Ashkenazi – New World Encyclopedia
Posted By admin on September 29, 2019
Ashkenazi Jews, also known as Ashkenazic Jews or Ashkenazim, are Jews descended from the medieval Jewish communities of the Rhineland"Ashkenaz" being the Medieval Hebrew name for Germany. They are distinguished from Sephardic Jews, the other main group of European Jewry, who arrived earlier in Europe and lived primarily in Spain.
Many Ashkenazim later migrated, largely eastward, forming communities in Germany, Hungary, Poland, Russia, Eastern Europe, and elsewhere between the tenth and nineteenth centuries. From medieval times until the mid-twentieth century, the lingua franca among Ashkenazi Jews was primarily Yiddish.
The Ashkenazi Jews developed a distinct liturgy and culture, influenced to varying degrees, by interaction with surrounding peoples, predominantly Germans, Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Kashubians, Hungarians, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Letts, Belarusians, and Russians.
Although in the eleventh century they comprised only three percent of the world's Jewish population, Ashkenazi Jews accounted for 92 percent of the world's Jews in 1931, and today make up approximately 80 percent of Jews worldwide. Most Jewish communities with extended histories in Europe are Ashkenazim, with the exception of Sephardic Jews associated with the Mediterranean region. A significant portion of the Jews who migrated from Europe to other continents in the past two centuries are Eastern Ashkenazim, particularly in the United States. Ashkenazi Jews have made major contributions to world culture in terms of science, literature, economics, and the arts.
Ashkenaz is a Medieval Hebrew name for Germany. European Jews came to be called "Ashkenaz" because the main centers of Jewish learning were located in Germany.
The Ashkenazi Jewish population originated in the Middle East. When they arrived in northern France and the Rhineland sometime around 800-1000 C.E., the Ashkenazi Jews brought with them both Rabbinic Judaism and the Babylonian Talmudic culture that underlies it. Yiddish, once spoken by the vast majority of Ashkenazi Jewry, is a Jewish language which developed from the Middle High German vernacular, heavily influenced by Hebrew and Aramaic.
After the forced Jewish exile from Jerusalem in 70 C.E. and the complete Roman takeover of Judea following the Bar Kochba rebellion of 132-135 C.E., Jews continued to be a majority of the population in Palestine for several hundred years. In Palestine and Mesopotamia, where Jewish religious scholarship was centered, the majority of Jews were still engaged in farming. Trade was also a common occupation, facilitated by the easy mobility of traders through the dispersed Jewish communities.
In the late Roman Empire, small numbers of Jews are known to have lived in Cologne and Trier, as well as in what is now France. However, it is unclear whether there is any continuity between these late Roman communities and the distinct Ashkenazi Jewish culture that began to emerge about 500 years later.
In Mesopotamia and in Persian lands free of Roman imperial domination, Jewish life had a long history. Since the conquest of Judea by Nebuchadnezzar II in the early sixth century B.C.E., "Babylonian Jews" had always been the leading diaspora community, rivaling the leadership of Palestine. When conditions for Jews began to deteriorate in the western Roman Empire, many of the religious leaders of Judea and Galilee fled to the east. At the academies of Pumbeditha and Sura near Babylon, Rabbinic Judaism based on talmudic learning began to emerge and assert its authority over Jewish life throughout the diaspora. Rabbinic Judaism also created a religious mandate for literacy, requiring all Jewish males to learn Hebrew and read from the Torah. This emphasis on literacy and learning a second language would eventually be of great benefit to the Jews, allowing them to take on commercial and financial roles within Gentile societies where literacy was often quite low.
After the Islamic conquest of the Middle East and North Africa, new opportunities for trade and commerce opened between the Middle East and Western Europe. The vast majority of Jews in the world now lived in Islamic lands. Urbanization, trade, and commerce within the Islamic world allowed Jews to abandon farming and live in cities, engaging in occupations where they could use their skills. The influential, sophisticated, and well-organized Jewish community of Mesopotamia, now centered in Baghdad, became the center of the Jewish world. In the Caliphate of Baghdad, Jews took on many of the financial occupations that they would later hold in the cities of Ashkenaz. Jewish traders from Baghdad began to travel to the west, renewing Jewish life in the western Mediterranean region. They brought with them Rabbinic Judaism and Babylonian Talmudic scholarship.
