History Summarized: Persistence of Judaism

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 6. 04. 2017
  • Gooooood morning everybody! Today, Blue finishes the trilogy of Abrahamic religions with a video summarizing the history of the Hebrew people and the Jewish faith. There's a lot of ground to cover, so fasten your seatbelts for a twenty-minute rundown of the facts, the theories, and the ever-so-popular misconceptions!
    Look forward to next time, when Blue brings it all together to talk about Religious Wars and Religious Philosophy!
    PATREON: www.patreon.com/user?u=4664797
    MERCH LINKS:
    Shirts - overlysarcasticproducts.threa...
    All the other stuff - www.cafepress.com/OverlySarcas...
    Find us on Twitter @OSPCZcams!

Komentáře • 3K

  • @grozwald
    @grozwald Před 4 lety +7343

    A Jewish friend of mine had the best summary of nearly every Jewish holiday: "They tried to kill us and they failed. Let's eat."

    • @leinagoldman2817
      @leinagoldman2817 Před 4 lety +244

      literally everyone says this

    • @faeriedragon348
      @faeriedragon348 Před 4 lety +311

      As another Jewish person; yeah pretty much

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Před 4 lety +113

      except Yom Kippur

    • @nodeloliver6201
      @nodeloliver6201 Před 4 lety +86

      Don't forget the parts involving slavery, burning/razing of things, being thrown out of their homes, and ALL the racism... probably missing some stuff though.

    • @batyalivni3577
      @batyalivni3577 Před 4 lety +100

      I'm Jewish. This is painfully accurate

  • @ladyvincenza
    @ladyvincenza Před 3 lety +1964

    Jewish history: What doesn't kill you causes you to develop an amazing sense of humor as a coping device.

    • @samuelforesta
      @samuelforesta Před 2 lety +9

      Lol

    • @DarkLadyLeora
      @DarkLadyLeora Před 2 lety +71

      I think you have done it, you have summed up Judaism.

    • @SamButler22
      @SamButler22 Před 2 lety +43

      Pretty sure Ireland agrees with that sentiment

    • @hexlith
      @hexlith Před 2 lety +21

      And allot of food, so much holydays revolve around food its great

    • @emperorbooglitch8540
      @emperorbooglitch8540 Před 2 lety +10

      @@SamButler22 and us Latinos.

  • @thogthemighty7960
    @thogthemighty7960 Před 2 lety +485

    One of the best parts of my Jewish education was the fact that in any class about the Tanakh or Talmud, you were encouraged to ask questions, point out flaws, express your own opinion, and generally tell the teacher why he is wrong. It ends up less a class and more of a very long argument about incredibly trivial things, like carrying stuff outside a city, or how to get away with property damage. It is the only class you can take where you are encouraged to be a tricky asshole and argue about everything.

    • @bananaeclipse3324
      @bananaeclipse3324 Před rokem +37

      Yep, if you look at Nobel prizes, a large amount of them go to Jewish people. Judaism pulls out curiosity and opinion, unlike other religions which squash it. It’s like how other religions are normal schools (prying the general love of learning away from you) and Judaism is what we want schools to be like, encourage learning!While I don’t find myself part of the religious aspect anymore, I still stay with the culture.

    • @thanoscube8573
      @thanoscube8573 Před rokem +4

      @@bananaeclipse3324 me too!

    • @lazydroidproductions1087
      @lazydroidproductions1087 Před 7 měsíci +7

      Mhm. Treat the Tanakh and the Midrash and the Talmud the way the rabbis did, a centerpiece of discussion

    • @Youandme-kd3ic
      @Youandme-kd3ic Před 5 měsíci

      @@bananaeclipse3324if you read this you should be a proud Jew!! And put on teffilin!!

    • @steelgriffin7716
      @steelgriffin7716 Před 4 měsíci

      It certainly serves as an insight into SO MANY Jews being scientists, researchers, explorers, scholars in general. Asking questions and arguing about it, discussion, sussing it out... It's integral to your identity.

  • @Steven_O_1982
    @Steven_O_1982 Před 3 lety +715

    Btw with that joke at the end; the Talmud actually has a story whereby a voice from the heavens tells a group Rabbis that one opinion is correct, and they respond with "The Torah is not in the heaven, you don't get to decide what's correct anymore"

    • @SK-tg5qj
      @SK-tg5qj Před 3 lety +69

      I was going to comment this. It's possibly my favorite and personal connection to Judaism

    • @MrSlicekill
      @MrSlicekill Před 2 lety +140

      Using death of the author on god. What a powermove

    • @kiraina25
      @kiraina25 Před 2 lety +59

      Reminder that one of the primary founders of our homeland, Yaakov, earned the name Yisrael by _wrestling_ a divine presence that is sometimes argued to have actually been Adonai Themself. Hence the name Yisrael, meaning "one who contests with G-d".

    • @shirtzemah4560
      @shirtzemah4560 Před 2 lety +12

      "כי לא בשמיים היא"

    • @messianic_scam
      @messianic_scam Před 2 lety +4

      @@shirtzemah4560
      she?!

  • @internetzenmaster8952
    @internetzenmaster8952 Před 6 lety +3718

    Judaism: the "I get knocked down but I get up again" religion.

