"|50,000
|(est.)
|-
|-
|style="text-indent: 2em"|[[Iran]]
| 08 ||align=left | [[Ciudad Juárez]] ||align=left | [[Chihuahua]] || 1.31 million ||align=center | North West
|style="text-align: right"|11,000
|(est.) <ref name="jewishvirtuallibrary" />
|-
|-
|[[Mexico]]
| 09 ||align=left | [[Torreón|La Laguna]] ||align=left | [[Coahuila]] || 1.11 million ||align=center | North East
|style="text-align: right"|40,000&ndash;50,000
|(est.) <ref name="jewishvirtuallibrary" />
|-
|-
|'''Total'''
| 10 ||align=left | [[San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí|San Luis Potosí]] ||align=left | [[San Luis Potosí]] || 0.96 million ||align=center | Center
|style="text-align: right"|'''15,471,000'''
|-
|'''(est.)'''
| 11 ||align=left | [[Santiago de Querétaro|Querétaro]] ||align=left | [[Querétaro]] || 0.92 million ||align=center | Center
|-
| 12 ||align=left | [[Mérida, Yucatán|Mérida]] ||align=left | [[Yucatán]] || 0.90 million ||align=center | South East
|-
| 13 ||align=left | [[Mexicali]] ||align=left |[[Baja California]] || 0.85 million ||align=center | North West
|-
| 14 ||align=left | [[Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes|Aguascalientes]] ||align=left | [[Aguascalientes]] || 0.81 million ||align=center | Center
|-
| 15 ||align=left | [[Tampico]] ||align=left | [[Tamaulipas]] || 0.80 million ||align=center | Center
|-
| 16 ||align=left | [[Cuernavaca|Cuernavaca]] ||align=left | [[Morelos]] || 0.79 million ||align=center | Center
|-
| 17 ||align=left | [[Acapulco]] ||align=left |[[Guerrero]] || 0.79 million ||align=center | South
|-
| 18 ||align=left | [[Chihuahua, Chihuahua|Chihuahua]] ||align=left | [[Chihuahua]] || 0.78 million ||align=center | North East
|-
| 19 ||align=left | [[Culiacán]] ||align=left |[[Sinaloa]] || 0.76 million ||align=center | North West
|}
|}


==Geography and climate==
===State of Israel===
{{main|Geography of Mexico}}
{{main|Israel}}
[[Image: Declaration of State of Israel 1948.jpg|left|frame|[[David Ben Gurion]] (First Prime Minister of Israel) publicly pronouncing the [[Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel, May 14, 1948]] ]]
[[Image:Mexicofromspace.PNG|right|thumb|250px|Mexico from Space]]
[[Image:Mexico_topo.jpg||right|thumb|250px|Mexico's [[topography]].]]
Situated in the southwestern part of mainland North America and roughly triangular in shape, Mexico stretches more than 3,000 [[kilometre]]s <!--format per WP:MOSNUM -->(1,875&nbsp;[[mile|mi]]) from northwest to southeast. Its width is varied, from more than 2,000 kilometres (1,250&nbsp;mi) in the north and less than 220 kilometres (137&nbsp;mi) at the [[Isthmus of Tehuantepec]] in the south.


[[Israel]], the Jewish nation-state, is the only country in which Jews make up a majority of the citizens. It was established as an independent [[Democracy|democratic]] state on [[May 14]], [[1948]]. Of the 120 members in its parliament, the [[Knesset]], 9 members are Israeli [[Arabs]] and 2 are Israeli [[Druses]]. At the time of its independence, approximately 600,000 Jews lived in Israel. Since then, the country's Jewish population has increased by about one million over each decade as more immigrants arrived and more Israelis were born, resulting in one of the most significant global Jewish population shifts in over 2,000 years.
Mexico is [[United States–Mexico border|bordered by the United States]] to the North, and Belize and Guatemala to the Southeast. [[Baja California (peninsula)|Baja California]] in the West is a 1,250&nbsp;kilometre (775&nbsp;mi) peninsula and forms the [[Gulf of California]]. In the east are the [[Gulf of Mexico]] and the [[Bay of Campeche]], which is formed by Mexico's other peninsula, the [[Yucatán]]. The center of Mexico is a great, high plateau, open to the north, with mountain chains on the east and west and with ocean-front lowlands lying outside of them. (See [[List of mountains#Mexico|list of mountains in Mexico]]). Mexico is about one-fourth the size of the United States.


All the [[Arab Israeli Wars]] have not slowed Israel's growth. Israel opened its doors to the [[the Holocaust|Holocaust]] survivors. It has absorbed a majority of the [[Sephardic Jews|Sephardic]] and [[Mizrahi Jew]]s from the [[Islam|Islamic]] countries. It has taken in hundreds of thousands of Jews from the former [[Soviet Union|USSR]], and has airlifted tens of thousands of Ethiopian Jews<ref>{{cite web | title= airlifted tens of thousands of Ethiopian Jews | url=http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/ejhist.html#operation1/ | accessdate= July 7 | accessyear= 2005 }}</ref>to Israel. In the past decade nearly a million immigrants came to Israel from the former Soviet Union. Many Jews who emigrated to Israel have moved elsewhere, known as [[yerida]] ("descent" [from the Holy Land]), due to its economic problems or due to disillusionment with political conditions and the continuing [[Israeli-Palestinian conflict]].
The terrain and [[climate]] vary from rocky [[desert]]s in the north to tropical [[rain forest]] in the south. Mexico's major rivers include the [[Rio Grande|Río Bravo del Norte]] (Rio Grande) on the northern border and the [[Usumacinta River|Usumacinta]] on its southern borders, respectively, together with the [[Río Grijalva|Grijalva]], [[Río Balsas|Balsas]], [[Río Pánuco|Pánuco]], and [[Río Yaqui|Yaqui]] in the interior. The [[Tropic of Cancer]] effectively divides the country into temperate and tropical zones. Land north of the [[Circle of latitude|twenty-fourth parallel]] experiences cooler temperatures during the winter months. South of the point, temperatures are fairly constant year round and vary solely as a function of elevation.
<br>
<br>
===Diaspora (outside Israel) ===
{{main|Jewish diaspora}}
The waves of immigration to the United States at the turn of the 19th century, massacre of European Jewry during [[the Holocaust]], and the foundation of the state of Israel (and subsequent [[Jewish exodus from Arab lands]]) all resulted in substantial shifts in the population centers of world Jewry during the 20th century.
[[Image:Happynewyearcard.jpg|thumb|225px|In this [[Rosh Hashana]] greeting card from the early 1900s, Russian Jews, packs in hand, gaze at the American relatives beckoning them to the United States. Over two million Jews would flee the [[pogroms]] of the [[Russian Empire]] to the safety of the US from 1881-1924.]]


Currently, the largest Jewish community in the world is located in the United States, with almost 5.7 million Jews. Elsewhere in the Americas, there are also large Jewish populations in Canada and Argentina, and smaller populations in [[Brazil]], [[Mexico]] , [[Uruguay]], [[Venezuela]], [[Chile]], and several other countries (see [[History of the Jews in Latin America]]).
On [[September 19]], [[1985]], an [[earthquake]] measuring approximately 8.0 on the [[Richter scale]] struck [[Michoacán]] and inflicted severe damage on Mexico City. Estimates of the number of dead range from 6,500 with 30,000 injured. (see [[1985 Mexico City earthquake]]). The country also is fairly frequently struck by [[hurricanes]], mainly on the south and east coasts and on the particularly exposed Yucatan Peninsula.


Western Europe's largest Jewish community can be found in [[France]], home to 600,000 Jews, the majority of whom are immigrants or refugees from North African Arab countries such as [[Algeria]], [[Morocco]], and [[Tunisia]] (or their descendants). There are over 265,000 Jews in the [[United Kingdom]]. In [[East Europe|Eastern Europe]], there are anywhere from 500,000 to over two million Jews living in the former [[Soviet Union]], but exact figures are difficult to establish. The fastest-growing Jewish community in the world, outside Israel, is the one in [[Germany]], especially in [[Berlin]], its capital. Tens of thousands of Jews from the former [[Eastern Bloc]] have settled in Germany since the fall of the [[Berlin Wall]].
==Economy==
{{main|Economy of Mexico}}
[[Image:Mexico.DF.Chapultepec.02.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Looking along Reforma from Chapultepec Castle]]According to the [[World Bank]], Mexico ranks [[List of countries by GDP (PPP)|12th in the world in regard to GDP]] and has the [[List of countries by GDP (PPP) per capita|fourth largest per capita income in Latin America]] just after [[Argentina]], [[Chile]] and [[Costa Rica]], and it is firmly established as an upper middle-income country. Since the [[1994 economic crisis in Mexico|economic crisis]] of 1994&ndash;1995 the country has made an impressive economic recovery. According to the director for Colombia and Mexico of the [[World Bank]], the population below the poverty level has decreased from 24.2% to 17.6% in the general population and from 42% to 27.9% in rural areas from 2000-[[2004]] [http://estadis.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/301198.html].


The Arab countries of North Africa and the Middle East were home to around 900,000 Jews in 1945. Systematic persecution after the founding of Israel caused almost all of these Jews to flee to Israel, North America, and Europe in the 1950s. Today, around 8,000 Jews remain in Arab nations. [[Iran]] is home to around 25,000 Jews, down from a population of 100,000 Jews before the 1979 revolution. After the revolution some of the Iranian Jews emigrated to Israel or Europe but most of them emigrated (with their non-Jewish Iranian compatriots) to the [[United States]] (especially [[Los Angeles]]).
Mexico has a [[mixed economy]] that recently entered the trillion dollar class. It contains a mixture of modern and outmoded [[industry]] and [[agriculture]], increasingly dominated by the private sector. The number of state-owned enterprises in Mexico has fallen from more than 1,000 in 1982 to fewer than 200 in 1999. Recent administrations have expanded competition in seaports, railroads, [[telecommunications]], [[electricity]] generation, [[natural gas]] distribution, and [[airport]]s. Mexico is also the fourth largest oil producer in the world.


Outside Europe, Asia and the Americas, significant Jewish populations exist in [[Australia]] and [[South Africa]].
A strong export sector helped to cushion the economy's decline in 1995 and led the recovery in 1996&ndash;1999. Private consumption became the leading driver of growth, accompanied by increased employment and higher wages.


===Population changes: Assimilation===
Mexico has entered a new era of macroeconomic stability. Following a 4.1% growth in 2004, real [[Gross Domestic Product|GDP]] grew 3% in 2005. According to the [[Bank of Mexico]] recent economic developments include a record-low inflation of 3.3% in 2005, low interest rates, a lower [[External debt]] to GDP ratio (8.9%) and a strong [[Mexican peso|peso]]. Trade with the [[United States]] and [[Canada]] has tripled since [[NAFTA]] was implemented in 1994.
Since at least the time of the ancient Greeks, a proportion of Jews have assimilated into the wider non-Jewish society around them, by either choice or force, ceasing to practice Judaism and losing their Jewish identity. Some Jewish communities, for example the [[Kaifeng Jews]] of China, have disappeared entirely, but assimilation has remained relatively low over much of the past millennium, as Jews were often not allowed to integrate with the wider communities in which they lived. The advent of the Jewish Enlightenment (see [[Haskalah]]) of the 1700s and the subsequent emancipation of the Jewish populations of Europe and America in the 1800s, changed the situation, allowing Jews to increasingly participate in, and become part of, secular society. The result has been a growing trend of assimilation, as Jews marry non-Jewish spouses and stop participating in the Jewish community. Rates of [[interreligious marriage]] vary widely: In the United States, they are just under 50%<ref>{{cite web | title=NJPS: Intermarriage: Defining and Calculating Intermarriage | url=http://www.ujc.org/content_display.html?ArticleID=83910 | accessdate= July 7 | accessyear= 2005 }}</ref>, in the United Kingdom, around 50%, and in Australia and Mexico, as low as 10%<ref>{{cite web | title=World Jewish Congress Online | url=http://www.worldjewishcongress.org/communities/world/asia-oceania/australia.cfm | accessdate= July 7 | accessyear= 2005 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title=The Virtual Jewish History Tour - Mexico | url=http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Mexico.html | accessdate= July 7 | accessyear= 2005 }}</ref>, and in France, they may be as high as 75%. In the United States, only about a third of children from intermarriages affiliate themselves with Jewish practice. Additionally, since non-religious Jews generally tend to marry later and have fewer children than the general population, the Jewish community in many countries is aging. The result is that most countries in the [[Diaspora]] have steady or slightly declining Jewish populations as Jews continue to assimilate into the countries in which they live.


===Population changes: Wars against the Jews===
Mexico has opened its markets to free trade like few other countries have done, lowering its trade barriers with more than 40 countries in 12 [[Foreign affairs of Mexico|Free Trade Agreements]], including [[Japan]] and the [[European Union]]. However more than 85% of the trade is still done with the United States. Government authorities expect that by putting more than 90% of trade under free trade agreements with different countries Mexico will lessen its dependence on the United States. The government is seeking to sign an additional agreement with [[Mercosur]].
[[Image:FirstCrusade.jpg|thumb|180px|Right|Jews (identifiable by the [[Judenhut|distinctive hats]] that they were required to wear) being killed by Christian knights. French Bible illustration from 1250.]]
Throughout history, many rulers, empires and nations have oppressed their Jewish populations, or sought to eliminate them entirely. Methods employed have ranged from expulsion to outright genocide; within nations, often the threat of these extreme methods was sufficient to silence dissent. Some examples in the [[history of anti-Semitism]] are: the [[Great Jewish Revolt]] against the [[Roman Empire]]; the [[First Crusade]] which resulted in the massacre of Jews; the [[Spanish Inquisition]] led by [[Torquemada]] and the ''[[Auto de fé]]'' against the [[Marrano]] Jews; the [[Bohdan Chmielnicki]] [[Cossack]] massacres in [[Ukraine]]; the [[Pogrom]]s backed by the Russian [[Tsar]]s; as well as expulsions from Spain, England, France, Germany, and other countries in which the Jews had settled. The persecution culminated in [[Adolf Hitler]]'s [[final solution|Final Solution]], which led to [[the Holocaust]] and the slaughter of approximately 6 million Jews from 1939 to 1945.