After 800 C.E., Charlemagne's unification of former Frankish lands with northern Italy and Rome brought on a brief period of stability and unity in Western Europe. This created opportunities for Jewish merchants to settle north of the Alps. Charlemagne granted the Jews in his lands freedoms similar to those once enjoyed under the ancient Roman Empire. In Frankish lands, many Jewish merchants took on occupations in finance and commerce, including moneylending or usury. (Church legislation banned Christians from lending money to fellow Christians in exchange for interest.) Although the Sephardic community in Islamic Spain was far better established at first, by the eleventh century, when the great rabbinic sage Rashi of Troyes wrote his talmudic commentaries, Ashkenazi Jews had emerged as a strong community capable of major cultural contributions to Jewish civilization.
Efforts to identify the origins of Ashkenazi Jews through DNA analysis began in the 1990s. Like most DNA studies of human migration patterns, these studies have focused on two segments of the human genome, the Y chromosome (inherited only by males), and the mitochondrial genome (DNA which passes from mother to child). Both segments are unaffected by recombination. Thus, they provide an indicator of paternal and maternal origins, respectively.
Recent research indicates that a significant portion of Ashkenazi maternal ancestry is also of Middle Eastern origin. A 2006 study by Behar et al. [2] suggested that about 40 percent of the current Ashkenazi population is descended matrilineally from just four women. These four "founder lineages" were "likely from a Hebrew/Levantine mtDNA pool" originating in the Near East in the first and second centuries C.E.
Historical records show evidence of Jewish communities north of the Alps and Pyrenees as early as the eighth and ninth century, especially in the Rhineland area, where they at first established trading establishments and later more settled communities under the protection of feudal lords. By the early 900s, Jewish populations were well-established in Northern Europe and later followed the Norman Conquest into England in 1066, also settling in the Rhineland. With the onset of the Crusades and the expulsions of Jews from England (1290), France (1394), and parts of Germany (1400s), Jewish migration pushed eastward into Poland, Lithuania, and Russia.
Due to Christian European prohibitions restricting certain land ownership and guild membership by Jews, Jewish economic activity was focused on trade, business management, and financial services.
By the 1400s, the Ashkenazi Jewish communities in Poland were the largest Jewish communities of the diaspora. Poland at this time was a decentralized medieval monarchy, incorporating lands from Latvia to Romania, including much of modern Lithuania and Ukraine. This area, which eventually fell under the domination of Russia, Austria, and Prussia (Germany), would remain the main center of Ashkenazi Jewry until the Holocaust.
The collective corpus of Jewish religious law, including biblical law and later, Talmudic and rabbinic customs and traditions of Ashkenazi Jews may differ from those of Sephardi Jews, particularly in matters of custom.
Well-known differences in practice include:
An Ashkenazi Jew can be defined religiously, culturally, or ethnically. Since the overwhelming majority of Ashkenazi Jews no longer live in Eastern Europe, the isolation that once fostered their distinct religious tradition and culture has vanished. Furthermore, the word "Ashkenazi" is itself evolving and taking on new meanings.
In a religious sense, an Ashkenazi Jew is any Jew whose family tradition and ritual follows Ashkenazi practice. When the Ashkenazi community first began to develop, the centers of Jewish religious authority were in the Islamic world, at Baghdad and in Islamic Spain. Ashkenaz (Germany) was so distant geographically that it developed a tradition of its own, and Ashkenazi Hebrew came to be pronounced in ways distinct from other forms of Hebrew.
In a cultural sense, an Ashkenazi Jew can be identified by the concept of Yiddishkeit, a word that literally means Jewishness in the Yiddish language. Originally this meant the study of Torah and Talmud for men, and a family and communal life governed by the observance of Jewish Law for men and women. From the Rhineland to Riga to Romania, most Jews prayed in liturgical Ashkenazi Hebrew, and spoke some dialect of Yiddish in their secular lives.
However, with modernization, Yiddishkeit began to encompass not just Orthodoxy and Hasidism, but a broad range of movements, ideologies, practices, and traditions in which Ashkenazi Jews have participated and somehow retained a sense of Jewishness. As Ashkenazi Jews moved away from Eastern Europe, settling mostly in North America and Israel, the geographic isolation which gave rise to Ashkenazim has given way to mixing with other cultures, and with non-Ashkenazi Jews who, similarly, are no longer isolated in distinct geographic locales. In Israel, Hebrew has replaced Yiddish as the primary Jewish language for the vast majority of Ashkenazi Jews.