    • @sflaningam7680
      @sflaningam7680 Před 4 lety +149

      Thousands of years of suffering have proven that nobody's ever gonna keep the Jews down.

    • @mattbenz99
      @mattbenz99 Před 4 lety +120

      It is the Rocky Balboa of Raligions. It isn't about how hard you hit, it is about how hard you can get hit and still keep moving.

    • @alexpage10
      @alexpage10 Před 4 lety +56

      I can do this all day

    • @snaketooth0943
      @snaketooth0943 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sflaningam7680 *Down.

    • @BigaloMax
      @BigaloMax Před 4 lety +15

      @@alexpage10 i understood that reference

  • @aperson7199
    @aperson7199 Před 4 lety +475

    My mom once said this: you could put three Jews in a room, and end up with four different opinions. As a Jew myself, I very much can see that.

    • @technicallythecenteroftheu1349
      @technicallythecenteroftheu1349 Před 3 lety +19

      Hey, y'know, if it's a period, it proves the Rambam's point, if it's a comma, it proves Rashi's point, and if it's a grease spot, it proves Akiva's point.

    • @kiraina25
      @kiraina25 Před 2 lety +7

      @@technicallythecenteroftheu1349 So what if it's a yud? Does that prove Maimonides'?

    • @frankwest5388
      @frankwest5388 Před 2 lety +2

      kiraina25 Rambam is Maimonides’es Hebrew name.

    • @tomerschubert2095
      @tomerschubert2095 Před 2 lety +3

      @@frankwest5388 rambam is his nickname. His real name was Moshe ben Maimon

    • @frankwest5388
      @frankwest5388 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tomerschubert2095 true, he just usually referred to by that nickname, to the point where it becomes more identifiable than his real one

  • @lentoturmahub8214
    @lentoturmahub8214 Před 4 lety +1757

    Most people: Save the Library of Alexandria, kill Hitler, explore ancient Egypt
    Blue: The Buble lol

    • @Jdon-pd1tn
      @Jdon-pd1tn Před 3 lety +37

      very specific yet true nonetheless lol

    • @wandefter
      @wandefter Před 3 lety +34

      tbh if you saved the library of Alexandria, you definitely wouldn't have had Hitler lol

    • @fullmetalalchemist9126
      @fullmetalalchemist9126 Před 3 lety +10

      Also kill Mohammed

    • @MS-Melas
      @MS-Melas Před 3 lety +16

      @@fullmetalalchemist9126 killing Jesus and Constantine and Theodosius 👌🏻

    • @RelativelyBest
      @RelativelyBest Před 3 lety +16

      Pretty sure they're all Grandfather Paradoxes. But, anyway, I'd settle for figuring out the ancient Egyptian language once and for all. Hey, _vowels are a thing,_ you jackasses!

  • @batataacelerada4698
    @batataacelerada4698 Před 3 lety +421

    Person 1: "Ah yes, that period is when that people wanted to kill the jews"
    Person 2: "Which people?"
    Person 1: "All of them, except the Persians, they're cool I guess"

    • @nathanielhellerstein5871
      @nathanielhellerstein5871 Před 3 lety +8

      The Americans have been okay so far.

    • @chrono-glitchwaterlily8776
      @chrono-glitchwaterlily8776 Před 3 lety +8

      @@dimapez you can't tag the op unless they comment themselves. Assume they're talking to you when they tag you themselves

    • @chrono-glitchwaterlily8776
      @chrono-glitchwaterlily8776 Před 3 lety +10

      @@dimapez it wouldn't do anything. That would still alert everyone. Just don't respond to comments not addressed to you and you would not have to be in this type of situation again

    • @chrono-glitchwaterlily8776
      @chrono-glitchwaterlily8776 Před 3 lety +6

      @@dimapez just learn how the internet works. I'm not trying to stop you, but prevent you from having this issue again. Do with it what you will. I don't really care

    • @MWeiss-ci3qs
      @MWeiss-ci3qs Před 3 lety +6

      except for the entire story of purim

  • @nairbvel
    @nairbvel Před 4 lety +1769

    You might have been able to simplify some of the discussion by recalling two very common Jewish in-jokes: 1) The definition of a Jewish holiday: "They tried to kill us, we won, let's eat." 2) One Jew in a room is a discussion; two Jews in a room is an argument. Aside from that, you done good! :-)
    Oh, and a joke for a joke... One night, a rabbi (hey, let's call him Jacob!) notices at dinner that his son is just picking at his food, isn't participating in family discussion, and is pale & sweaty. He asks his son what's wrong, and his son nervously admits that he will be leaving in the morning because he has decided to convert to Christianity. The heartbroken rabbi finds his way to the synagogue, where his quiet prayer slowly builds into an anguished questioning. Suddenly he hears a booming voice from above... "Your son converted to Christianity? Yeah, I know how you feel..."

    • @muksimulmaad7413
      @muksimulmaad7413 Před 3 lety +159

      Lmao these jokes are fire ngl

    • @anyanon3849
      @anyanon3849 Před 3 lety +148

      As a jew, can confirm, we argue about EVERYTHING. Nothing is sacred enough for us to not argue about.

