Our 2013 study found that an overwhelming majority of U.S. Jews (89%) say a person can be Jewish if he/she is strongly critical of Israel. Fewer than half (43%) say caring about Israel is an essential part of what being Jewish means to them: https://t.co/QSPbi7G3mZ pic.twitter.com/ugMhLR2OzG
— Pew Research Religion (@PewReligion) March 12, 2019
Suggested reading and viewing for proper understanding of universal brotherhood and anti-Semitism
BBC Video: The Big Questions: Is anti-Zionism anti-Semitic
As an Israeli American, I agree with Ilhan Omar much more than the US politicians weaponising antisemitism
Debunking the myth that anti-Zionism is anti-Semitic
Bernie Sanders Hires First-Ever Muslim Presidential Campaign Manager
The Muslim Times’ Collection to Show, Islam or the Holy Quran are Not Anti-Semitic
CNN Documentary: Ultra-orthodox Jews and Israel’s Struggle with Secularism
Why Did Muhammad Fly to Jerusalem?
How can we build the Third Temple together?
True Fasting: A Message of Compassion and Love from the Old Testament

Dome of the rock and the Western wall in Jerusalem. Suggested reading: Our Growing Collection to Refute Antisemitism
Categories: Anti-Semitism, Collection of articles, Demographics, Israel, Judaism, The Muslim Times
You don’t stop being who you are just because you don’t agree with what others are doing.
Well, a person can be jewish even if eating pork and not attending any religious function. That is because ‘Jewish’ is both a religious and a racial thing. When a Muslim leaves his / her religion he / she is gone. When a Jew leaves his / her religion he / she is still a Jew (by race). The advantage of this way of thinking is that th next generation may again come back being both racially and religiously Jewish. When someone leaves any other religion usually ‘gone is gone’. (comments welcome if you have other views).
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ATbyOuk0bvE&w=700&h=385%5D