By tradition, Jewish status is inherited through the maternal lineage. Therefore, someone who is descended from a Jewish mother, even if totally unaware of their Jewish heritage, is a Jew. A large proportion of Ashkenazi Jews in Israel, the U.S., and the former Soviet Union are not religiously observant. Even a Jew who converts to another religion, though an apostate, is still considered a Jew. Karl Marx, an atheist whose Jewish mother and father had converted to Christianity before he was born, was an Ashkenazi Jew.
In an ethnic sense, an Ashkenazi Jew is one whose ancestry can be traced to the Jews of central and Eastern Europe. For roughly a thousand years, the Ashkenazi Jews were a reproductively isolated population in Europe. However, since the middle of the twentieth century, many Ashkenazi Jews have intermarried, both with members of other Jewish communities and with people of other nations and faiths. Conversion to Judaism, rare for nearly 1500 years, has once again become common. Thus, the concept of Ashkenazi Jews as a distinct ethnic people, especially in ways that can be defined ancestrally and therefore traced genetically, has also blurred considerably.
In Israel, Jews of mixed background are increasingly common, partly because of intermarriage between Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi partners, and partly because some do not identify with such historic markers as relevant to their life experiences as Jews. Religious Ashkenazi Jews living in Israel are obliged to follow the authority of the chief Ashkenazi rabbi in halakhic matters.
In an essay on Sephardi Jewry, Daniel Elazar at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs summarized the demographic history of Ashkenazi Jews in the last thousand years, noting that at the end of the eleventh century, 97 percent of world Jewry was Sephardic and 3 percent Ashkenazi; in the mid-seventeenth century, "Sephardim still outnumbered Ashkenazim three to two," but by the end of the eighteenth century "Ashkenazim outnumbered Sephardim three to two, the result of improved living conditions in Christian Europe versus the Muslim world. "By 1931, Ashkenazi Jews accounted for nearly 92 percent of world Jewry.
Ashkenazi Jews developed the Hasidic movement as well as major Jewish academic centers across Poland, Russia, and Lithuania in the generations after emigration from the west. After two centuries of comparative tolerance in the new nations, massive westward emigration occurred in the 1800s and 1900s in response to pogroms and the economic opportunities offered in other parts of the world. Ashkenazi Jews have made up the majority of the American Jewish community since 1750. Ashkenazi cultural growth led to the Haskalah or Jewish Enlightenment, and the development of Zionism in modern Europe.
However, Ashkenazi Jews were the primary victims of the Nazi campaign to eradicate European Jewry. Of the estimated 8.8 million Jews living in Europe at the beginning of World War II, the majority of whom were Ashkenazi, about six millionmore than two-thirdswere systematically murdered in the Holocaust. These included three million of 3.3 million Polish Jews (91 percent); 900,000 of 1.1 million in Ukraine (82 percent); and 50 to 90 percent of the Jews of other Slavic nations, Germany, France, Hungary, and the Baltic states. The only non-Ashkenazi community to have suffered similar depletions were the Jews of Greece. Many of the surviving Ashkenazi Jews emigrated to countries such as Israel, Australia, and the United States after the war.
Today, Ashkenazi Jews constitute approximately 80 percent of world Jewry, but probably less than half of Israeli Jews. Nevertheless they have traditionally played a prominent role in the media, economy, and politics of Israel. Tensions have sometimes arisen between the mostly Ashkenazi elite whose families founded the state, and later migrants from various non-Ashkenazi groups.
Ashkenazi Jews have a noted history of achievement in western societies. They have won a disproportionate share of major academic prizes, such as the Nobel awards and the Fields Medal in mathematics. In those societies where they have been free to enter any profession, they have a record of high occupational achievement, entering professions and fields of commerce where higher education is required. Ashkenazim have also made major contributions in literature, economic leadership, and the arts.
All links retrieved April 20, 2016.
New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:
The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:
Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.