    • @HyacinthTheArtist
      @HyacinthTheArtist Před 3 lety +64

      Yep, that sounds right! Two jews, three opinions.

    • @PragmaticAntithesis
      @PragmaticAntithesis Před 3 lety +33

      I'll admit, the last joke took me a while to get.

    • @RelativelyBest
      @RelativelyBest Před 3 lety +26

      You get an upvote purely because of that second joke.

  • @latte8626
    @latte8626 Před 7 lety +976

    "Now it's three against two." I laughed so hard at that, oh my gosh.

    • @paxonite-7bd5
      @paxonite-7bd5 Před 6 lety +5

      Pokegeek151 X'D

    • @Mrsquiggley
      @Mrsquiggley Před 5 lety +26

      I normally don’t laugh much at jokes but I started uncontrollably laughing at that

    • @DamienZshadow
      @DamienZshadow Před 5 lety +8

      For the life of me, I cannot figure it out though! I hate to make anyone ever explain a joke but this went over my head somehow.

    • @rickpgriffin
      @rickpgriffin Před 5 lety +68

      The joke is that the rabbis are only treating Actual God like one voice in the argument rather than a final authority

    • @DamienZshadow
      @DamienZshadow Před 5 lety +2

      I guess but why three against two? Isn't it then two against two since it's only three rabbis?

  • @mattgreen7692
    @mattgreen7692 Před 4 lety +524

    10:30 missed the perfect opportunity for a Sodom and Gamora reference:
    "... So take what I'm saying with a Pillar of Salt."

    • @greenstarlover1
      @greenstarlover1 Před 4 lety +4

      X'D

    • @eliloeb7760
      @eliloeb7760 Před 4 lety +4

      Boo :)

    • @conallthewolf4103
      @conallthewolf4103 Před 3 lety +17

      Yeah, but you missed the reference that in the Bible there is a prophecy “epic guitar solo” that Carthage will be raised and salted so nothing will grow. There was also a specific part that said fishermen would lay their nets to dry. Then a couple hundred years later, the Romans razed and salted Carthage in the Punic Wars

    • @Ravenforce3
      @Ravenforce3 Před 3 lety +3

      @@conallthewolf4103 I've not heard of this. Where is it so I can read for myself?

    • @Emily-ye1rj
      @Emily-ye1rj Před 3 lety +3

      @@conallthewolf4103 Seriously, that's interesting. What verse/chapter/book coordinates?

  • @batyalivni3577
    @batyalivni3577 Před 4 lety +545

    I am Jewish and religious. Your viewpoint on the Tanach as allegory is one hundred percent valid. Many big names in Judaism agree, that it's not a history book; it's a rule book. I am completely orthodox; I also believe in evolution. The are not contradictory terms.
    God, I love this channel.

    • @nethanelartsi6909
      @nethanelartsi6909 Před rokem +1

      זה לא לגמרי נכון.
      מה שהוא אומר

    • @antipaladinTM
      @antipaladinTM Před rokem +7

      @@nethanelartsi6909 its his opinion , it cannot be wrong or right, its a personal thing.
      התנ''ך ברובו אכן ספר חוקים ולא צריך להתייחס אליו כספר היסטוריה אלא כמשלים לסיפורים בהם הכותבים רוצים לתת עמדה או נקודה במצב גיאופוליטי כולשהו. דוגמא סיפור הגבעה מהווה משל למשהו שקרה אחרכך וכיוצא בזאת.

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 8 měsíci +7

      Mostly agree, but there are definitely bits that make zero sense outside of it being a history book. The genealogies, for instance, which are literally a dry list of names. There's also some accounts of historical events that have _absolutely no_ decipherable moral message.
      The conclusion I draw is that it was multiple authors scrambling to cobble together as much ancient knowledge as they could before it was lost forever and who were determined to leave nothing on the cutting room floor. This would explain why _Genesis_ contains *two separate and contradictory* creation myths and why so much of the content is far from internally self-consistent.

    • @Absolute_Zero7
      @Absolute_Zero7 Před 7 měsíci

      @@GSBarlev There are actually a lot of theories on why those contradicitons exist. You can watch UserfulChart's video for a more in depth analysis, but something that was proposed that to me makes a lot of sense is that a unified Jewish State under King Solomon never existed. Instead, the separate states of Israel and Judea have always been separate, but when the North fell to the Assyrians, the people migrated to the south and all of a sudden there was a push to unify both tranditions. For instance, it could be argued that Jacob and the Patriarchs was the Southern/Judean origin story, meanwhile Moses and the Exodus was the Northern/Israelite origin story. After the fall of Israel, and especially during the post temple period, the Jews came together to basically stitch both traditions into a single continuous narrative, but of course that means there's a lot of duplication and contradictions, such as how things like the creation of the world is written twice, or why there's a huge time gap between the end of Genesis and the beginning of Exodus. Later on, the characters of King David and King Solomon were created as a historic justification to suggest that there is historical precedent for the 2 kingdoms to be united.

    • @user-qg4vt9mz3j
      @user-qg4vt9mz3j Před 7 měsíci +2

      its more of a lesson book

  • @TheNN
    @TheNN Před 6 lety +1345

    "One metric Carthage of salt"
    I get it!