===Population changes: Growth===
Mexico still needs to overcome many structural problems as it strives to modernize its economy and raise living standards. Ongoing economic concerns include low real wages, [[underemployment]] for a large segment of the population, inequitable [[income distribution]] (top 20% of income earners account for 55% of income), and few advancement opportunities for the largely [[Amerindian]] population in the impoverished southern states. If municipalities of Mexico were classified as countries in the [[Human Development Index|HDI World Ranking]],[[San Pedro Garza Garcia]], and [[Benito Juárez, D.F.|Benito Juárez]], one of the districts in [[Mexican Federal District|the Distrito Federal]], would have a similar level of development to that of [[Italy]], whereas Metlatonoc, [[Guerrero]], would have an HDI similar to that of [[Malawi]] [http://hdr.undp.org/docs/reports/national/MEX_Mexico/Mexico_2004_sp.pdf].
Israel is the only country with a consistently growing Jewish population due to natural population increase, though the Jewish populations of other countries in Europe and North America have recently increased due to immigration. In the Diaspora, in almost every country the Jewish population in general is either declining or steady, but [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox]] and [[Haredi]] Jewish communities, whose members often shun [[birth control]] for religious reasons, have experienced rapid population growth, with rates near 4% per year for Haredi Jews in Israel, and similar rates in other countries.


Orthodox and Conservative Judaism discourage proselytization to non-Jews, but many Jewish groups have tried to reach out to the assimilated Jewish communities of the Diaspora in order to increase the number of Jews. Additionally, while in principle Reform Judaism favors seeking new members for the faith, this position has not translated into active proselytism, instead taking the form of an effort to reach out to non-Jewish spouses of intermarried couples. There is also a trend of Orthodox movements pursuing secular Jews in order to give them a stronger Jewish identity so there is less chance of intermarriage. As a result of the efforts by these and other Jewish groups over the past twenty-five years, there has been a trend of secular Jews becoming more religiously observant, known as the ''[[Baal Teshuva]]'' movement, though the demographic implications of the trend are unknown. Additionally, there is also a growing movement of [[Jews by Choice]] by [[gentiles]] who make the decision to head in the direction of becoming Jews.
The country has continued to struggle with such issues as economic control and development, especially with the [[petroleum]] sector and the evolution of trade relations with the [[United States]]. Corruption at certain levels of the administration and crime continue to be chronic problems.


==Crime and poverty==
==Jewish languages==
{{main|Mexican crime}}
{{main|Jewish languages}}
Although normally regarded as a third world country, Mexico is in fact a developing nation. It is the 12th largest economy in the world, according to the [[World Bank]], and the fourth largest [[oil]] producer worldwide.
There is a great economic polarization between the rich and the poor which has greatly contributed to the high crime rates in Mexico. Mexican drug cartels deliver more than half of the methamphetamine supply into the United States.[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8444216/site/newsweek/from/RL.3/] The persistence of corruption at certain levels of the administration and the police has prevented effective crime control efforts. Most Mexican officers, nevertheless, are honest people.


[[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] is the [[liturgical language]] of Judaism (termed ''lashon ha-kodesh'', "the holy tongue"), and is one of the two official languages of the State of Israel (the other being [[Arabic]]). It was revived by [[Eliezer ben Yehuda]], who arrived in Palestine in 1881 at a time when no one spoke the Hebrew language. Diaspora Jews (outside Israel) today speak the local languages of their respective countries. [[Yiddish language|Yiddish]] is the historic language of many [[Ashkenazi]] Jews, and [[Ladino language|Ladino]] of many [[Sephardi]]c Jews.
A major detraction of Mexico City is its perceived crime rate. In reference specifically to the City, street crime and kidnappings fill the inhabitants with fear on a daily basis. It is estimated that there are between 2000-3000 crimes committed on the street every day. Approximately 600 are reported (2000 average). Most of these are muggings, although the breakdown of the figures runs the gamut of criminal activity. Curiously for such a violent atmosphere, murders are not a significant part of the problem. These average around 2.5 per day which, given the size of the population is relatively few. To put it in context, Washington, D.C. has a murder rate per capita around 5 times higher.


==History of the Jews==
==Demographics==
{{main|Jewish history}}
[[Image:Oaxaca-009.jpg|thumb|[[Zócalo]], [[Oaxaca de Juárez]]]]
{{main|Timeline of Jewish history}}
[[Image:Chiapas street.jpg|thumb|Indigenous People on a [[Chiapas]] street]]
{{main|Demographics of Mexico}}
With an estimated 2005 population of about [http://estadis.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/127113.html 106.5 million], Mexico is the most populous [[Spanish language|Spanish]]-speaking country in the world.


:''See also: [[Schisms among the Jews|Historical Schisms among the Jews]]''
According to the [[The World Factbook|CIA World Factbook]], Mexico is a racially and ethnically diverse country, its main ethnic groups are:


===Jews and migrations===
71% [[Mestizo]] (mixed [[white]] and [[Indigenous]] people)<br>
[[Image:1614jews.jpg|thumb|200px|Right|Etching of the expulsion of the Jews from Frankfurt on August 23, 1614. The text says: "1380 persons old and young were counted at the exit of the gate"]]
15% [[European]]/[[White]] ([[Spanish people|Spanish]], [[German people|German]], [[Italian people|Italian]], [[French people|French]], [[Portuguese people|Portuguese]], [[British people|British]], [[Swedish people|Swedish]], [[Irish people|Irish]], and white [[United States|American]]).<br>
Throughout Jewish history, Jews have repeatedly been directly or indirectly expelled from both their original homeland, and the areas in which they have resided. This experience as both [[immigrate|immigrants]] and [[Emigration|emigrants]] (see: [[Jewish refugees]]) have shaped Jewish identity and religious practice in many ways. An incomplete list of such migrations includes:
12% [[Amerindian]]<br>
2% [[Afro-Mexican]], [[Middle Easterner]], and [[East Asian]].


*The patriarch [[Abraham]] was a migrant to the land of [[Canaan]] from [[Ur]] of the [[Chaldea|Chaldees]].
Mexico is also home for many other Latin American emigrants, including most numerously [[Argentina|Argentines]] (Mexico is home to the largest Argentine population outside of Argentina) [http://www.lanacion.com.ar/coberturaespecial/argentinos/mexico/NotaMostrar.asp?nota_id=517497], [[Cuba]]ns, [[Brazil]]ians, and other [[South America|South]] and [[Central America]]ns. The PRI governments in power for most of the 20th century had a policy of granting asylum to fellow Latin Americans fleeing political persecution in their home countries.
*The [[Children of Israel]] experienced [[the Exodus]] (meaning "departure" or "going forth" in Greek) from [[ancient Egypt]], as recorded in the [[Book of Exodus]].
*The [[Kingdom of Israel]] was sent into permanent exile and scattered all over the world by [[Assyria]].
*The [[Kingdom of Judah]] was exiled first by [[Babylon]]ia and then by [[Roman Empire|Rome]].
*The 2,000 year dispersion of the [[Jewish diaspora]] beginning under the [[Roman Empire]], as Jews were spread throughout the Roman world and, driven from land to land, and settled wherever they could live freely enough to practice their religion. Over the course of the diaspora the center of Jewish life moved from [[History of the Jews in Iraq|Babylonia]] to [[Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain|Spain]] to [[History of the Jews in Poland|Poland]] to the [[Jewish American|United States]] and to [[Israel]].
*Many expulsions during the Middle Ages and Enlightenment in Europe, including: 1290, 16,000 Jews were expelled from [[England]], see the ''([[Statute of Jewry]])''; in 1396, 100,000 from [[France]]; in 1421 thousands were expelled from [[Austria]]. Many of these Jews settled in [[Eastern Europe]], especially [[Poland]].
*Following the [[Spanish Inquisition]] in 1492, the Spanish population of around 200,000 [[Sephardi]]c Jews were expelled by the Spanish crown and Catholic church, followed by expulsions in 1493 in Sicily (37,000 Jews) and Portugal in 1496. The expelled Jews fled mainly to the [[Ottoman Empire]], the [[Netherlands]], and [[North Africa]], others migrating to [[South Europe|Southern Europe]] and the [[Middle East]].
*During the 19th century, [[France]]'s policies of equal citizenship regardless of religion led to the immigration of Jews (especially from Eastern and Central Europe), which was encouraged by [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon Bonaparte]].
*The arrival of millions of Jews in the [[New World]], including immigration of over two million Eastern European Jews to the United States from 1880-1925, see [[History of the Jews in the United States]] and [[History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union]].
*The [[Pogroms]] in Eastern Europe, the rise of modern [[Anti-Semitism]], [[the Holocaust]] and the rise of [[Arab nationalism]] all served to fuel the movements and migrations of huge segments of Jewry from land to land and continent to continent, until they have now arrived back in large numbers at their original historical homeland in Israel.
*The [[Iranian Revolution|Islamic Revolution of Iran]], forced many [[Persian Jews|Iranian Jews]] to flee Iran. Most found refuge in the US (particularly Los Angeles, CA) and Israel. Smaller communities of [[Persian Jews]] exist in Canada and Western Europe.{{fact}}


===Kingdoms of Israel and Judah===
According to the ''Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígenas'' ("National Council for the Development of Indigenous Peoples"), the Amerindian population in Mexico is approximately [http://estadis.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/127113.html 12.7 million]. However, the Mexican government does not collect racial information during censuses. In 2004, the [[National Institute of Statistics, Geography, and Data Processing]] had estimated this figure to be 12,089,094 (~11.4% of Mexico's population) of indigenous people of which, more than one million do not speak Spanish and almost five million are bilingual ([http://www.inegi.gob.mx/prod_serv/contenidos/espanol/bvinegi/productos/integracion/sociodemografico/mujeresyhombres/2004/myh_2004.pdf INEGI, 2004]).
[[Image:1695 Eretz Israel map in Amsterdam Haggada by Abraham Bar-Jacob.jpg|left|thumb|300px|Allotments of Israelite tribes in [[Eretz Israel]]. (1695 Amsterdam [[Haggada]])]]
{{main|History of ancient Israel and Judah}}
Jews descend mostly from the ancient [[Israelites]] (also known as [[Hebrews]]), who settled in the [[Land of Israel]]. The Israelites traced their common lineage to the [[Bible|biblical]] patriarch [[Abraham]] through [[Isaac]] and [[Jacob]]. A [[United Monarchy]] was established under [[Saul the King|Saul]] and continued under [[King David]] and [[Solomon]]. King David conquered [[Jerusalem]] (first a [[Canaanite]], then a [[Jebusite]] town) and made it his capital. After Solomon's reign, the nation split into two kingdoms, the [[Kingdom of Israel]] (in the north) and the [[Kingdom of Judah]] (in the south). The [[Kingdom of Israel]] was conquered by the [[Assyria]]n ruler [[Shalmaneser V]] in the [[8th century BC|8th century BCE]] and spread all over the Assyrian empire, where they were assimilated into other cultures and came to be known as the [[Ten Lost Tribes]]. The [[Kingdom of Judah]] continued as an independent state until it was conquered by a Babylonian army in the early [[6th century BC|6th century BCE]], destroying the [[First Temple]] that was at the centre of Jewish worship. The Judean elite was exiled to Babylonia, but later at least a part of them returned to their homeland after the subsequent conquest of Babylonia by the Persians seventy years later, a period known as the [[Babylonian Captivity]]. A new [[Second Temple]] was constructed funded by Persian Kings, and old religious practices were resumed.


===Persian, Greek, and Roman rule===
Judging by the proportion of people speaking indigenous languages, the states with the highest proportion of indigenous people are [[Yucatán]] (37.3%), [[Oaxaca]] (37.1%), [[Chiapas]] (24.6%) and [[Quintana Roo]] (23%). The states of [[Aguascalientes]] (0.2%), [[Coahuila]] (0.2%), [[Zacatecas]] (0.2%) and [[Nuevo León]] (0.5%) have the lowest proportion of speakers of indigenous languages (INEGI, 2004).
:''See related article [[Jewish-Roman wars]]''.


The [[Seleucid]] Kingdom, which arose after the Persians were defeated by [[Alexander the Great]], sought to introduce Greek culture into the Persian world. When the Seleucid king [[Antiochus IV Epiphanes]], supported by [[Hellenism|Hellenized]] Jews (those who had adopted Greek culture), attempted to convert the Jewish Temple to a temple of [[Zeus]], the non-Hellenized Jews revolted under the leadership of the [[Maccabees]] and rededicated the Temple to the Jewish God (hence the origins of ''[[Hanukkah]]'') and created an independent Jewish kingdom known as the [[Hasmonaean Kingdom]] which lasted from [[165 BC|165 BCE]] to [[63 BC|63 BCE]], when the kingdom came under influence of the [[Roman Empire]]. During the early part of Roman rule, the Hasmonaeans remained in power, until the family was annihilated by [[Herod the Great]]. Herod came from a wealthy [[Edom|Idumean]] family and became a very successful client-king under the Romans. He significantly expanded the Temple in Jerusalem.
Mexico is the country where the greatest number of U.S citizens live outside the [[United States]]. This may be due to the growing economic and business interdependence of the two countries under [[North American Free Trade Agreement|NAFTA]], and also that Mexico is considered an excellent choice for retirees. A clear example of the latter phenomenon is provided by [[San Miguel de Allende]] and many towns along the [[Baja California peninsula]] and around [[Guadalajara, Jalisco]]. The official figures for foreign-born citizens in Mexico are 493,000 (since 2004), with a majority (86.9%) of these born in the United States (with the exception of Chiapas, where the majority of immigrants are from Central America). The five states with more immigrants are Baja California (12.1% of total immigrants), Federal District (11.4%), Jalisco (9.9%), Chihuahua (9%) and Tamaulipas (7.3%). More than 54.6% of the immigrant population are 15 years old or younger, while 9% are 50 or older. The large number of children may be due to the Central American population, or the American population consisting largely of Hispanics, or Americans taking advantage of lower costs of living to raise larger families. 4.2% of male immigrants and 3.8% of female immigrants did not have formal education while 20.2% of male immigrants and 17.7% of female immigrants had a college degree (INEGI, 2004).