Continued here:
Ashkenazi - New World Encyclopedia
- Israel Meir Kin is a threat to all Jewish women [Last Updated On: April 1st, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 1st, 2014]
- Ashkenazi (people) -- Encyclopedia Britannica [Last Updated On: April 1st, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 1st, 2014]
- Ashkenazi - New World Encyclopedia - Info:Main Page - New ... [Last Updated On: April 1st, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 1st, 2014]
- Los fabulosos 90s en el lanzamiento de ecko - Video [Last Updated On: April 1st, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 1st, 2014]
- LORD's Word(03 22 14)PT6 Esau is Edom, Seir, Idumea Not Ashkenazi - Video [Last Updated On: April 1st, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 1st, 2014]
- traxxas e revo vs bruslesh - Video [Last Updated On: April 2nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 2nd, 2014]
- INTENTIA TADMIT - Video [Last Updated On: April 2nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 2nd, 2014]
- Is there a link between Parkinsons and Ashkenazi Jews? [Last Updated On: April 3rd, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 3rd, 2014]
- Hitler [Last Updated On: April 5th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 5th, 2014]
- DNA Evidence Suggests Hitler May Have Married Woman of Jewish Descent [Last Updated On: April 5th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 5th, 2014]
- Was Adolf Hitler's lover Eva Braun from a Jewish family? [Last Updated On: April 5th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 5th, 2014]
- karate motti samobor 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: April 5th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 5th, 2014]
- Greeces last Romaniote Jews remember a catastrophe [Last Updated On: April 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 6th, 2014]
- DNA suggests Hitler may have married a Jew [Last Updated On: April 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 6th, 2014]
- Hitler may have 'unwittingly married a Jew' [Last Updated On: April 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 6th, 2014]
- -- -- - Video [Last Updated On: April 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 6th, 2014]
- CIMG6555 - Video [Last Updated On: April 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 6th, 2014]
- 10 Ancient Knowledge Pt 6c Lost History, Phoenicians, Alphabet, Symbology, Ashkenazi, Mythology - Video [Last Updated On: April 7th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 7th, 2014]
- Documentary: Hitlers wife, Eva Braun, may have had Jewish ancestry [Last Updated On: April 7th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 7th, 2014]
- Did Hitler's wife have Jewish ancestry? UK TV show makes DNA claims of Ashkenazi heritage - Video [Last Updated On: April 7th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 7th, 2014]
- smt 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: April 8th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 8th, 2014]
- E revo vs e maxx traxxass - Video [Last Updated On: April 8th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 8th, 2014]
- Conversation with Cantor Aaron Bensoussan [Last Updated On: April 9th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 9th, 2014]
- Louisa Shafia Explains the Jewish and Persian Influences in Her Gondi Recipe [Last Updated On: April 11th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 11th, 2014]
- For Passover, so many ways to kugel [Last Updated On: April 12th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 12th, 2014]
- Drop Kingz Review - Video [Last Updated On: April 14th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 14th, 2014]
- 2 so called sephardim and ashkenazi jews - Video [Last Updated On: April 16th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 16th, 2014]
- 1 so called sephardim and ashkenazi jews - Video [Last Updated On: April 16th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 16th, 2014]
- GUITAR SHRED VIRTUOSO "Wurz' Shred" - Video [Last Updated On: April 17th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 17th, 2014]
- - (2000) - Video [Last Updated On: April 17th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 17th, 2014]
- - (2008) - Video [Last Updated On: April 17th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 17th, 2014]
- - (2002) - Video [Last Updated On: April 17th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 17th, 2014]
- Nera Kraljevic & Gil Ashkenazi social @ 3rd Istanbul Salsa Festival - Video [Last Updated On: April 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 18th, 2014]
- Danay Bustamante & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ 3rd Istanbul Dance Festival 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: April 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 18th, 2014]
- - (2008) - Video [Last Updated On: April 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 18th, 2014]
- - (2001) - Video [Last Updated On: April 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 18th, 2014]
- - (2002) - Video [Last Updated On: April 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 18th, 2014]
- Victor Ashkenazi vs Bill Phipps Championship flight - Video [Last Updated On: April 19th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 19th, 2014]
- Nordic Open 2014 DMP Thomas Kristensen (DK) - Victor Ashkenazi (World) - Video [Last Updated On: April 19th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 19th, 2014]
- - 2004 - Video [Last Updated On: April 19th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 19th, 2014]
- Marc Olsen vs Victor Ashkenazi part 2, Denmark vs. The World - Video [Last Updated On: April 21st, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 21st, 2014]
- Marc Olsen vs Victor Ashkenazi part 1, Denmark vs. The World - Video [Last Updated On: April 21st, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 21st, 2014]