  • @solitaryghost1180
    @solitaryghost1180 Před 7 lety +1798

    **drops 5 commandments** "10, 10 COMMANDMENTS!"

    • @flayremoon
      @flayremoon Před 6 lety +80

      Dallon long legs Gotta love Mel Brooks and "A History of the World, Part I"
      "'S good to be the king!"

    • @yacqubmahamoud2874
      @yacqubmahamoud2874 Před 6 lety +3

      Dallon long legs Did they happen?

    • @paxonite-7bd5
      @paxonite-7bd5 Před 6 lety +1

      Solitary Ghost XD

    • @htoodoh5770
      @htoodoh5770 Před 6 lety +13

      Andrew Stirling There was 20, the first 10 was broken.

    • @suprizeoptomist4680
      @suprizeoptomist4680 Před 5 lety +1

      MOSES! Makin' copies! The Mozo Show! Mozorino!

  • @achintyanaithani889
    @achintyanaithani889 Před 4 lety +1149

    As an Indian, it's always interesting to know about our ancient contemporaries.
    To all Hebrews, congrats for surviving against the entire world. Most others didn't.

    • @solomonz2821
      @solomonz2821 Před 4 lety +75

      Thank you :)
      There are many similarities between the Jewish tradition and the Vedic tradition. For example, the Bible says the 12 sons of Abraham and Keturah, among them Ashurim and Avida, were given gifts and sent to the lands of the east. At around the same time (correct me if I am wrong), the Vedas record great ones who came from the west. Today, there are places called ashrams (like Ashurim, whose name meant "camp"), and the word Veda even sounds like one of Abraham's sons' names. Even the word "Brahman" seems to come from "Abraham"

    • @PalmersTradingPost
      @PalmersTradingPost Před 4 lety +24

      They hate us cause they aint us. 😁

    • @pripegalapobedonosni3324
      @pripegalapobedonosni3324 Před 4 lety +51

      @@solomonz2821 brahma and saraswati, abraham and sarah. Archetypes are more or less similar all over the world. There is either a common older origin, or mutual influence/inspiration through trade and contact.

    • @JuanManuel-ii1ov
      @JuanManuel-ii1ov Před 4 lety +33

      @@pripegalapobedonosni3324 Common origin from the Proto-Indo European people, who originated somewhere around Ukraine and expanded from the brithis isles to north India.
      Because of them there are a lot of things in language, culture, genetics and religion that tie people from all over Europe to the middle east and India. A little tidbit about this that I like is that the latin and sanskrit words for fire are "igni/s" and "agni".

    • @pripegalapobedonosni3324
      @pripegalapobedonosni3324 Před 4 lety +9

      @@JuanManuel-ii1ov oganj on slavic. Or Bog from the Iranian Baga and sanskrit Bhaga.
      Also slavs had polycephalic deities as one few cultures in the world, including hinduism. Look at svantevit who is similar to brahma, or porenut with five heads like some buddha depictions, triglav with three heads like some shiva depictions etc etc. Cant recall it among celts or later British people. It makes sense with slavs since they are closer to india and eastern iranian steppe people(specifically scythians, sarmatians and alans) and are a later migration out of the steppes that they were inspired.
      There is also loan words from. both Indian and irian languages in proto slavic.

  • @adamfisher173
    @adamfisher173 Před 5 lety +404

    I just want to say it’s really heart warming to see all the nice comments on this video the last one on judaism that I watched had a neo Nazi flam war

    • @WolfHreda
      @WolfHreda Před 4 lety +30

      There's a lot of dickheads out there.

    • @dansmith1661
      @dansmith1661 Před 3 lety +6

      Calling everyone a Nazi is such a Jew thing.

    • @TheRealEvilkitten3
      @TheRealEvilkitten3 Před 3 lety +61

      @@dansmith1661 actually we tend to be pretty cautious about that. kinda a sore subject and all.

    • @dansmith1661
      @dansmith1661 Před 3 lety +2

      @Digicraftmon the Crystal Gem Sure is.

    • @tosterm
      @tosterm Před 3 lety +7

      @@dansmith1661 uh oh

  • @uilsoum875
    @uilsoum875 Před 5 lety +526

    “HEY JEWS? WANT AN EXILE?”
    “no?”
    “LOL HERE YOU GO ANYWAY”

  • @Demonslayre
    @Demonslayre Před 6 lety +3228

    Here's a joke I love for ya; A Rabbi, a Priest, and a Father are debating about whom best can spread the word of their Lord. The agree to go into the woods and convert a bear to their religion. Whoever can, is a powerful mouthpiece of God. They meet back up the following week and the Priest says "I found a bear feasting on berries. I preached to him the Good Word from the book of Genesis. His first service is this Sunday." The Father says "I found a bear drinking from a stream! I spoke to him of Revelations, and he allowed me to Baptize him then and there!". they look to the Rabbi, who is lying silent in a full body cast. The Rabbi looks to them and says "Looking back, I probably shouldn't have started with circumcision."

    • @MeinUnterkampf
      @MeinUnterkampf Před 5 lety +149

      This made my day

    • @talknight2
      @talknight2 Před 5 lety +232

      See, this is why Judaism is an in-group. You can't convince another person to become Jewish, they have to WANT IT, ad then you test them on how bad they want it before deciding if they're worthy.