Upon his death in [[4 BC|4 BCE]] the Romans directly ruled Judea and there were frequent changes of policies by conflicting and empire-building [[Caesar (title)|Caesars]], generals, governors, and consuls who often acted cruelly or to maximize their own wealth and power. Rome's attitudes swung from tolerance to hostility against its Jewish subjects, who had since moved throughout the Empire. The Romans, worshipping a [[Roman religion|large pantheon]], could not readily accommodate the exclusive [[monotheism]] of Judaism, and the religious Jews could not accept Roman [[polytheism]]. (It was in this tumultous climate that [[Christianity]] first emerged, among a small group of Jews.) After a famine and riots in [[66|66 CE]], the Judeans began to revolt against their Roman rulers. The revolt was smashed by [[Titus Flavius]], a Roman general who later succeeded his father [[Vespasian]] as [[Roman emperor|emperor]]. In Rome the [[Arch of Titus]] still stands, showing enslaved Judeans and a ''[[menorah]]'' being brought to Rome. It is customary for Jews not to walk through this arch.
Despite its reputation as a major source of illegal immigrants to the United States, Mexico itself experiences illegal immigration from Central America due to similar differences in wages and poverty between there and Mexico as between Mexico and the United States. Many if not most of the Central American illegals are trying to ultimately get to the United States.


[[Image:Sack of jerusalem.JPG|thumb|The [[Arch of Titus]] depicts enslaved Judeans and objects from the Temple being brought to Rome.]]
Life expectancy in Mexico increased from 34.7 for men and 33 years for women in 1930 to 72.1 for men and 77.1 years for women in 2002. The states with the highest life expectancy are Baja California (75.9 years) and Nuevo Leon (75.6 years). The Federal District has a life expectancy of the same level as Baja California. The lowest levels are found in Chiapas (72.9), Oaxaca (73.2) and Guerrero (73.2 years), although the first two have had the highest increase (19.9 and 22.3% respectively).


The Romans all but destroyed [[Jerusalem]]; only a single "[[Western Wall]]" of the [[Second Temple]] remained. After the end of this first revolt, the Judeans continued to live in their land in significant numbers, and were allowed to practice their religion. In the second century the Roman Emperor [[Hadrian]] began to rebuild Jerusalem as a pagan city while restricting some Jewish practices. Angry at this affront, the Judeans again revolted led by [[Bar Kokhba's revolt|Simon Bar Kokhba]]. [[Hadrian]] responded with overwhelming force, putting down the revolution and killing as many as half a million Jews. After the Roman Legions prevailed in 135, Jews were not allowed to enter the city of Jerusalem and most Jewish worship was forbidden by Rome. Following the destruction of Jerusalem and the expulsion of the Jews, Jewish worship stopped being centrally organized around the Temple, and instead was rebuilt around rabbis who acted as teachers and leaders of individual communities. No new books were added to the Jewish Bible after the Roman period, instead major efforts went into interpreting and developing the [[Halakhah]], or oral law, and writing down these traditions in the [[Talmud]], the key work on the interpretation of Jewish law, written during the first to fifth centuries CE.
The mortality rate in 1970 was 9.7/1000 people and by 2001 the rate had dropped to 4.9/1000 for men and 3.8/1000 for women. The most common reasons for death in 2001 were heart problems (14.6% for men 17.6% for women) and Cancer (11% for men and 15.8% for women).
{{seealso|Indigenous peoples of Mexico}}


===Beginning of the Diaspora===
==Culture, media, and sports==
{{main|Jewish diaspora}}
[[Image:Estadio_Azteca.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Estadio Azteca]], Largest stadium in [[Latin America]]]]
[[Image:Bailando.jpg|thumb|200px|A woman dancing folklórico in the traditional dress of Jalisco]]
Mexico boasts a wealth of regional cultures that is unique in the Americas. Every region in the country has a distinct culture, languages and arts that create a huge mosaic as a whole.


Though Jews had settled outside Israel since the time of the Babylonians, the results of the Roman response to the Jewish revolt shifted the center of Jewish life from its ancient home to the diaspora. While some Jews remained in Judea, renamed Palestine by the Romans, some Jews were sold into [[slavery]], while others became citizens of other parts of the [[Roman Empire]]. This is the traditional explanation to the [[Jewish diaspora]], almost universally accepted by past and present rabbinical or Talmudical scholars, who believe that Jews are almost exclusively biological descendants of the Judean exiles, a belief backed up at least partially by DNA evidence. Some secular historians speculate that a majority of the Jews in Antiquity were most likely descendants of converts in the cities of the Graeco-Roman world, especially in Alexandria and Asia Minor. They were only affected by the diaspora in its spiritual sense and by the sense of loss and homelessness which became a cornerstone of the Jewish creed, much supported by persecutions in various parts of the world. Any such policy of conversion, which spread the Jewish religion throughout Hellenistic civilization, seems to have ended with the wars against the Romans and the following reconstruction of Jewish values for the post-Temple era. DNA evidence of this theory has been spotty, however, some historians believe based on some historical records that at the dawn of [[Christianity]] as many as 10% of the population of the Roman Empire were [[Jewish]], a figure that could only be explained by local conversion. This theory could also solve the paradox of DNA studies noted above that show [[Ashkenazi Jews]] to be somewhat related to the peoples of the nations surrounding [[Israel]] despite physical features that more closely resembles that of the peoples of southern and central [[Europe]]; as one explanation would be a large [[miscegenation]] millennia ago followed by almost no outside genetic contact thereafter.
Dancing and singing are commonly part of family gatherings, bringing the old and young together, no matter what kind of music is being played, like [[cumbia]], [[salsa]], [[merengue]] or the more Mexican [[banda]]. Dancing is a strong part of the culture, and visitors will find that even people who were thought to be unlikely to dance, do so. Singing enjoys the same popularity and mexicans will sing when they are depressed, in a cantina to a [[mariachi]] song, or when they are very happy.


During the first few hundred years of the Diaspora, the most important Jewish communities were in [[History of the Jews in Iraq|Babylonia]], where the Talmud was written, and where relatively tolerant regimes allowed the Jews freedom. The situation was worse in the Byzantine Empire which treated the Jews much more harshly, refusing to allow them to hold office or build places of worship. The conquest of much of the Byzantine Empire and Babylonia by Islamic armies generally improved the life of the Jews, though they were still considered second-class citizens. In response to these Islamic conquests, the [[First Crusade]] of 1096 attempted to reconquer Jerusalem, resulting in the destruction of many of the remaining Jewish communities in the area.
Mexicans in places like [[Guadalajara]], [[Puebla]], [[Monterrey]], [[Mexico City]], and most middle sized cities, enjoy a great variety of options for leisure. Shopping centers are a favorite among families, since there has been an increasing number of new [[malls]] that cater to people of all ages and interests. A large number of them, have multiplex cinemas, international and local restaurants, food courts, cafes, bars, bookstores and most of the international reknowned clothing brands are found too. Mexicans are prone to travel within their own country, making short weekend trips to a neighbouring city or town.


===Middle Ages: Europe===
The standard of living in Mexico is higher than most of other countries in [[Latin America]] drawing people from places like Argentina, Brazil or Cuba to the country in search for better opportunities. With the recent economic growth, most middle and high income families live in single houses, commonly found within a walled village, called "fraccionamiento". The reason these places are the most popular among the middle and upper classes is that they offer a sense of security, since most of them are within walls and have survelliance, and living in one also provides social status, due to the infrastructure of most of these villages. Swimming pools or golf clubs, and/or some other commodities are found in these fraccionamientos. Houses inside them tend to be of higher quality, and larger than other homes, most of them with at least three or four bedrooms and even maid quarters and laundry. However, the poorer mexicans live a harsh life, although they share with the other the importance they grant to family, friends and cultural habits. Poverty is specially poignant in the countryside.
{{main|Jews in the Middle Ages}}
[[Image:Spanishhaggadah.jpg|thumb|150px|Image of a [[Hazzan|cantor]] reading the [[Passover]] story in [[Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain|Moorish Spain]], from a 14th century Spanish [[Haggadah]].]]
Jews settled in [[Europe]] during the time of the Roman Empire, but the rise of the [[Catholic]] Church resulted in frequent expulsions and persecutions. The Crusades routinely attacked Jewish communities, and increasingly harsh laws restricted them from most economic activity and land ownership, leaving open only moneylending and a few other trades. Jews were subject to expulsions from England, France, and the Holy Roman Empire throughout the Middle Ages, with most of the population moving to Eastern Europe and especially Poland, [[History of the Jews in Poland|which was uniquely tolerant of the Jews through the 1700s]]. The final mass expulsion of the Jews, and the largest, occurred after the Christian conquest (''[[reconquista]]'') of Spain in 1492 (see [[History of the Jews in Spain]]). Even after the end of the expulsions in the 17th century, individual conditions varied from country to country and time to time, but, as rule, Jews in Western Europe generally were forced, by decree or by informal pressure, to live in highly segregated [[ghettos]] and [[shtetls]].


===Middle Ages: Islamic Europe, North Africa and Asia===
In the larger towns, hiring housekeepers or maids is not as common as in the past, but there are still many families that are willing to pay a person, generally a middle aged woman, to come help with the house chores once or twice a week. "Muchacha" or "chacha" are the words used to call them.
{{main|Islam and Judaism}}


During the Middle Ages, Jews in Islamic lands generally had more rights than under Christian rule, with a [[Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain|Golden Age of coexistence in Islamic Spain]] from about 900 to 1200, when Spain became the center of the richest, most populous, and most influential Jewish community of the time. The rise of more radical Muslim regimes, such as that of the [[Almohades]] ended this period by the thirteenth century, and Jews were soon [[Alhambra decree|expelled from Spain]] after the Christian reconquest. Many of these Jews found refuge in the [[History of the Jews in Turkey|Ottoman Empire]], which remained tolerant of its Jewish population for much of its history. In the Islamic lands Jews at times were driven by necessity to engage in despised occupations, becoming [[baccha|dancing boys]] or tavern keepers.
Mexicans are people oriented, and they will put friends, family and relatives before work or business matters. They are not estoic when it comes to passion for the honour of their mothers, sisters, wives or daughters.


===Enlightenment and emancipation===
Traditionally, Mexicans have struggled with the creation of a united identity. The issue is the main topic of "Labyrinth of Solitude" by Mexican [[nobel prize]] winner [[Octavio Paz]]. Mexico is a large country, therefore having many cultural traits found only in some parts of the country. The north of Mexico is the least culturally diverse and more americanized of them all, making it a less exciting destination for foreign travelers. Central and southern Mexico is where many well-known traditions find their origin, therefore the people from this area are in a way the most traditional, but their collective personality can´t be generalized. People from [[Puebla]], for instance, are thought to be conservative and reserved, and just a few kilometers away, the people from [[Veracruz]] have the fame of being very outgoing and liberal. Chilangos (Mexico City natives) are believed to be poshy or preppy, or dirty and crime-prone if talking about the poor. The regiomontanos (from Monterrey) are thought to be stingy and cocky regardless of their social status. Different accents are used in almost every state in Mexico, making it fairly easy to distinguish the origin of someone by the distinct use of language in every of them. .
{{main|Haskalah}}


During the [[Age of Enlightenment]], significant changes occurred within the Jewish community. The [[Haskalah]] movement paralleled the wider Enlightenment, as Jews began in the 1700s to campaign for emancipation from restrictive laws and integration into the wider European society. Secular and scientific education was added to the traditional religious instruction received by students, and interest in a national Jewish identity, including a revival in the study of Jewish history and Hebrew, started to grow.
Indigenous people are likely to be perceived as inferior, even though this rarely reaches the level of aggressive racism. It´s a rarity to see native Mexicans in high positions anywhere. This hidden racism is latent in the use of the word "indio" as an insult for the darker skinned, which is even used between indigeneous people to offend each other.
[[Image:Napoleonandjews.jpg|thumb|150px|Napoleon [[Jewish Emancipation|emancipating]] the Jews, represented by the woman with the [[menorah]], and 1804 French print.]]
The Haskalah movement influenced the birth of all the modern Jewish denominations, and planted the seeds of [[Zionism]]. At the same time, it contributed to encouraging cultural assimilation into the countries in which Jews resided. At around the same time another movement was born, one preaching almost the opposite of Haskalah, [[Hasidic Judaism]]. Hasidic Judaism began in the 1700s by Israel ben Eliezer, the [[Baal Shem Tov]], and quickly gained a following with its exuberant, mystical approach to religion. These two movements, and the traditional orthodox approach to Judaism from which they spring, formed the basis for the modern divisions within Jewish observance.


At the same time, the outside world was changing. France was the first country to [[Jewish Emancipation|emancipate]] its Jewish population in 1796, granting them equal rights under the law. [[Napoleon]] further spread emancipation, inviting Jews to leave the [[Ghetto#Jewish ghettos in Europe|Jewish ghettos in Europe]] and seek refuge in the newly created tolerant political regimes (see [[Napoleon and the Jews]]). By the mid-19th century, almost all Western European countries had [[Jewish Emancipation|emancipated]] their Jewish populations, with the notable exception of the [[Papal States]], but persecution continued in Eastern Europe including massive [[pogroms]] at the end of the 19th century and throughout the [[Pale of Settlement]]. The persistence of anti-semitism, both violently in the east and socially in the west, led to a number of [[Jewish political movements]], culminating in [[Zionism]].
The derogatory term [[naco]] was forged by the middle and high class Mexicans, to refer to the native or mestizo population. The term allegedly comes from the word totonaco, which is one of the ethnic groups in Valle de Mexico. It´s use has been made popular even among the poorest classes. Mexicans differ in opinion about the meaning of the word. Some would use it for a person who dresses in a tacky or tasteless manner, some use it to refer to the natives, some to the poor classes, and other for people with less education or culture and other ideology. The term [[fresa]] is in some terms the opposite of naco, and it is not always derogatory and means always some relative high economical status of the person termed in that way. Traditionally, people with more European looks and belonging to the middle or high classes are called fresas. In general, a "fresa"-being is followed by a way of speaking and dressing. Nuances in the meaning are a complex subject. The term has been made popular in other Latin American countries since Mexico is the largest exporter in the region of TV productions.