- Andrew Carrington Hitchcock - Founder of the Church Of Satan Anton LaVey was an Ashkenazi Jew - Video [Last Updated On: April 22nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 22nd, 2014]
- Baby by Idan & Natali Ashkenazi - Video [Last Updated On: April 23rd, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 23rd, 2014]
- Magna Gopal & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ 3rd Istanbul Dance Festival 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: April 23rd, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 23rd, 2014]
- 100 Million Non Jews Murdered by USSR's ashkenazi communist Regime YouTube1 - Video [Last Updated On: May 4th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 4th, 2014]
- THE FALSE ASHKENAZI / KHAZARS JEWS - Video [Last Updated On: May 5th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 5th, 2014]
- Mave Store: ORLY ASHKENAZI - Video [Last Updated On: May 7th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 7th, 2014]
- Ashkenazi Genetic Diseases - Video [Last Updated On: May 7th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 7th, 2014]
- Faces of Various Jewish Groups (Ashkenazi, Mizrahi, Italkim, & Sephardi) - Video [Last Updated On: May 7th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 7th, 2014]
- Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory Nearly Doubles Diseases Covered by Ashkenazi Jewish Carrier Screening Panel [Last Updated On: May 8th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 8th, 2014]
- Falasha Jews and Sephardic jews ,how are they treated by Ashkenazi Jews in Israel - Louis Farrakhan - Video [Last Updated On: May 9th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 9th, 2014]
- Ensuring your baby's health with genetic testing [Last Updated On: May 13th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 13th, 2014]
- Pittsburgh photographer offers rare view of Eastern European synagogues [Last Updated On: May 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 18th, 2014]
- Ella Jauk & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ On2 Salsa Congress 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: May 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 18th, 2014]
- Becky Lee & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ 4th On2 Salsa Congress 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: May 18th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 18th, 2014]
- New Products: Asper Biotech's Ashkenazi Jewish Diseases Test [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2014]
- Wolpe Vows he will no longer address issue of ethnic percentages [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2014]
- shmulik ashkenazi photographer - riviki and daniel - Video [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2014]
- Heres Whats About To Hit Netflix [Last Updated On: May 22nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 22nd, 2014]
- WBTOC - Semi Finals - Victor Ashkenazi vs. Gerry Tansey - Video [Last Updated On: May 25th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 25th, 2014]
- Masters - Round 1 - Victor Ashkenazi vs. Michi - Video [Last Updated On: May 25th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 25th, 2014]
- WBTOC - Best of 3 Victor Ashkenazi vs. Sabri (score 1-1) - Video [Last Updated On: May 25th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 25th, 2014]
- Masters Rd 2 - Justin Nunez vs. .Victor Ashkenazi - Video [Last Updated On: May 26th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 26th, 2014]
- Prince Andrew's pal Goga Ashkenazi takes design duties VERY seriously [Last Updated On: May 27th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 27th, 2014]
- Sun 11am CST - Chicago Open Rd 6 - Victor Ashkenazi vs. Masayuki Mochizuki - Video [Last Updated On: May 27th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 27th, 2014]
- iHome Makes a Splash with the iBN6. New Award-Winning iPX7 Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker takes Your Sounds into the Sun ... [Last Updated On: August 31st, 2014] [Originally Added On: August 31st, 2014]
- dvir ashkenazi - war ballad - Video [Last Updated On: August 31st, 2014] [Originally Added On: August 31st, 2014]
- FM1 Hickey vs Ashkenazi - Video [Last Updated On: August 31st, 2014] [Originally Added On: August 31st, 2014]
- FMFinal Riles vs Ashkenazi - Video [Last Updated On: September 1st, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 1st, 2014]
- QCC1 Ashkenazi vs Todd - Video [Last Updated On: September 1st, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 1st, 2014]
- Who are the Ashkenazi Jews? (with pictures) [Last Updated On: September 2nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 2nd, 2014]
- FM2 Kostadinov vs Ashkenazi - Video [Last Updated On: September 2nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 2nd, 2014]
- FM1 Kostadinov vs Ashkenazi - Video [Last Updated On: September 2nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 2nd, 2014]
- Charlotte Main Rd3 Ashkenazi vs Stuart Thompson - Video [Last Updated On: September 2nd, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 2nd, 2014]
- Canadian researchers track Angelina effect on cancer gene screening [Last Updated On: September 4th, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 4th, 2014]
- Ashkenazi Jews Are NOT From Judah (CHRISTIAN OVERCOMERS) - Video [Last Updated On: September 4th, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 4th, 2014]
- Despite advances, ovarian cancer survival rates refuse to budge [Last Updated On: September 5th, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 5th, 2014]
- Angelina Jolie Effect Doubles BRCA Testing; @ProMedicaHealth Cancer Genetics Expert Discusses the Importance of ... [Last Updated On: September 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 6th, 2014]
- Sofer compares Sephardi and Ashkenazi sefer Torah - Video [Last Updated On: September 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: September 6th, 2014]
Comments