    • @feelthepony
      @feelthepony Před 5 lety +56

      the whole genital mutilation is just a test then weed the weak willed then?

    • @bg8580
      @bg8580 Před 5 lety +67

      @@feelthepony It's actually the easier part lol. There are many restrictions and rules you have to obey to prove yourself "worthy".

    • @alucard347
      @alucard347 Před 5 lety +59

      @@feelthepony not exactly.
      yes, it is to weed the weak, but it is also for sanitary uses.
      According to the old jewish traditions, it would prevent sexual diseases from spreading.
      Not sure how accurate it is, but that's the general consensus.

  • @theleakypen8662
    @theleakypen8662 Před 2 lety +98

    I'm making my way through the OSP playlists and I gotta say I actually teared up at this one. I grew up as a Jew in NYC so haven't personally experienced a whole lot of antisemitism and YET it's still so rare to find non-Jewish sources of history that handle Jewish history, faith, & status as an ethnoreligion with the empathy and even-handedness shown here.
    Also, I want to say, about the nature of commentary in Judaism. One of my favorite little Jewish stories is about a man seeking to convert who goes to a series of rabbis and says, "I'm interested in converting to Judaism, but I'll only do it if you tell me the entire Torah while I stand on one leg." Most rabbis send him packing for his disrespect. But the last rabbi he visits says to him. "This is the Torah: What is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor. All the rest is commentary. Now, go and read it."
    (Also, also: all fanfiction is midrash.)

    • @poyobotyahoo7494
      @poyobotyahoo7494 Před rokem +4

      There is even a saying "כל התורה על רגל אחת"
      Basically: all this subject proven or summerised by a single sentence or action.

    • @jungletherainwing1471
      @jungletherainwing1471 Před rokem +2

      "! FANFICTION! YOU SHOULD BE ASHAMED OF YOUR HERESY"
      *I say in a mostly joking voice*

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse Před 10 měsíci +3

      I think that was Rabbi Hillel (or at least he's the one people like to credit with the saying.)

  • @SewardWriter
    @SewardWriter Před 4 lety +143

    I need to send this to my rabbi. I think he'll get a kick out of it.
    That joke is no joke, btw. Rabbanim can sometimes agree on where to go to lunch. Sometimes. This is why the office manager makes those decisions.

    • @tomerschubert2095
      @tomerschubert2095 Před 2 lety +2

      you know what they say, put two rabbis in a room and you'll end up with three jewish sects.

    • @60sspider-man29
      @60sspider-man29 Před 2 lety +5

      @@dimapez I unironically had this argument with my Mom one time...no I lied it was two time's...

    • @stephanierhall85
      @stephanierhall85 Před rokem +3

      My late-Ex-grandmother was an office manager for a whole building worth of Jewish doctors, she confirmed this argument with several stores before her passing, and crazy enough she was Jehovah. On another note, I had a Jewish neurologist doctor at the Va the receptionist settled arguments in the office too as there was a Jew, catholic, Christian, Hindi, atheist, and agnostic. The only thing they could actively agree on was that the psychology department was crazy.

  • @ArmsofLove06
    @ArmsofLove06 Před 5 lety +1340

    I'm a Jewish girl (With an upcoming batmitzfah), and this is one of the rare descriptions of Jewish history I've seen that is
    A) pretty damn accurate
    B) Goes into the deeper realms of what Judaism IS.
    I applaud you sir, good job!

    • @emmathestonedspider8676
      @emmathestonedspider8676 Před 4 lety +36

      I hope you had a great batmitzfah

    • @ghoulisnotaghost7982
      @ghoulisnotaghost7982 Před 4 lety +21

      Congratulations on your batmitzfah!
      I too had mine last year (albeit a little later in life than intended) in Israel on my Birthright trip.

    • @emmathestonedspider8676
      @emmathestonedspider8676 Před 4 lety +32

      @@Sean-no3zv shut the fuck up you anti Semitic prick

    • @ghoulisnotaghost7982
      @ghoulisnotaghost7982 Před 4 lety +37

      @@Sean-no3zv I can't tell if this is blatant anti-Semitism or a joke, so I'll treat it like the latter.
      It's one of the few industries gentiles have allowed us to (kinda sorta not really) thrive in. Let us do what we know and love.

    • @she7061
      @she7061 Před 4 lety +8

      This is late, but I hope you had a great batmitzfah! Mazel tov!!

  • @user-vn9jm2gm7k
    @user-vn9jm2gm7k Před 6 lety +1642

    Being Jewish, I absolutely agree that it's ethnicity first and religious beliefs second..and of course Tradition...great job, well done!!

    • @Erg893
      @Erg893 Před 4 lety +25

      If you believe in God how come you put ethnicity first when it is God who is the centre of the whole universe and your life is just a moment in eternity? Is God universal or just there for the Jews? Who created the other human then etc...

    • @faeriedragon348
      @faeriedragon348 Před 4 lety +59

      did you say...TRADITION!