===Zionism and immigration===
Mexicans living in the [[United States]], legally or illegally, are looked down by most middle class and high class Mexicans, since they feel they are creating a bad [[reputation]] for the rest of the Mexicans. Many terms that refer to Mexicans in USA exist, but [[chicano]] or [[pocho]] are the most popular. In central and southern Mexico, these terms are used as a derogatory description. The majority of Mexican men or families that pursue a life in the U.S. come from the lowest [[stratus]] of society in Mexico, and have created a culture [[unique]] to them. The celebration of [[cinco de mayo]] is an example of this. Mexicans do not regard this date as important and nothing special takes place that day in Mexico whereas the [[chicano]] population does and the day is celebrated as a holiday in areas of the United States that have large Mexican populations.
[[Image:ac.zionistposter.jpg|thumb|150px|Hungarian and Romanian poster promoting Zionism, 1930s]]
Many of the newly secular Jews who had embraced Haskalah found themselves deeply troubled by the continuing virulent anti-semitism of the late 1800s, especially the massive [[pogroms]] of the 1880s in Russia and the [[Dreyfus Affair]], which occurred in [[France]] in 1894, a country many Jews had previously thought of as particularly accepting. Many Jews in Eastern Europe embraced [[socialism]] as a potential escape from persecution, but another group, the Zionists, led by [[Theodor Herzl]], viewed the only solution as the creation of a Jewish state. The interplay between Jewish national and religious identities was evident in Zionism, which was initially an entirely secular movement, but drew inspiration and support from the religious connection between Jews and the Land of Israel. Zionism contributed to the growth of the Jewish population there, which at the time was the [[Palestine]] province of the [[Ottoman Empire]], and later the [[British Mandate of Palestine]]. Zionism, initially one out of a number of competing [[Jewish political movements]], gained nearly universal support from the world Jewish population following the near-complete destruction of the Jews of Europe in [[the Holocaust]], and led to the foundation of the [[Israel|State of Israel]].


In addition to responding politically, during the late 19th century, Jews began to flee the persecutions of Eastern Europe in large numbers, mostly by heading to the United States, but also to Canada and Western Europe. By 1924, almost two million Jews had emigrated to the US alone, creating a large community in a nation relatively free of the persecutions of rising European [[anti-Semitism]] (see [[History of the Jews in the United States]]).
Two of the major television networks based in Mexico are [[Televisa]] and [[TV Azteca]]. [[Soap opera]]s ([[telenovela]]s) are translated to many languages and seen all over the world with renown names like [[Verónica Castro]], [[Thalía Sodi|Thalía]], and [[Salma Hayek]]. Even [[Gael García Bernal]] and [[Diego Luna]] from [[Y tu mamá también]] and current [[Zegna]] model act in some of them. Some of their TV shows are modeled after American counterparts like ''[[100 Mexicanos Dijeron|Family Feud]]'' (''100 Mexicanos Dijeron'' or "A hundred Mexicans said" in Spanish), ''[[Big Brother (TV series)|Big Brother]]'', ''[[American Idol]]'', ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' and others. Nationwide news shows like ''[[Las Noticias por Adela]]'' on Televisa resemble a hybrid between ''[[Donahue]]'' and ''[[Nightline]]''. Local news shows are modeled after American counterparts like the ''[[Eyewitness News]]'' and ''[[Action News]]'' formats.


===The Holocaust===
The favorite sport remains world [[football (soccer)]] while [[baseball]] is also popular especially in the Gulf of Mexico and bordering states. Exhibitions like bull fighting are still practiced and professional wrestling as shown on shows like [[Lucha Libre]]. [[American football]] is practiced at the major universities like [[UNAM]].
{{Main|The Holocaust}}


This anti-Semitism reached its most destructive form in the policies of [[Nazism|Nazi]] Germany, which made the destruction of the Jews a priority, culminating in the killing of approximately six million Jews during [[the Holocaust]] from 1941 to 1945. Originally, the Nazis used death squads, the [[Einsatzgruppen]], to conduct massive open-air killings of Jews in territory they conquered. By 1942, the Nazi leadership decided to implement the [[Final Solution]], the [[genocide]] of the Jews of Europe, and to increase the pace of the Holocaust by establishing [[extermination camps]] specifically to kill Jews. This was an industrial method of genocide. Millions of Jews who had been confined to diseased and massively overcrowded [[Ghettos]] were transported (often by train) to these [[extermination camps|"Death-camps"]] where they were herded into a specific location (often a [[gas chamber]]), then either gassed or shot. Afterwards, their remains were buried or burned up. Many Jews tried to escape Europe before or during the Holocaust, but were unable to find refuge, giving new urgency to the Zionist goal of establishing a Jewish homeland.
The national sport of Mexico is [[Charreria]]. Ancient Mexicans played a ball game which still exists in Northwest Mexico (Sinaloa, the game is called Ulama), though it is not a popular sport any more.
[[Image:Immigrationtoisrael.gif|right|thumb|200px|Immigration immediately after the establishment of Israel.]]


===Israel===
Although Mexico has low prices for food and accomodation for tourists, prices are somewhat higher than most other countries in Latin America.
{{main|Israel}}
In 1948, the Jewish state of [[Israel]] was founded, creating the first Jewish nation since the Roman destruction of Jerusalem. After a series of wars with neighboring Arab countries, almost all of the 900,000 Jews previously living in North Africa and the Middle East fled to the Jewish state, joining an increasing number of immigrants from post-War Europe. By the end of the 20th century, Jewish population centers had shifted dramatically, with the United States and Israel being the centers of Jewish secular and religious life.


==Languages==
==Persecution==
{{main|Persecution of Jews}}
[[Image:Palenque Relief.jpg|thumb|200 px|right|A stucco relief in the Palenque museum, [[Palenque]], Chiapas, Mexico]]
{{main|Languages of Mexico}}


:''Related articles: [[Anti-Semitism]], [[History of anti-Semitism]], [[Modern anti-Semitism]]''
The Mexican Constitution does not mention the existence of an "[[official language]]", although [[Spanish language|Spanish]] is considered to be the "common" language of the country, used in all sorts of documents and spoken by the majority of the population. About 7% of the population speak an [[Amerindian]] language. The government officially recognizes 62 Amerindian languages. Of these, [[Nahuatl language|Nahuatl]] and [[Maya language|Maya]] are each spoken by 1.5 million, while others, such as [[Lacandon]], are spoken by fewer than 100. The Mexican government has promoted and established bilingual education programs in indigenous rural communities.


The [[Jew]]ish people and [[Judaism]] have experienced various [[persecution]]s throughout [[Jewish history]]. In [[Middle Ages|medieval Europe]], many persecutions of Jews in the name of Christianity occurred, notably during the [[Crusades]]&mdash;when Jews all over Germany were massacred&mdash;and a series of expulsions from England, Germany, France, and, in the largest expulsion of all, Spain. In the [[Papal States]], which existed until [[1870]], Jews were required to live only in specified neighborhoods called [[ghetto]]s. In the 19th and (before the end of the second World War) 20th centuries, the Roman Catholic church adhered to a distinction between "good anti-Semitism" and "bad anti-Semitism". The "bad" kind promoted hatred of Jews because of their descent. This was considered un-Christian because the Christian message was intended for all of humanity regardless of ethnicity; anyone could become a Christian. The "good" kind criticized alleged Jewish conspiracies to control newspapers, banks, and other institutions, to care only about accumulation of wealth, etc.
Although Spanish is the official language of Mexico, [[English language|English]] is widely used in business. As a result, English language skills are much in demand and can lead to an increase in the salary offered by a company. It is also spoken along the [[U.S.-Mexico border|U.S. border]], in big cities, and in beach resorts. Also, the majority of private schools in Mexico offer bilingual education, both in Spanish and English. English is the main language spoken in U.S. expatriate communities such as those along the coast of [[Baja California]], [[Jalisco]] and the town of [[San Miguel de Allende]].


[[Islam and Judaism]] have a complex relationship. The political conflict between [[Muhammad]] and the Jews of [[Medina]] in the [[7th century]] left ample ideological fuel for [[Islam and anti-Semitism]] through the centuries. During the [[Middle Ages]], Jews typically had a better status in the Muslim world than in [[Christendom]]. As the Muslim empire expanded during the centuries, the status of the non-Muslim communities was at times precarious, and they were generally subject to ''[[dhimmi]]'' laws. These laws freed them from military service and paying [[zakah]], but placed additional [[jizyah]] and land taxes on them.
With respect to other European languages brought by immigrants, the case of [[Chipilo]], in the state of [[Puebla]], is unique, and has been documented by several linguists like Carolyn McKay. The immigrants that founded the city of [[Chipilo]] in 1882 came from the [[Veneto]] region in northern [[Italy]], and thus spoke a northern variant of the [[Venetian language|Venetian]] dialect. While other European immigrants assimilated into the [[Culture of Mexico|Mexican culture]], the people of Chipilo retained their language. Nowadays, most of the people who live in the city of Chipilo (and many of those who have migrated to other cities) still speak the unaltered Veneto dialect spoken by their great-grandparents making the Veneto dialect an unrecognized minority language in the city of [[Puebla, Puebla|Puebla]]. In [[Huatusco]] and [[Colonia Gonzalez]], [[Veracruz]], [[Veneto]] is still heard too. A similar case is that of the [[Plautdietsch]] language, spoken by the descendants of [[German people|German]] and [[Dutch people|Dutch]] [[Mennonite]] immigrants in the states of [[Chihuahua]] and [[Durango]]. Other German communities lie in [[Puebla]], [[Mexico City]], [[Sinaloa]] and [[Chiapas]], with the largest German school outside of [[Germany]] being in Mexico City (Alexander von Humboldt school), these represent the large German populations where they still try to preserve the German culture and language. Other strong [[German people|German]] communities lie in [[Sinaloa]] ([[Mazatlan]]), Nuevo Leon, Chiapas ([[Tapachula]]) and other parts of Puebla ([[Nueva Necaxa]]) where the German culture and language have been preserved to different extents. [[French language|French]] is also heard in the state of [[Veracruz]] in the cities of [[Jicaltepec]], [[San Rafael]] and [[Mentideros]], where the architecture and food is also very [[French people|French]]. These [[French people|French]] immigrants came from [[Haute-Saône]] département in [[France]], especially from [[Champlitte]] and [[Borgonge]]. Another important French group were the "[[Barcelonette]]'s" from the [[Alpes-de-Haute-Provence]] département, whom interestingly the whole town and surrounding towns immigrated specifically to Mexico to find jobs and work in merchandising, they are well known in [[Mexico City]], [[Puebla]], and [[Veracruz]]. Another important [[French people|French]] village in Mexico is [[Santa Rosalía]] in [[Baja California Sur]], where [[French language|French]] language and culture/architecture are still found. [[Scandinavia]]n languages and traditions can also be heard in [[Chihuahua]], like [[Swedish language|Swedish]] and [[Norwegian language|Norwegian]] in [[Nueva Escandinavia]] and other [[Scandinavia]]n colonies in the north of the country. [[Russian language|Russian]] is heard in the [[Baja California]] region of [[Valle de Guadalupe]], thanks to the immigrants from southern [[Russia]] who settled these areas. They are the [[Molokans]] or "milk eaters", and they preserve their culture in [[Baja California]], with the architecture in their houses and museums, they produce fine [[wine]] (Along with the large [[Italian people|Italian]] community that lives near them) and their language and traditions, as well as dresses and festivities. Other [[Russians]] belong to a more recent wave of immigration from mainly [[Russia]] and [[Poland]] and the [[Ukraine]] along other Eastern Europeans, who settle mainly in [[Mexico City]] and [[Guadalajara]]. The [[Cornish]] dialect of [[Cornwall]], [[England]] disappeared from '''Mexico''' in the state of [[Hidalgo]] in the early 20th century, especially in the cities of [[Pachuca]] and [[Real del Monte]], but the [[Cornish]] culture still survives in the architecture, sports, food and many aspects of these cities in central '''Mexico'''.


The most notable modern day persecution of Jews remains the [[Holocaust]] &mdash; the state-led systematic [[persecution]] and [[genocide]] of the Jews and other [[minority group]]s of Europe and North Africa during [[World War II]] by [[Nazi Germany]] and its [[Non-German cooperation with nazis during World War 2|collaborators]]<ref>Donald L Niewyk, ''The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust,'' Columbia University Press, 2000, p.45: "The Holocaust is commonly defined as the murder of more than 5,000,000 Jews by the Germans in World War II." There is a debate among scholars over whether the Holocaust only refers to Jewish victims, or to all groups targeted by the Nazis, or to some subset of those groups. All scholars agree that other groups were targeted by the [[Nazis]], but not all believe that the victims are part of the Holocaust. This article uses a wide definition of the Holocaust to include all groups systematically targeted by the Nazis.</ref> During the Holocaust, the [[Middle East]] was in turmoil. Britain prohibited Jewish immigration to the [[British Mandate of Palestine]]. While the [[Allies]] and the [[Axis Powers|Axis]] were fighting for the oil-rich region, the Mufti of Jerusalem [[Amin al-Husayni]] staged a pro-Nazi coup in Iraq and organized the [[Farhud]] pogrom which marked the turning point for about 150,000 Iraqi Jews who, following this event and the hostilities generated by the [[1948 Arab-Israeli war|war with Israel in 1948]], were targeted for violence, persecution, boycotts, confiscations, and near complete expulsion in 1951. In the French [[Vichy]] territories of [[Algeria]] and [[Syria]] plans were drawn up for the liquidation of their Jewish populations were the [[Axis Powers|Axis]] powers to triumph.
==Religion==
{{main|Religion in Mexico}}
[[Image:Catedral de Guadalajara.jpg|right|thumb|330px|Cathedral by night]]Mexico is predominantly [[Catholic Church in Mexico|Roman Catholic]] (about 89% of the population). It is the nation with the second largest Catholic population, behind [[Brazil]] and before the [[United States]]. Also, 6% of the population adheres to various [[Protestant]]/[[Restoration]] faiths (e.g. [[Latter-day Saints]], [[Pentecostalism|Pentecostal]]), and the remaining 5% of the population adhering to other religions or professing no [[religion]]. Some of the country's Catholics (notably those of indigenous background) [[syncretic|syncretize]] Catholicism with various elements of [[Aztec]] or [[Mayan people|Mayan]] religions. The Virgin of Guadalupe has long been a symbol enshrining the major aspirations of Mexican society. According to anthropologist Eric R. Wolf, the Guadalupe symbol links family, politics, and religion; the colonial past and the independent present; and the indigenous and the Mexican. [http://countrystudies.us/mexico/61.htm]
[[Judaism]] has been practiced in Mexico for centuries, and there are estimated to be more than 45,000-50,000 (some estimates say 60,000) Jews in Mexico today. <ref>{{es icon}} "[http://148.245.26.68/lastest/2002/Agosto/11Ago2002/11pr07a.htm Advierten una reducción en el número de mexicanos que profesan la religión católica]", ''El Informador'', 11 August 2002. Retrieved 15 May 2006.</ref> [[Islam]] is mainly practiced by members of the [[Arab]], [[Turkish peoples|Turkish]], and other expatriate communities, though there very small percentage of the indigenous population in [[Chiapas]] state practices Islam. Mexico has a very tiny [[Sikh]] population in the country.


The tensions of the [[Arab-Israeli conflict]] were also a factor in the rise of animosity to Jews all over the Middle East, as hundreds of thousands of Jews fled as [[Jewish refugees|refugees]], the main waves being soon after the [[1948]] and [[1956]] wars. In reaction to the [[Suez Crisis]] of [[1956]], the Egyptian government expelled almost 25,000 Egyptian Jews and confiscated their property, and sent approximately 1,000 more Jews to prisons and detention camps. The population of Jewish communities of Muslim Middle East and North Africa was reduced from about 900,000 in 1948 to less than 8,000 today.
==Education==
{{main|Education in Mexico}}
[[Image:UNAM library.jpg|left|thumb|UNAM, National Library]]
Mexico has made impressive improvements in education in the last two decades. In 2004, the literacy rate was at 92.2%, and the youth literacy rate (ages 15-24) was 96%. Primary and secondary education (9 years) is free and mandatory. Even though different bilingual education programs have existed since the 1960s for the indigenous communities, after a constitution reform in the late 1990s, these programs have had a new thrust, and free text books are produced in more than a dozen indigenous languages.


==Jewish leadership==
In the 1970's, Mexico became the first country to establish a system of "distance-learning" . Schools that use this system are known as ''[[telesecundaria]]s'' in Mexico. The Mexican [[distance education|distance learning]] secondary education is also transmitted to some [[Central America]]n countries and to Colombia, and it is used in some southern regions of the [[United States]] as a method of bilingual education.
{{main|Jewish leadership}}


There is no single governing body for the Jewish community, nor a single authority with responsibility for religious doctrine. Instead, a variety of secular and religious institutions at the local, national, and international levels lead various parts of the Jewish community on a variety of issues.
The two most widely known universities in Mexico are in Mexico City [[National Autonomous University of Mexico]]([[Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México]]), founded in 1551 and [[National Polytechnic Institute]] (IPN), both renowned in Latin American education. However, private universities have enjoyed a better reputation for some time now, because students have given a bad name to the public universities through such events as the student strikes at the UNAM in the 90s. (UNAM has various private campuses around Mexico which were not affected by student disturbances on the Mexico City campuses). The most important private universities are [[Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México|Mexico's Autonomous Technological Institute]] (ITAM), [[ITESM|Monterrey's Technological and Higher Education Institute]] (ITESM), the Ibero-American University (Universidad Iberoamericana) and recently the Mexico Valley University (Universidad del Valle de Mexico UVM) had shown a very important growing, expanding its contact with other universities around the world.


==Chiapas conflict==
==Famous Jews==
{{main|List of Jews}}
[[Image:Subcomandante_Marcos.jpg|thumb|Subcomandante Marcos in [[Chiapas]]]]
{{main|List of Jews by country}}
In the twentieth century some people in [[Chiapas]] felt that their poor and largely [[Agriculture|agricultural]] area had been ignored by the government since enactment of the [[Constitution of Mexico|constitution of 1917]]. One of the chief complaints was that many Indian farmers were required to pay absentee landlords, despite the fact that since the [[1920s]] the Mexican government had been promising the peasants ownership of the land they had farmed and lived on for generations. Article 27 of the 1917 constitution guaranteed [[indigenous peoples]] the right to an "[[ejido]]" or communal land. As Mexico restructured its economy after the 1982 financial crisis the state sector shrank due to privatizations and reorganization while land reform became less of a priority (it had long since been completed in most of the country, with Chiapas as a notable exception). The Mexican government under President Carlos Salinas de Gortari sought to modernize the traditionally closed and state dominated economy and increase its openness to trade. As part of this process Mexico repealed the constitutional guarantee of communally owned ejidos for rural communities. As the [[North American Free Trade Agreement]] came into effect on January 1, 1994, the indigenous peoples of Chiapas - struggling to make a living with few resources - felt increasingly left behind.


Jews have made contributions in a broad range of human endeavors, including the sciences, arts, politics, business, etc.
Such dissatisfaction led to the rise of the [[Zapatista Army of National Liberation]] (Zapatistas, or ''Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional),'' which began an armed rebellion against the federal government on [[January 1]], [[1994]] as a response to the negative impact NAFTA had for the indigenous population especially in Southern Mexico. In that year, thousands of supporters of the [[anti-globalization]] movement gathered in Chiapas, and it was from this meeting that the modern movement was born.


==See also==
The Zapatistas were in principle a peaceful movement that was pushed to use the force of arms to guarantee the indigenous right to ejidos. [[Subcomandante Marcos]], the face of the Zapatistas, succeeded in attracting international attention, with the innovative use of modern information and communication technologies for the struggle of the indigenous peoples in Chiapas.
A full guide to topics related to the Jews is available from the [[template:Jew|guide at the top of this page]]. Additional topics of interest include:

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In [[August 2003]], the EZLN declared all Zapatista territory an autonomous government independent of Mexico. Since then, the armed EZLN has been laying low to some extent working on the government level to implement health care and educational institutions in poor rural indigenous communities.
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* [[Judaism]], for information on the Jewish religion
==Origin and history of the name==
* Europe
{{IPA notice}}
** [[History of the Jews in England]]
Mexico is named after its capital city, whose name comes from the Aztec city Mexico-Tenochtitlan that preceded it. The ''Mexi'' part of the name is from Mexitli, the war god, whose name was derived from ''metztli'' (the moon) and ''xictli'' (navel) and thus meant "navel (probably implying 'child') of the moon". So, Mexico is the home of the people of Mexitli (the Mexicas), ''co'' meaning "place" and ''ca'' meaning "people".
** [[History of the Jews in France]]

** [[History of the Jews in Germany]]
When the Spaniards encountered this people and transcribed their language, they naturally did so according to the spelling rules of the [[Castilian language]] of the time. The [[Nahuatl language]] had a {{IPA|/&#643;/}} sound (like English "<u>sh</u>op"), and this sound was written ''x'' in Spanish (e.g. ''<u>X</u>iménez''); consequently, the letter ''x'' was used to write down words like ''Mexitli''. Meanwhile, the letter ''j'' (or, rather, the letter ''i'' when used as a consonant, since ''j'' had not been invented yet) was used for the {{IPA|/&#658;/}} sound (as in "vi<u>si</u>on"), as was ''g'' before ''e'' or ''i''. These old pronunciations of ''j'' and ''x'' are still found in [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] and [[Ladino language|Ladino]].
** [[History of the Jews in Greece]]

** [[History of the Jews in Hungary]]
Over the centuries, the pronunciation of Spanish changed. Words like ''Ximénez'', ''exercicio'', ''xabón'' and ''perplexo'' started to be pronounced with a {{IPA|/x/}} (this [[International Phonetic Alphabet|phonetic symbol]] represents the sound in the word "lo<u>ch</u>"). The {{IPA|/&#658;/}} sound also started to be pronounced this way. The coalescence of the two phonemes into a single new one encouraged scholars to use the same letter for the sound, regardless of its origin (Spanish scholars have always tried to keep the orthography of their language faithful to the spoken tongue). It was ''j''/''g'' that was chosen. So, modern Spanish has ''ejercicio'', ''ejército'', ''jabón'', ''perplejo'', etc. (Another example is the old spelling of ''[[Don Quixote]]'' which is now ''Don Quijote''. The old pronunciation is maintained in Portuguese "Quixote" and in French "Quichotte", and the English word "[[quixotic]]" maintains the spelling while pronouncing it with its English value.) In modern Spanish, ''x'' is used to represent the {{IPA|/k͡s/}} affricate of Latin or Greek, in words derived from those languages. The standard pronunciation, however, in Spanish is {{IPA|/ɣs/}}. For example, ''sexenio'' {{IPA|/sɛɣˈseːnjo/}}, "six-year", from Latin ''sexénnium'' {{IPA|/sɛˈk͡sɛnːɪ̆ʊm/}}.
** [[History of the Jews in Ireland]]

** [[History of the Jews in Italy]]
Proper nouns and their derivatives are optionally allowed to break this rule. Thus, although ''xabón'' is now incorrect and archaic, alongside many millions of people called "Jiménez", there also are plenty called "Giménez" or "Ximénez" &mdash; a matter of personal choice and tradition.
** [[History of the Jews in the Netherlands]]

** [[History of the Jews in Poland]]
In Mexico, it has become almost a matter of national pride to maintain the otherwise archaic ''x'' spelling in the name of the country. It is regarded as more authentic and less jarring to the reader's eye. Mexicans have tended to demand that other Spanish-speakers use this spelling, rather than following the general rule, and the demand has largely been respected. The [[Real Academia Española]] states that both spellings are correct, and most dictionaries and guides recommend ''México'' first, and present ''Méjico'' as a variant. Today, even outside of the country, ''México'' is preferred over ''Méjico'' by ratios ranging from 15-to-1 (in [[Spain]]) to about 280-to-1 (in [[Costa Rica]]). Also, in the local placenames "[[Oaxaca]]" and "[[Xalapa]]" or former territories like "[[Texas]]", the x is pronounced as {{IPA|/x/}}; in "[[Xochimilco]]", however, it sounds as a {{IPA|/&#643;/}}.
** [[History of the Jews in Russia and Soviet Union]]

** [[History of the Jews in Spain]]
A cultural side-effect of the fact that Mexicans use ''México'' {{IPA|/'mexiko/}} and Spaniards sometimes use ''Méjico'' is the occasional boiling-over of negative sentiment towards the old colonial oppressor. The mere act of using the ''j'' spelling is interpreted by some as a form of colonial aggression. On the other hand, some Peninsular scholars (such as [[Ramón Menéndez Pidal]]) preferred to apply the general spelling rule, arguing that the spelling with an ''x'' could encourage non-Mexicans to mispronounce ''México'' as {{IPA|/'meksiko/}} (as is generally the case in the English-speaking world). ''Méjico'' on the other hand could easily be mispronounced as well, because the letter ''j'' stands for {{IPA|/&#658;/, /d&#658;/ or /j/}} in other languages.
{{col-2}}

*Americas
In the [[Nahuatl language]], from which the name originally derived, the name for Mexico is '''Mēxihco''' ([[International Phonetic Alphabet]] {{IPA|/me&#720;.&#597;i&#660;.ko/}}).
** [[History of the Jews in Canada]]

** [[History of the Jews in the United States]] and [[Jewish American]]
==Further reading==
** [[History of the Jews in Latin America]]
*James D. Cockcroft, ''Mexico's Hope: An Encounter with Politics and History'', 320 pages, Monthly Review Press 1999, ISBN 0853459258 &ndash; leftist view of Mexican history
*Western Asia and North Africa
*Enrique Krauze, ''Mexico: Biography of Power. A history of Modern Mexico 1810-1996'', 896 pages &ndash; Perennial 1998, ISBN 0060929170 - standard work by a renowned Mexican author.
** [[History of the Jews in Turkey]]
*Julia Preston and Samuel Dillon, ''Opening Mexico: The Making of a Democracy'', Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2004, hardcover, 608 pages, ISBN 0374226687 &ndash; recent history since the [[Tlatelolco massacre]] of 1968 told by two journalists
** [[History of the Jews in Tunisia]]
*Joanne Hershfield, David R. Maciel, ''Mexico's Cinema: A Century of Film and Filmmakers'', SR Books 1999, ISBN 0842026827 &ndash; comprehensive survey
** [[History of the Jews in Algeria]]
*Michael C. Meyer, William H. Beezley, editors, ''The Oxford History of Mexico'', 736 pages, Oxford University Press 2000, ISBN 0195112288 &ndash; 20 essays, also covers cultural history
** [[History of the Jews in Morocco]]
*Kernecker, Herbert. "When in Mexico, Do as the Mexicans Do." In depth information about life in Mexico, including culture, history, economy, language and more in 176 comprehensive pages..ISBN 0844227838.
** [[History of the Jews in Egypt]]
*[http://wild-net.com.au/mexico/html/san_cristobal_political.phtml San Cristobal : The Political climate] - A brief description of the situation in the town of San Cristobal.
** [[History of the Jews in Iraq]]
*[http://www.edhelper.com/ReadingComprehension_Geography_9_1.html Mexico] - A description of Mexico's geographical situation by Ekaterina Zhdanova-Redman.
** [[Persian Jews|History of the Jews in Iran]]
*[http://www.pittstate.edu/services/scied/Staff/Shoberg/History/wwi/zimmer.htm The Zimmerman Telegram] - A translation to English of the Zimmerman Telegram.
** [[History of the Jews in Israel]]