    • @danielsjohnson
      @danielsjohnson Před 4 lety +14

      @@faeriedragon348 I also thought of the "Fiddler on the Roof" musical :)

    • @Erg893
      @Erg893 Před 4 lety +11

      @Isrel156 fanatic? Isn't it fanatic to put one over other cause they're of different ethnicity in the first place? A feature you can't even change while you can choose to follow or not follow any religion. Nationalism is the biggest threat in modern history though. Both can be radicalised while you can't do anything against nationalism being on the other side of their angle

    • @George22777
      @George22777 Před 4 lety +8

      That's stupid.. 😑
      It literally says in the Hebrew bible that one can convert to Judaism

  • @Oceaniac
    @Oceaniac Před 4 lety +192

    I’m a muslim and I agree with your theory about Judaism being an ethnicity first before being a religion! This was an amazing video. I’d love to learn more about Judaism. I also appreciate that Jewish people are encouraged to debate. I wish Muslims could debate about the meaning and context of the Quran. I firmly believe it was left so that every word could apply to everybody - so debate and discussion is necessary.

    • @kaitoyuu1925
      @kaitoyuu1925 Před 3 lety +7

      I think they do have this debate, but in a higher academic level between scholars

    • @misterbk4933
      @misterbk4933 Před 3 lety

      It wasnt it doesn’t have 5 meaninf so people who worship 10 gods is the wuran for them ? Is people who worship men n women is it for them no please don’t say such things

    • @phillipholland6795
      @phillipholland6795 Před 2 lety +6

      Muslims are actually encouraged to debate and absorb knowledge. It happens all the time. Dr. Zakir Naik is excellent. You may need to do a lot more research...

    • @antipaladinTM
      @antipaladinTM Před rokem +4

      they did try to debate, henceforth you have shia, sunny and ibadi and suffy
      (no one remmbers that islam is not just shia and sunny) , also you have the druze as offshot of islam. bektashi alevism is also islamic off shot

  • @TheFanoren
    @TheFanoren Před 4 lety +69

    Alexander the "______" jokes are one of the reasons I love this channel. Keep up the good work!

  • @MrGksarathy
    @MrGksarathy Před 5 lety +127

    About Spain, the whole systematic oppression of Jews only really started after Ferdinand and Isabella finished the Reconquista. Prior to that, Christian Spanish kings had ambivalent relationships with their conquered Jewish and Muslim subjects, mostly leaving them well enough alone, but not being cool necessarily with having to do that.

  • @galruchin6463
    @galruchin6463 Před 6 lety +203

    the joke in the end actually originates from a part of the talmud that roughly translates to "achanai's furnace". a story in which a rabi proves himself right over and over again but the other ones do not believe him. it's much more complex than that but that's where the joke originates from.

    • @fuzzytheduck6821
      @fuzzytheduck6821 Před 4 lety +6

      Randy Wilks stop proselytizing in the comment section. Please. Nobody likes it.

    • @WindspriteM
      @WindspriteM Před 4 lety +20

      @@fuzzytheduck6821 he was giving context and I appreciate it.

    • @fuzzytheduck6821
      @fuzzytheduck6821 Před 4 lety +3

      that isn’t context, he’s pushing his disguised xtian beliefs on Jews.

    • @gh0rochi363
      @gh0rochi363 Před 4 lety +4

      @@fuzzytheduck6821 even of it's not my religion I respect and even appreciate it as it gives understanding.

    • @yonatanbeer3475
      @yonatanbeer3475 Před 4 lety +3

      Ah yes, Bava Metzia 59b.

  • @josephfrank3948
    @josephfrank3948 Před 4 lety +129

    I really enjoyed this summary! One thing to consider is that this is mostly an Ashkenazi history, and that the Sephardi, Mizrahi, Ethiopian, etc. parts of Judaism also are important to the explanation of the cultural and ethnic history of Jews.

  • @Nitrinoxus
    @Nitrinoxus Před 3 lety +254

    Jewish history in seven words: "More or less _fine,_ until it _wasn't."_

    • @danfrancis2707
      @danfrancis2707 Před 2 lety

      Usuary
      Usuary
      Usuary
      Usuary
      Usuary
      Usuary
      Usuary

    • @stephenwright8824
      @stephenwright8824 Před 2 lety +9

      @@danfrancis2707 7 tries and he still didn't spell _usury_ right. -10 on message delivery.

    • @aaronsirkman8375
      @aaronsirkman8375 Před rokem

      @@danfrancis2707 Gesundheit.

  • @anaiscanepa2071
    @anaiscanepa2071 Před 6 lety +78

    God, I love this. As an atheistic Jewish person raised by parents who were married Hasidic (they're less extreme in devotion, but they married in such way so that if they or my siblings or I wish to make an aliyah one day, our Jewish identities won't be questioned), it has been important to me and other Jewish people I know that we're recognized as ethnically and culturally Jewish, and that our possible lack of belief in a godly figure does not erase the fact that we ENJOY following the traditions and the community that builds around them. More to that, one of my favorite things that my parents tell me is that "It's Jewish to question." It's just something that sticks, and could also explain why many of us question the idea of a higher power; because our culture does not look down upon those who ask questions.
    (Also, great joke lmao)

  • @SuperAsd8
    @SuperAsd8 Před 7 lety +471

    i just want to say that this video almost made me cry from happines. as an israeli jew i've been living my whole life with my jewish identity and every time i tried to understant "what is a jew?" and so "what am i?" i got confused because of the complexity of judaism. but after seeing this video everything suddenly feel into place. so thank you blue, you solved my identity crisis. and thank you for giving me something to show my non-jewish friends instead of giving me (and them) a headache.