** [[Teimanim|History of the Jews in Yemen]]
==See also==
{{col-begin}}
{{col-4}}
*[[Communications in Mexico]]
*[[Education in Mexico]]
*[[Foreign affairs of Mexico]]
*[[List of international trade topics]]
{{col-4}}
*[[List of cities in Mexico]]
*[[Cars in Mexico]]
*[[List of Mexican Universities]]
*[[List of Mexicans]]
*[[List of Presidents of Mexico]]
{{col-5}}
*[[Culture of Mexico]]
*[[Military of Mexico]]
*[[Music of Mexico]]
*[[List of Latin American artists]]
*[[Sport in Mexico]]

{{col-4}}
*[[Transportation in Mexico]]
*[[U.S.-Mexico border]]
*[[Zapatista Army of National Liberation|Zapatista uprising in Chiapas, Mexico]]
*[[Postage stamps and postal history of Mexico]]
{{col-end}}
{{col-end}}
*East Asia

**[[History of the Jews in China]]
==References==
**[[History of the Jews in Japan]]
<div class="references-small">
<references />
</div>


==External links==
==External links==
{{col-begin}}
*[http://www.angus-reid.com/polls/index.cfm/fuseaction/searchSimpleResults/iw/1/keyword/Mexico%20and%20election%20and%20obrador Public Opinion in Mexico]
{{col-break}}
*[http://www.angus-reid.com/tracker/index.cfm/fuseaction/viewItem/itemID/11395 All you need to know about Mexico's election]
===General===
{{sisterlinks|Mexico}}
* [http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761567959/Jews.html#s1 Encarta Encyclopedia entry on Jews]
{{portal}}
* [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org Jewish Virtual Library] - collection of many articles on many topics, including Jewish history
* {{wikitravel}}
* [http://www.accionporlajusticia.com AXJ]: Political Information about Mexico
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia]
* [http://www.jta.org Jewish Telegraphic Agency] - news bureau reporting on contemporary Jewish news and issues
* [http://unmexicosinpejendejadas.blogspot.com]: Un Mexico Sin Pejendejadas
* [http://www.sanmigueldirectory.com/ News and Information from Mexico] (in English, Spanish, French, Italian and German)
* [http://www.book-lover.com/legendsofthejews/ Legends of the Jews] - online text of classic work by Louis Ginzberg
* [http://www.jewfaq.org Encyclopedia of Jewish Religion]
* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9108719?query=mexico&ct=]: Encyclopaedia Britannica free article on Mexico, its history and its people
{{col-break}}
* [http://www.turbomaps.com.ar/english/mexico.php Mexico main cities satellite views]


===Government===
===Maps===
* [http://www.routledge.com/textbooks/0415236614/resources/indi.asp Map collection] related to Jewish history and culture from Routledge Publishing
* [http://www.presidencia.gob.mx/en/ Presidencia]: Presidency of the Republic
===Photos===
* {{es icon}} [http://www.gob.mx Gob.mx]: Governmental portal (in Spanish)
* [http://www.ZionOzeri.com Zion Ozeri Photography] - photos of many Jewish communities worldwide (requires [[Macromedia Flash]] player)
* {{es icon}} [http://www.directorio.gob.mx Directorio.gob.mx]: Official web directory of the Mexican Presidency (in Spanish)
{{col-end}}
* {{es icon}} [http://www.cddhcu.gob.mx Cámara de Diputados]: Chamber of Deputies (in Spanish)
===Major Jewish secular organizations===
* {{es icon}} [http://www.senado.gob.mx/index.php?lng=en Cámara de Senadores]: Senate
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}
* [http://www.adl.org/adl.asp Anti-Defamation League]
* [http://www.bnaibrith.org B'nai B'rith International]
* [http://www.ajc.org American Jewish Committee]
{{col-break}}
* [http://www.ujc.org United Jewish Communities: The Federations of North America]
* [http://www.ajcongress.org American Jewish Congress]
* [http://www.science.co.il/JSO.asp Jewish Student Organizations]
{{col-end}}
===Global Jewish communities===
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{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
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* [http://www.haruth.com/JewsoftheWorld.html Jewish Communities of the World] - large list of Jewish communities in many countries
===Information about Mexico===
* [http://www.ujc.org/ir_category_listing.html?nt=0&amp;id=200 List of international Jewish organizations]
*[http://www.professores.uff.br/hjbortol/arquivo/2006.1/applets/mexico_en.html Mexico's location on a 3D globe (Java)]
* [http://uk-org-bod.supplehost.org/bod/index.jsp Board of Deputies of British Jews]
*[http://www.libcom.org/history/articles/mexico-peoples-history-1867-2000/index.php A people's history of Mexico, 1867-2000] on [[libcom.org]] history
* [http://www.cjc.ca Canadian Jewish Congress] - Jewish advocacy organisation representing Canadian Jewry
*[http://archaeology.about.com/od/s4/ Mexican Archaeological Sites]
* [http://www.einst.ee/factsheets/jews/ Jews in Estonia]
*[http://www.latinbusinesschronicle.com/mexico Latin Business Chronicle: Mexico Business Reports, Statistics and Links]
* [http://www.fjc.ru/default.asp Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS (Russia)]
{{col-break}}
* [http://www.col.fr/ Communaute Online: France]
* [http://www.haruth.com/JewsArgentina.html Jewish Argentina]
* [http://www.mindspring.com/~jaypsand/index.htm African Jews] - also contains information about various small Jewish communities elsewhere
* [http://chinese-school.netfirms.com/Jews.html Chinese Jews] - history of Jews in China
* [http://www.bh.org.il/Communities/index.aspx/ The Database of Jewish Communities]
* [http://www.chabad.org/centers/default.asp?AID=6268 Global Chabad-Lubavitch Centers and Institutions Directory]
{{col-end}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}
===Zionist institutions===
* [http://www.wzo.org.il/en/default.asp World Zionist Organization]
* [http://www.zoa.org Zionist Organization of America]
* [http://www.hadassah.org Hadassah] - Women's Zionist Organization, also operates a number of prominent hospitals
* [http://www.habonimdror.org Habonim Dror] - Union of Progressive Zionists
{{col-break}}
===Israeli institutions===
* [http://www.jafi.org.il The Jewish Agency]
* [http://www.yad-vashem.org.il Yad VaShem] - The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority
* [http://www.imj.org.il Israel Museum]
* [http://www.bh.org.il/index.html/ Beth Hatefutsoth - The Nahum Goldmann Museum of the Jewish Diaspora]
{{col-end}}
===Lists of notable Jews===
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}
* [http://www.science.co.il/Nobel.asp Jewish Nobel Prize Laureates]
{{col-break}}
* [http://www.jinfo.org Prominent Jewish Scientific and Cultural Figures]
{{col-end}}


===Religious links===
* {{es icon}} [http://www.consejomexicano.org.mx/ Mexican Council for Economic and Social Development]
{{col-begin}}
* {{es icon}} [http://www.inegi.gob.mx INEGI]: National Institute of Statistics, Geography and Information (in Spanish)
{{col-break}}
* {{es icon}} [http://www.cenam.mx/husos-horarios.htm Time zones in Mexico]
* Orthodox (in general): [http://ou.org The Orthodox Union]
*[http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/LACEXT/MEXICOEXTN/0,,menuPK:338407~pagePK:141132~piPK:141107~theSitePK:338397,00.html World Bank's assessment of the Mexican economy]
* {{es icon}} [http://www.portaldeldesarrollo.org/ Mexico Development Gateway]
* Conservative: [http://www.uscj.org United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism]
* Karaite: [http://www.karaite-korner.org The Karaite Korner]
*[http://digital.library.unt.edu/govdocs/crs/search.tkl?q=mexico&search_crit=title&search=Search&date1=Anytime&date2=Anytime&type=form Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding Mexico]
* Reform: [http://urj.org/ Union for Reform Judaism]
*[http://texashistory.unt.edu/search.tkl?q=mexico+map&search=Search&fulltext_select=ON&format=&collection=&institution=&document_type=&date1=Anytime&date2=Anytime&type=form Historic Maps of Mexico] hosted by the Portal to Texas History
* [http://www.elbalero.gob.mx/index_kids.html Mexico for kids]
* Humanistic: [http://www.shj.org/ Society for Humanistic Judaism]
{{col-break}}
* [http://www.facts-about-mexico.com Facts about Mexico]
* [http://www.justiceinmexico.org Justice in Mexico Project]
* Reconstructionist: [http://www.jrf.org Jewish Reconstructionist Federation]
* Chabad-Lubavitch: [http://www.chabad.org Chabad]
* [http://www.accionporlajusticia.com Action For Justice in Mexico Project]
* Sephardic: [http://www.americansephardifederation.org/ American Sephardi Federation]
{{col-2}}

===Mexican newspapers and news agencies===
* {{es icon}} [http://www.biznews.com.mx ''Biznews'']
* {{es icon}} [http://mexico.indymedia.org/ ''IMC Mexico'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.reforma.com ''Reforma'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.informador.com.mx ''El Informador'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.eluniversal.com.mx ''El Universal'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.elnorte.com ''El Norte'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.jornada.unam.mx ''La Jornada'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.mural.com ''Mural'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.debate.com.mx ''El Debate'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.imagen.com.mx ''Imagen Informativa'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.milenio.com ''Milenio'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.cronica.com.mx ''La Crónica'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.enmexico.com/noticias.htm''Mexican Newspapers'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.am.com.mx ''AM Bajío'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.notimex.com.mx ''Notimex'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.elfinanciero.com.mx ''El Financiero'']
* {{es icon}} [http://www.eleconomista.com.mx ''El Economista'']
{{col-end}}
{{col-end}}
{{see|Judaism#External links}}


==Notes==
{{States of Mexico}}
<references />
{{North America}}

[[Category:Mexico| A]]
[[Category:Spanish speaking countries]]


[[Category:Jews|*]]
{{Link FA|es}}


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Revision as of 16:34, 7 June 2006

Distinguish from Ju (an abbreviation, and a division of Korea) and Jiu (a Romanian river, and a Chinese beverage).

Jews (Hebrew: יהודים, Yehudim; Yiddish: ייִדן, Yiden) are followers of Judaism or, more generally, members of the Jewish people (also known as the Jewish nation, or the Children of Israel), an ethno-religious group descended from the ancient Israelites and from converts who joined their religion. The term also includes those who have undergone an officially recognized formal process of religious conversion to Judaism. The current Jewish population is over 14.5 million, the majority of whom live in Israel and the U.S.A.

This article describes some ethnic, historic, and cultural aspects of the Jewish identity; for a consideration of the Jewish religion, refer to the article Judaism.

Jews and Judaism

The origin of the Jews [1] is traditionally dated to around 1800 BCE [citation needed] with the biblical account of the birth of Judaism.

The Merneptah Stele, dated at 1200 BCE, is one of the earliest archaeological records of the Jewish people in the Land of Israel, where they further developed a monotheistic religion and enjoyed periods of self-determination. As a result of foreign conquests and expulsions starting in the 8th century BCE, a Jewish diaspora was formed. Defeats in the Jewish-Roman Wars in the years 70 CE and 135 notably contributed to the numbers and geography of the diaspora, as significant numbers of the Jewish population of the Land of Israel were expelled and sold to slavery throughout the empire. Since then, Jews lived throughout Europe and the greater Middle East, surviving discrimination, oppression, poverty, and even genocide (see the article anti-Semitism), with occasional periods of cultural, economic, and individual prosperity.

Until the late 18th century, the terms Jews and adherents of Judaism were practically synonymous, and Judaism was the prime binding factor among the Jews, although it was not strictly required to be followed in order to belong to the Jewish people. Following the Age of Enlightenment and its Jewish counterpart Haskalah, a gradual transformation occurred where many Jews came to view being a member of the Jewish nation as separate from adhering to the Jewish faith.

The Hebrew name Yehudi (plural Yehudim) came into being when the Kingdom of Israel was split between the northern Kingdom of Israel and the southern Kingdom of Judah. The term originally referred to the people of the southern kingdom, although the term B'nei Yisrael (Israelites) was still used for both groups. After the Assyrians conquered the northern kingdom leaving the southern kingdom as the only Israelite state, the word Yehudim gradually came to refer to people of the Jewish faith as a whole, rather than those specifically from Judah. The English word Jew is ultimately derived from Yehudi (see Etymology). Its first use in the Bible to refer to the Jewish people as a whole is in the Book of Esther.

Etymology

There are many different views as to the origin of the English language word Jew. The most common view is that the Middle English word Jew is from the Old French giu, earlier juieu, from the Latin iudeus from the Greek Ioudaios (Ιουδαίος). The Latin simply means Judaean, from the land of Judaea. The Hebrew for Jew, יהודי , is pronounced ye-hoo-DEE. The Hebrew letter Yodh (or Yud), י, used as a 'y' in the Hebrew language (as in the word ye-hoo-DEE), becomes a 'j' in languages using the Latin-based alphabet when the Yodh is used as a consonant rather than as a vowel. Therefore, a rough transliteration of יהודי in English would be Jew.

The etymological equivalent is in use in other languages, e.g., "Jude" in German, "jøde," in Norwegian, etc., but derivations of the word "Hebrew" are also in use to describe a Jewish person, e.g., in Italian (Ebreo) and Russian: Еврей, (Yevrey). (See Jewish ethnonyms for a full overview.)

Who is a Jew?

Jews praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur. (1878 painting by Maurice Gottlieb)

Judaism shares some of the characteristics of a nation, an ethnicity, a religion, and a culture, making the definition of who is a Jew vary slightly depending on whether a religious or national approach to identity is used. For discussions of the religious views on who is a Jew and how these views differ from each other, please see Who is a Jew?. Generally, in modern secular usage, Jews include three groups: people who practice Judaism and have a Jewish ethnic background (sometimes including those who do not have strictly matrilineal descent), people without Jewish parents who have converted to Judaism; and those Jews who, while not practicing Judaism as a religion, still identify themselves as Jewish by virtue of their family's Jewish descent and their own cultural and historical identification with the Jewish people.

Historical definitions of Jewish identity have traditionally been based on Halakhic definitions of matrilineal descent, and halachic conversions. Historical definitions of who is a Jew date back to the codification of the oral tradition into the Babylonian Talmud. Biblical interpretations of sections in the Tanach, such as Deuteronomy 7:1-5, by learned Jewish sages, is used as a warning against intermarriage between Jews and non Jews because "[the non-Jewish male spouse] will cause your child to turn away from Me and they will worship the gods of others." Leviticus 24:10 speaks of the son in a marriage between a Hebrew woman and an Egyptian man to be "of the community of Israel.", which contrasts with Ezra 10:2-3, where Israelites returning from Egypt, vowed to put aside their gentile wives and their children. Since the Haskalah, these halakhic interpretations of Jewish identity have been challenged.

Jewish culture

The Fiddler by Marc Chagall

Judaism guides its adherents in both practice and belief, and has been called not only a religion, but also a "way of life," which has made drawing a clear distinction between Judaism, Jewish culture, and Jewish nationality rather difficult. In many times and places, such as in the ancient Hellenic world, in Europe before and after the Enlightenment (see Haskalah), and in contemporary United States and Israel, cultural phenomena have developed that are in some sense characteristically Jewish without being at all specifically religious. Some factors in this come from within Judaism, others from the interaction of Jews with others around them, others from the inner social and cultural dynamics of the community, as opposed to religion itself.

Ethnic divisions

The most commonly used terms to describe ethnic divisions among Jews currently are: Ashkenazi (meaning "German" in Hebrew, denoting the Central European base of Jewry); and Sephardi (meaning "Spanish" or "Iberia" in Hebrew, denoting their Spanish, Portuguese and North African location). They refer to both religious and ethnic divisions.

Other Jewish ethnic groups include Mizrahi Jews (a term overlapping Sephardi, but emphasizing North African and Middle Eastern rather than Spanish history, and including the Maghrebim); Teimanim (Yemenite and Omani Jews); and such smaller groups as the Gruzim and Juhurim from the Caucasus, the Bene Israel, Bnei Menashe, Cochin and Telugu Jews of India, the Romaniotes of Greece, the Italkim (Bené Roma) of Italy, various African Jews (most notably the Beta Israel or Ethiopian Jews), the Bukharan Jews of Central Asia, and the Persian Jews of Iran.

Population

Prior to World War II the world population of Jews was approximately 18 million. The Holocaust reduced this number to approximately 12 million. Today, there are an estimated 13 million [2] to 14.6 million[3] Jews worldwide in over 134 countries.

Significant geographic populations

Please note that these populations represent low-end estimates of the worldwide Jewish population, accounting for around 0.2% of the world's population. Higher estimates place the worldwide Jewish population at over 14.5 million.

Country or Region Jewish population Notes
United States 5,671,000 (est.) [2]
Israel 5,466,800 (est.)[4] (about 79% of Israel's population)
Europe 2,000,000 (fewer than)
France 600,000 (est.) [2]
Russia 400,000 (Territory of the former Soviet Union. Some estimates are much higher.)[5]
United Kingdom 267,000 (2001 census)
Germany 100,000 (2004 est.) or 60,000 (est.) [2]
Turkey 30,000 (2001 census)
Italy 30,000 (Jewish communities est.)
Canada 371,000 (est.) [2]
Argentina 250,000 (est.) [6]
Brazil 130,000 (est.) [6]
South Africa 106,000 (est.) [6]
Australia 100,000 (est.) [6]
Asia (excl. Israel) 50,000 (est.)
Iran 11,000 (est.) [6]
Mexico 40,000–50,000 (est.) [6]
Total 15,471,000 (est.)

State of Israel

David Ben Gurion (First Prime Minister of Israel) publicly pronouncing the Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel, May 14, 1948

Israel, the Jewish nation-state, is the only country in which Jews make up a majority of the citizens. It was established as an independent democratic state on May 14, 1948. Of the 120 members in its parliament, the Knesset, 9 members are Israeli Arabs and 2 are Israeli Druses. At the time of its independence, approximately 600,000 Jews lived in Israel. Since then, the country's Jewish population has increased by about one million over each decade as more immigrants arrived and more Israelis were born, resulting in one of the most significant global Jewish population shifts in over 2,000 years.

All the Arab Israeli Wars have not slowed Israel's growth. Israel opened its doors to the Holocaust survivors. It has absorbed a majority of the Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews from the Islamic countries. It has taken in hundreds of thousands of Jews from the former USSR, and has airlifted tens of thousands of Ethiopian Jews[7]to Israel. In the past decade nearly a million immigrants came to Israel from the former Soviet Union. Many Jews who emigrated to Israel have moved elsewhere, known as yerida ("descent" [from the Holy Land]), due to its economic problems or due to disillusionment with political conditions and the continuing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Diaspora (outside Israel)

The waves of immigration to the United States at the turn of the 19th century, massacre of European Jewry during the Holocaust, and the foundation of the state of Israel (and subsequent Jewish exodus from Arab lands) all resulted in substantial shifts in the population centers of world Jewry during the 20th century.

In this Rosh Hashana greeting card from the early 1900s, Russian Jews, packs in hand, gaze at the American relatives beckoning them to the United States. Over two million Jews would flee the pogroms of the Russian Empire to the safety of the US from 1881-1924.

Currently, the largest Jewish community in the world is located in the United States, with almost 5.7 million Jews. Elsewhere in the Americas, there are also large Jewish populations in Canada and Argentina, and smaller populations in Brazil, Mexico , Uruguay, Venezuela, Chile, and several other countries (see History of the Jews in Latin America).

Western Europe's largest Jewish community can be found in France, home to 600,000 Jews, the majority of whom are immigrants or refugees from North African Arab countries such as Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia (or their descendants). There are over 265,000 Jews in the United Kingdom. In Eastern Europe, there are anywhere from 500,000 to over two million Jews living in the former Soviet Union, but exact figures are difficult to establish. The fastest-growing Jewish community in the world, outside Israel, is the one in Germany, especially in Berlin, its capital. Tens of thousands of Jews from the former Eastern Bloc have settled in Germany since the fall of the Berlin Wall.

The Arab countries of North Africa and the Middle East were home to around 900,000 Jews in 1945. Systematic persecution after the founding of Israel caused almost all of these Jews to flee to Israel, North America, and Europe in the 1950s. Today, around 8,000 Jews remain in Arab nations. Iran is home to around 25,000 Jews, down from a population of 100,000 Jews before the 1979 revolution. After the revolution some of the Iranian Jews emigrated to Israel or Europe but most of them emigrated (with their non-Jewish Iranian compatriots) to the United States (especially Los Angeles).

Outside Europe, Asia and the Americas, significant Jewish populations exist in Australia and South Africa.

Population changes: Assimilation

Since at least the time of the ancient Greeks, a proportion of Jews have assimilated into the wider non-Jewish society around them, by either choice or force, ceasing to practice Judaism and losing their Jewish identity. Some Jewish communities, for example the Kaifeng Jews of China, have disappeared entirely, but assimilation has remained relatively low over much of the past millennium, as Jews were often not allowed to integrate with the wider communities in which they lived. The advent of the Jewish Enlightenment (see Haskalah) of the 1700s and the subsequent emancipation of the Jewish populations of Europe and America in the 1800s, changed the situation, allowing Jews to increasingly participate in, and become part of, secular society. The result has been a growing trend of assimilation, as Jews marry non-Jewish spouses and stop participating in the Jewish community. Rates of interreligious marriage vary widely: In the United States, they are just under 50%[8], in the United Kingdom, around 50%, and in Australia and Mexico, as low as 10%[9][10], and in France, they may be as high as 75%. In the United States, only about a third of children from intermarriages affiliate themselves with Jewish practice. Additionally, since non-religious Jews generally tend to marry later and have fewer children than the general population, the Jewish community in many countries is aging. The result is that most countries in the Diaspora have steady or slightly declining Jewish populations as Jews continue to assimilate into the countries in which they live.

Population changes: Wars against the Jews

File:FirstCrusade.jpg
Jews (identifiable by the distinctive hats that they were required to wear) being killed by Christian knights. French Bible illustration from 1250.

Throughout history, many rulers, empires and nations have oppressed their Jewish populations, or sought to eliminate them entirely. Methods employed have ranged from expulsion to outright genocide; within nations, often the threat of these extreme methods was sufficient to silence dissent. Some examples in the history of anti-Semitism are: the Great Jewish Revolt against the Roman Empire; the First Crusade which resulted in the massacre of Jews; the Spanish Inquisition led by Torquemada and the Auto de fé against the Marrano Jews; the Bohdan Chmielnicki Cossack massacres in Ukraine; the Pogroms backed by the Russian Tsars; as well as expulsions from Spain, England, France, Germany, and other countries in which the Jews had settled. The persecution culminated in Adolf Hitler's Final Solution, which led to the Holocaust and the slaughter of approximately 6 million Jews from 1939 to 1945.

Population changes: Growth

Israel is the only country with a consistently growing Jewish population due to natural population increase, though the Jewish populations of other countries in Europe and North America have recently increased due to immigration. In the Diaspora, in almost every country the Jewish population in general is either declining or steady, but Orthodox and Haredi Jewish communities, whose members often shun birth control for religious reasons, have experienced rapid population growth, with rates near 4% per year for Haredi Jews in Israel, and similar rates in other countries.

Orthodox and Conservative Judaism discourage proselytization to non-Jews, but many Jewish groups have tried to reach out to the assimilated Jewish communities of the Diaspora in order to increase the number of Jews. Additionally, while in principle Reform Judaism favors seeking new members for the faith, this position has not translated into active proselytism, instead taking the form of an effort to reach out to non-Jewish spouses of intermarried couples. There is also a trend of Orthodox movements pursuing secular Jews in order to give them a stronger Jewish identity so there is less chance of intermarriage. As a result of the efforts by these and other Jewish groups over the past twenty-five years, there has been a trend of secular Jews becoming more religiously observant, known as the Baal Teshuva movement, though the demographic implications of the trend are unknown. Additionally, there is also a growing movement of Jews by Choice by gentiles who make the decision to head in the direction of becoming Jews.

Jewish languages

Hebrew is the liturgical language of Judaism (termed lashon ha-kodesh, "the holy tongue"), and is one of the two official languages of the State of Israel (the other being Arabic). It was revived by Eliezer ben Yehuda, who arrived in Palestine in 1881 at a time when no one spoke the Hebrew language. Diaspora Jews (outside Israel) today speak the local languages of their respective countries. Yiddish is the historic language of many Ashkenazi Jews, and Ladino of many Sephardic Jews.

History of the Jews

See also: Historical Schisms among the Jews

Jews and migrations

Etching of the expulsion of the Jews from Frankfurt on August 23, 1614. The text says: "1380 persons old and young were counted at the exit of the gate"

Throughout Jewish history, Jews have repeatedly been directly or indirectly expelled from both their original homeland, and the areas in which they have resided. This experience as both immigrants and emigrants (see: Jewish refugees) have shaped Jewish identity and religious practice in many ways. An incomplete list of such migrations includes:

Kingdoms of Israel and Judah

Allotments of Israelite tribes in Eretz Israel. (1695 Amsterdam Haggada)

Jews descend mostly from the ancient Israelites (also known as Hebrews), who settled in the Land of Israel. The Israelites traced their common lineage to the biblical patriarch Abraham through Isaac and Jacob. A United Monarchy was established under Saul and continued under King David and Solomon. King David conquered Jerusalem (first a Canaanite, then a Jebusite town) and made it his capital. After Solomon's reign, the nation split into two kingdoms, the Kingdom of Israel (in the north) and the Kingdom of Judah (in the south). The Kingdom of Israel was conquered by the Assyrian ruler Shalmaneser V in the 8th century BCE and spread all over the Assyrian empire, where they were assimilated into other cultures and came to be known as the Ten Lost Tribes. The Kingdom of Judah continued as an independent state until it was conquered by a Babylonian army in the early 6th century BCE, destroying the First Temple that was at the centre of Jewish worship. The Judean elite was exiled to Babylonia, but later at least a part of them returned to their homeland after the subsequent conquest of Babylonia by the Persians seventy years later, a period known as the Babylonian Captivity. A new Second Temple was constructed funded by Persian Kings, and old religious practices were resumed.

Persian, Greek, and Roman rule

See related article Jewish-Roman wars.

The Seleucid Kingdom, which arose after the Persians were defeated by Alexander the Great, sought to introduce Greek culture into the Persian world. When the Seleucid king Antiochus IV Epiphanes, supported by Hellenized Jews (those who had adopted Greek culture), attempted to convert the Jewish Temple to a temple of Zeus, the non-Hellenized Jews revolted under the leadership of the Maccabees and rededicated the Temple to the Jewish God (hence the origins of Hanukkah) and created an independent Jewish kingdom known as the Hasmonaean Kingdom which lasted from 165 BCE to 63 BCE, when the kingdom came under influence of the Roman Empire. During the early part of Roman rule, the Hasmonaeans remained in power, until the family was annihilated by Herod the Great. Herod came from a wealthy Idumean family and became a very successful client-king under the Romans. He significantly expanded the Temple in Jerusalem.

Upon his death in 4 BCE the Romans directly ruled Judea and there were frequent changes of policies by conflicting and empire-building Caesars, generals, governors, and consuls who often acted cruelly or to maximize their own wealth and power. Rome's attitudes swung from tolerance to hostility against its Jewish subjects, who had since moved throughout the Empire. The Romans, worshipping a large pantheon, could not readily accommodate the exclusive monotheism of Judaism, and the religious Jews could not accept Roman polytheism. (It was in this tumultous climate that Christianity first emerged, among a small group of Jews.) After a famine and riots in 66 CE, the Judeans began to revolt against their Roman rulers. The revolt was smashed by Titus Flavius, a Roman general who later succeeded his father Vespasian as emperor. In Rome the Arch of Titus still stands, showing enslaved Judeans and a menorah being brought to Rome. It is customary for Jews not to walk through this arch.

The Arch of Titus depicts enslaved Judeans and objects from the Temple being brought to Rome.