    • @nikolavideomaker
      @nikolavideomaker Před 6 lety

      How is it complicated?

    • @booketoiles1600
      @booketoiles1600 Před 6 lety +17

      @OP Damn, youtube has come a looong way from cats videos.

    • @elsecretopez
      @elsecretopez Před 6 lety +2

      Shaked Geffen אני ממליץ לך ללמוד יותר לעומק את ההיסטוריה היהודית. הסרטון הזה הוא הנרטיב הפופולרי והמלאכותי לחלוטין.

    • @lazypoo6117
      @lazypoo6117 Před 6 lety +3

      You are a member of the longest lived ethnic group in history, who use their longevity and disproportionate power to skew world events in the favour of their tribe.
      You're a member of the Illuminati.

    • @betzalelbrook8948
      @betzalelbrook8948 Před 6 lety

      זה מאוד לא מדויק, כדאי ללמוד את הדעה של היהודים בנושא ;)

  • @rainbowlack
    @rainbowlack Před 3 lety +77

    I'm Jewish, and I adore this video. The in-depth analyses and compassion shown to my people by you brought me to tears. Thank you so much.

  • @JustVince7810
    @JustVince7810 Před 10 měsíci +27

    The fact that Judaism gets knocked around and keep trucking even to this day is simply amazing. They already gained my respect.

  • @heartears
    @heartears Před 6 lety +415

    My teacher during my last year of high school said that The Bible is a source of wisdom not knowledge.
    Taking the words literally will stop you from gaining the wisdom The Bible had to offer.
    I love her interpretation of the Genesis.
    Adam was made in the image of God does not mean that he looks like God or that we are molded to look like him. It means that humanity (Adam means human) was made using the image we interpret God as. It means that humanity was made under the image of love, kindness, and light.
    However, I believe that it could also mean that if you interpret God as vindictive, intolerant, and merciless, so would you be.

    • @alucard347
      @alucard347 Před 5 lety +26

      an interesting interpertation.
      I haven't thought about it as such, honestly, so thank you for food for thought!

    • @ThingsStuffington
      @ThingsStuffington Před 5 lety +31

      I've always heard the statement of Adam being made in God's image interpreted as more of a mental thing. It was not that man's was body created in the imagine of some divine body, but that the human mind was created in the image of the divine mind. I suppose the moral one can take from that is that our capacity to imagine and understand is limitless, and is thus the aspect of humanity that is closest to the divine.

    • @bluesbest1
      @bluesbest1 Před 4 lety +11

      That's actually a really good interpretation. You view the world around you with a mirror, after all.
      My religion, and therefore I, think that we are essentially made with the form that God has, i.e. human, but each person is, has always been, and always will be, individual. Some people, like Christ, look exactly like one of their parents, while others have very little of their actual parents' features.

    • @BlackEpyon
      @BlackEpyon Před 4 lety +9

      Metaphore is the kindest description one could give of Genesis, since it's hardly factual. The one part that even gets close is chapter 11, featuring the Marduk ziggurat, aka, the Tower of Babel, and even that is just because the structure actually existed. The tower was abandoned, not because people forgot how to communicate, but because the empire surrounding it broke down, and consequently, everybody forgot how to read and write cuneiform. Everything before that is GROSSLY inaccurate as a historical or scientific refrence, and is based on elder mythos, where everything after chapter 11 is better viewed as an "origin story" of where the Hebrew people came from. The latter part of Exodus might be viewed as a beginning of a chronicle of legendary conquest by a scattering of nomadic tribes, but the first part of it (Moses and the Exodus) has no basis in historical fact whatsoever.

    • @elijahdapaedobaptiza4831
      @elijahdapaedobaptiza4831 Před 4 lety +2

      Hebrew language and culture is more focused on function and not appearance. However, even though it is very likely we dont look the same as God, theres not enough evidence to prove that we dont. The word for image in the creation account is 'tselem' which literally means a shadow or an imitation of an original object (which would be a shadow). 'Tselem' is also the same word used for an idol, which is a physical representation of a deity.

  • @thezeitos469
    @thezeitos469 Před 4 lety +105

    You just a gotta love the Achaemenid Persians. Those were (mostly) really swell dudes and great empire builders.

  • @discordiadingle3203
    @discordiadingle3203 Před 3 lety +37

    This was very cathartic to hear. I was raised Jewish but decided that I’m agnostic. I never lost my ties with the culture of Judaism though. I’d say I’m culturally Jewish, but my religious beliefs fall more in line with being agnostic.

    • @brynbloom5993
      @brynbloom5993 Před rokem +5

      same except I consider myself culturally Jewish and religiously atheist. but somehow those can co-exist.
      I remember being 13 and going to talk to my rabbi before my bat mitzvah and telling him, this man who had watched me grow up, known me and my family my whole life. and telling him I didn't think I believed in God and him saying ok, let's talk about it. there was no judgement, no get out, no you're wrong just let's talk about it. the most he really questioned me was asking if any of the lessons I learned from the Torah were less relevant now. through my entire entire learning we always looked at the Torah as a set of stories to teach moral lessons

    • @bananaeclipse3324
      @bananaeclipse3324 Před rokem +2

      Same here except I count myself as atheist.