The Romans all but destroyed Jerusalem; only a single "Western Wall" of the Second Temple remained. After the end of this first revolt, the Judeans continued to live in their land in significant numbers, and were allowed to practice their religion. In the second century the Roman Emperor Hadrian began to rebuild Jerusalem as a pagan city while restricting some Jewish practices. Angry at this affront, the Judeans again revolted led by Simon Bar Kokhba. Hadrian responded with overwhelming force, putting down the revolution and killing as many as half a million Jews. After the Roman Legions prevailed in 135, Jews were not allowed to enter the city of Jerusalem and most Jewish worship was forbidden by Rome. Following the destruction of Jerusalem and the expulsion of the Jews, Jewish worship stopped being centrally organized around the Temple, and instead was rebuilt around rabbis who acted as teachers and leaders of individual communities. No new books were added to the Jewish Bible after the Roman period, instead major efforts went into interpreting and developing the Halakhah, or oral law, and writing down these traditions in the Talmud, the key work on the interpretation of Jewish law, written during the first to fifth centuries CE.

Beginning of the Diaspora

Though Jews had settled outside Israel since the time of the Babylonians, the results of the Roman response to the Jewish revolt shifted the center of Jewish life from its ancient home to the diaspora. While some Jews remained in Judea, renamed Palestine by the Romans, some Jews were sold into slavery, while others became citizens of other parts of the Roman Empire. This is the traditional explanation to the Jewish diaspora, almost universally accepted by past and present rabbinical or Talmudical scholars, who believe that Jews are almost exclusively biological descendants of the Judean exiles, a belief backed up at least partially by DNA evidence. Some secular historians speculate that a majority of the Jews in Antiquity were most likely descendants of converts in the cities of the Graeco-Roman world, especially in Alexandria and Asia Minor. They were only affected by the diaspora in its spiritual sense and by the sense of loss and homelessness which became a cornerstone of the Jewish creed, much supported by persecutions in various parts of the world. Any such policy of conversion, which spread the Jewish religion throughout Hellenistic civilization, seems to have ended with the wars against the Romans and the following reconstruction of Jewish values for the post-Temple era. DNA evidence of this theory has been spotty, however, some historians believe based on some historical records that at the dawn of Christianity as many as 10% of the population of the Roman Empire were Jewish, a figure that could only be explained by local conversion. This theory could also solve the paradox of DNA studies noted above that show Ashkenazi Jews to be somewhat related to the peoples of the nations surrounding Israel despite physical features that more closely resembles that of the peoples of southern and central Europe; as one explanation would be a large miscegenation millennia ago followed by almost no outside genetic contact thereafter.

During the first few hundred years of the Diaspora, the most important Jewish communities were in Babylonia, where the Talmud was written, and where relatively tolerant regimes allowed the Jews freedom. The situation was worse in the Byzantine Empire which treated the Jews much more harshly, refusing to allow them to hold office or build places of worship. The conquest of much of the Byzantine Empire and Babylonia by Islamic armies generally improved the life of the Jews, though they were still considered second-class citizens. In response to these Islamic conquests, the First Crusade of 1096 attempted to reconquer Jerusalem, resulting in the destruction of many of the remaining Jewish communities in the area.

Middle Ages: Europe

Image of a cantor reading the Passover story in Moorish Spain, from a 14th century Spanish Haggadah.

Jews settled in Europe during the time of the Roman Empire, but the rise of the Catholic Church resulted in frequent expulsions and persecutions. The Crusades routinely attacked Jewish communities, and increasingly harsh laws restricted them from most economic activity and land ownership, leaving open only moneylending and a few other trades. Jews were subject to expulsions from England, France, and the Holy Roman Empire throughout the Middle Ages, with most of the population moving to Eastern Europe and especially Poland, which was uniquely tolerant of the Jews through the 1700s. The final mass expulsion of the Jews, and the largest, occurred after the Christian conquest (reconquista) of Spain in 1492 (see History of the Jews in Spain). Even after the end of the expulsions in the 17th century, individual conditions varied from country to country and time to time, but, as rule, Jews in Western Europe generally were forced, by decree or by informal pressure, to live in highly segregated ghettos and shtetls.

Middle Ages: Islamic Europe, North Africa and Asia

During the Middle Ages, Jews in Islamic lands generally had more rights than under Christian rule, with a Golden Age of coexistence in Islamic Spain from about 900 to 1200, when Spain became the center of the richest, most populous, and most influential Jewish community of the time. The rise of more radical Muslim regimes, such as that of the Almohades ended this period by the thirteenth century, and Jews were soon expelled from Spain after the Christian reconquest. Many of these Jews found refuge in the Ottoman Empire, which remained tolerant of its Jewish population for much of its history. In the Islamic lands Jews at times were driven by necessity to engage in despised occupations, becoming dancing boys or tavern keepers.

Enlightenment and emancipation

During the Age of Enlightenment, significant changes occurred within the Jewish community. The Haskalah movement paralleled the wider Enlightenment, as Jews began in the 1700s to campaign for emancipation from restrictive laws and integration into the wider European society. Secular and scientific education was added to the traditional religious instruction received by students, and interest in a national Jewish identity, including a revival in the study of Jewish history and Hebrew, started to grow.

Napoleon emancipating the Jews, represented by the woman with the menorah, and 1804 French print.

The Haskalah movement influenced the birth of all the modern Jewish denominations, and planted the seeds of Zionism. At the same time, it contributed to encouraging cultural assimilation into the countries in which Jews resided. At around the same time another movement was born, one preaching almost the opposite of Haskalah, Hasidic Judaism. Hasidic Judaism began in the 1700s by Israel ben Eliezer, the Baal Shem Tov, and quickly gained a following with its exuberant, mystical approach to religion. These two movements, and the traditional orthodox approach to Judaism from which they spring, formed the basis for the modern divisions within Jewish observance.

At the same time, the outside world was changing. France was the first country to emancipate its Jewish population in 1796, granting them equal rights under the law. Napoleon further spread emancipation, inviting Jews to leave the Jewish ghettos in Europe and seek refuge in the newly created tolerant political regimes (see Napoleon and the Jews). By the mid-19th century, almost all Western European countries had emancipated their Jewish populations, with the notable exception of the Papal States, but persecution continued in Eastern Europe including massive pogroms at the end of the 19th century and throughout the Pale of Settlement. The persistence of anti-semitism, both violently in the east and socially in the west, led to a number of Jewish political movements, culminating in Zionism.

Zionism and immigration

File:Ac.zionistposter.jpg
Hungarian and Romanian poster promoting Zionism, 1930s

Many of the newly secular Jews who had embraced Haskalah found themselves deeply troubled by the continuing virulent anti-semitism of the late 1800s, especially the massive pogroms of the 1880s in Russia and the Dreyfus Affair, which occurred in France in 1894, a country many Jews had previously thought of as particularly accepting. Many Jews in Eastern Europe embraced socialism as a potential escape from persecution, but another group, the Zionists, led by Theodor Herzl, viewed the only solution as the creation of a Jewish state. The interplay between Jewish national and religious identities was evident in Zionism, which was initially an entirely secular movement, but drew inspiration and support from the religious connection between Jews and the Land of Israel. Zionism contributed to the growth of the Jewish population there, which at the time was the Palestine province of the Ottoman Empire, and later the British Mandate of Palestine. Zionism, initially one out of a number of competing Jewish political movements, gained nearly universal support from the world Jewish population following the near-complete destruction of the Jews of Europe in the Holocaust, and led to the foundation of the State of Israel.

In addition to responding politically, during the late 19th century, Jews began to flee the persecutions of Eastern Europe in large numbers, mostly by heading to the United States, but also to Canada and Western Europe. By 1924, almost two million Jews had emigrated to the US alone, creating a large community in a nation relatively free of the persecutions of rising European anti-Semitism (see History of the Jews in the United States).

The Holocaust

This anti-Semitism reached its most destructive form in the policies of Nazi Germany, which made the destruction of the Jews a priority, culminating in the killing of approximately six million Jews during the Holocaust from 1941 to 1945. Originally, the Nazis used death squads, the Einsatzgruppen, to conduct massive open-air killings of Jews in territory they conquered. By 1942, the Nazi leadership decided to implement the Final Solution, the genocide of the Jews of Europe, and to increase the pace of the Holocaust by establishing extermination camps specifically to kill Jews. This was an industrial method of genocide. Millions of Jews who had been confined to diseased and massively overcrowded Ghettos were transported (often by train) to these "Death-camps" where they were herded into a specific location (often a gas chamber), then either gassed or shot. Afterwards, their remains were buried or burned up. Many Jews tried to escape Europe before or during the Holocaust, but were unable to find refuge, giving new urgency to the Zionist goal of establishing a Jewish homeland.

File:Immigrationtoisrael.gif
Immigration immediately after the establishment of Israel.

Israel

In 1948, the Jewish state of Israel was founded, creating the first Jewish nation since the Roman destruction of Jerusalem. After a series of wars with neighboring Arab countries, almost all of the 900,000 Jews previously living in North Africa and the Middle East fled to the Jewish state, joining an increasing number of immigrants from post-War Europe. By the end of the 20th century, Jewish population centers had shifted dramatically, with the United States and Israel being the centers of Jewish secular and religious life.

Persecution

Related articles: Anti-Semitism, History of anti-Semitism, Modern anti-Semitism

The Jewish people and Judaism have experienced various persecutions throughout Jewish history. In medieval Europe, many persecutions of Jews in the name of Christianity occurred, notably during the Crusades—when Jews all over Germany were massacred—and a series of expulsions from England, Germany, France, and, in the largest expulsion of all, Spain. In the Papal States, which existed until 1870, Jews were required to live only in specified neighborhoods called ghettos. In the 19th and (before the end of the second World War) 20th centuries, the Roman Catholic church adhered to a distinction between "good anti-Semitism" and "bad anti-Semitism". The "bad" kind promoted hatred of Jews because of their descent. This was considered un-Christian because the Christian message was intended for all of humanity regardless of ethnicity; anyone could become a Christian. The "good" kind criticized alleged Jewish conspiracies to control newspapers, banks, and other institutions, to care only about accumulation of wealth, etc.

Islam and Judaism have a complex relationship. The political conflict between Muhammad and the Jews of Medina in the 7th century left ample ideological fuel for Islam and anti-Semitism through the centuries. During the Middle Ages, Jews typically had a better status in the Muslim world than in Christendom. As the Muslim empire expanded during the centuries, the status of the non-Muslim communities was at times precarious, and they were generally subject to dhimmi laws. These laws freed them from military service and paying zakah, but placed additional jizyah and land taxes on them.

The most notable modern day persecution of Jews remains the Holocaust — the state-led systematic persecution and genocide of the Jews and other minority groups of Europe and North Africa during World War II by Nazi Germany and its collaborators[11] During the Holocaust, the Middle East was in turmoil. Britain prohibited Jewish immigration to the British Mandate of Palestine. While the Allies and the Axis were fighting for the oil-rich region, the Mufti of Jerusalem Amin al-Husayni staged a pro-Nazi coup in Iraq and organized the Farhud pogrom which marked the turning point for about 150,000 Iraqi Jews who, following this event and the hostilities generated by the war with Israel in 1948, were targeted for violence, persecution, boycotts, confiscations, and near complete expulsion in 1951. In the French Vichy territories of Algeria and Syria plans were drawn up for the liquidation of their Jewish populations were the Axis powers to triumph.

The tensions of the Arab-Israeli conflict were also a factor in the rise of animosity to Jews all over the Middle East, as hundreds of thousands of Jews fled as refugees, the main waves being soon after the 1948 and 1956 wars. In reaction to the Suez Crisis of 1956, the Egyptian government expelled almost 25,000 Egyptian Jews and confiscated their property, and sent approximately 1,000 more Jews to prisons and detention camps. The population of Jewish communities of Muslim Middle East and North Africa was reduced from about 900,000 in 1948 to less than 8,000 today.

Jewish leadership

There is no single governing body for the Jewish community, nor a single authority with responsibility for religious doctrine. Instead, a variety of secular and religious institutions at the local, national, and international levels lead various parts of the Jewish community on a variety of issues.

Famous Jews

Jews have made contributions in a broad range of human endeavors, including the sciences, arts, politics, business, etc.

See also

A full guide to topics related to the Jews is available from the guide at the top of this page. Additional topics of interest include:

Major Jewish secular organizations

Global Jewish communities

Lists of notable Jews

Notes

  1. ^ Some uses of the term "Jew" are tainted by historic anti-Jewish bigotry. The correct adjectival form is "Jewish"; the use of "Jew" as an adjective (as in "Jew lawyer" rather than "Jewish lawyer") is associated with bigotry. The use of "Jew" or "jew" as a verb (as in "to jew someone down": to bargain for a lower price) is generally seen as an extremely offensive expression based on stereotypes. Even when used in a grammatically correct manner as a noun, the term "Jew" has been used to objectify and separate Jews from the remainder of the population, often by referring to the majority population by the name of the country ("Countrymen") but referring to Jewish citizens as "Jews."
  2. ^ a b c d e Data based on a study by Jewish People Policy Institute (JPPI). See Jewish people near zero growth by Tovah Lazaroff, Jerusalem Post, June 24, 2004.
  3. ^ See, for example Jews by country page for higher estimates.
  4. ^ Data based on a study by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. See [1] (Updated to June 2005).
  5. ^ 1993 Russian census. Some estimates are much higher; the US State Department Religious Freedom Report [2] estimates the number of Jews in Russia alone at 600,000 to 1 million.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Jewish Virtual Library, JewFAQ
  7. ^ "airlifted tens of thousands of Ethiopian Jews". Retrieved July 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ "NJPS: Intermarriage: Defining and Calculating Intermarriage". Retrieved July 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ "World Jewish Congress Online". Retrieved July 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ "The Virtual Jewish History Tour - Mexico". Retrieved July 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ Donald L Niewyk, The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust, Columbia University Press, 2000, p.45: "The Holocaust is commonly defined as the murder of more than 5,000,000 Jews by the Germans in World War II." There is a debate among scholars over whether the Holocaust only refers to Jewish victims, or to all groups targeted by the Nazis, or to some subset of those groups. All scholars agree that other groups were targeted by the Nazis, but not all believe that the victims are part of the Holocaust. This article uses a wide definition of the Holocaust to include all groups systematically targeted by the Nazis.