    • @bananaeclipse3324
      @bananaeclipse3324 Před rokem +2

      @@brynbloom5993 same here, while I never outright said I’m atheist to my rabbi, all through Sunday school I was always pointing out the bs in the Torah. Yet something I always appreciated was when they said to not focus on the god part but more so the morals and lessons from it. Honestly, this video just helped me understand the whole process I went through. Another thing is, at my temple something that was said often, or at least at the start of services was that EVERYONE was allowed to attend, no matter what you believe, you can always have sanctuary in a temple.
      Judaism has made it through all the oppression through thousands of years because we learned to respect, forgive, and most importantly tolerate other peoples beliefs.
      Every Jew has their own beliefs towards Judaism, the religion/culture would have fallen apart if it wasn’t accepting.
      Judaism is about learning.

  • @lynnwaterhouse2906
    @lynnwaterhouse2906 Před 7 lety +650

    Thank yo SO much for this! I'm an ultraorthodox jew and I have rarely if ever seen a respectful, factual representation for judaism.This was so awesome! thank you so much. On an important side note: it really really depends what kind of rabbi you ask about allegory/literal (reform, orthodox, ultraorthodox, hasidic...)

    • @lynnwaterhouse2906
      @lynnwaterhouse2906 Před 7 lety +26

      Also that joke you told basically happened according to jewish tradition (Achnai's oven)

    • @nowhereman6019
      @nowhereman6019 Před 7 lety +6

      Lynn Waterhouse Recently I've been trying to understand Jews and anti semitism. Can you give me a brief rundown?

    • @lynnwaterhouse2906
      @lynnwaterhouse2906 Před 7 lety +11

      Nowhere Man wow. that is a tall order. can you specify some exact questions?
      if you are in the mood to do some reading chabad.org has some interesting articles as well as a lot of information on judaism.
      i would love to answer any questions (if i can)

    • @nowhereman6019
      @nowhereman6019 Před 7 lety +4

      Lynn Waterhouse Can you explain anything about Jews in Poland in the 14th to 15th centuries? From what I've heard (that not being much) is that they bankrupted Poland by making most of the wheat farmed into alcohol, which led to the starvation of Poland. Is there any truth to this? Is it Russian bias on the part of the Czar?

    • @lynnwaterhouse2906
      @lynnwaterhouse2906 Před 7 lety +6

      Nowhere Man i have less knowledge than i would like about polish jewery in the 14th and 15th centuries so i will do a bit of research and get back to you. it is a few minutes to sabbath where i am so i will only be online again saturday night. hopefully then i will have a full answer and some sources.

  • @JTPri12345
    @JTPri12345 Před 7 lety +633

    You know that joke about Russian history and how it only ever gets worse. Yeah, they got that wrong. Jewish history is a freaking roller coaster.

    • @myohmy9000
      @myohmy9000 Před 7 lety +146

      JTPri12345 Jewish history is a roller coaster were the tracks break and the car falls off from the theme park and down a very rocky mountain were Hitler is standing at the bottom with a rifle

    • @paulsuresh5270
      @paulsuresh5270 Před 7 lety +29

      Chris Ramsey and that's only a slight exaggeration, and it continues to go down

    • @user-vn9jm2gm7k
      @user-vn9jm2gm7k Před 6 lety +22

      Try Jewish people who live in Russia/former Soviet Union...😊now, that's a brain-twister..

    • @Grim_Sister
      @Grim_Sister Před 6 lety +78

      Old Jewish breakdown of our holidays:
      Group tried to kill us.
      Group failed.
      WE EAT!

    • @St0ckwell
      @St0ckwell Před 6 lety +8

      Owning all the banks, medias, governments, web infrastructure, and getting to invade and genocide Palestine with no consequences sure is victimhood at its worst.

  • @michaelweiss2790
    @michaelweiss2790 Před 4 lety +46

    I was so happy hearing a good representation of the history of my people, but when you called the Hebrew Bible the Tanakh instead of just the Torah... wow that made me feel special :)

  • @HeyLookASquirrl
    @HeyLookASquirrl Před 4 lety +39

    ...huh. You know, "Jewish law" is a phrase I've heard plenty of times (being Jewish and all). Somehow it didn't click until this video that, A, Judaism really is more a system of law than a belief system, and B, the extent to which my views on religion in general have been shaped by that fact. ("Suddenly a lot of things make sense" is always a great feeling: thanks for providing me an opportunity to feel it!)

  • @faeb.8597
    @faeb.8597 Před 7 lety +570

    tbh seeing all the happy jewish people in the comments makes my heart happy

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 6 lety +3

      Christianity is the biggest threat to Judaism
      As long as it exist, the Jews should be wary of them

    • @a.morphous66
      @a.morphous66 Před 5 lety +16

      Happy Jews make a happy you.

    • @a.morphous66
      @a.morphous66 Před 5 lety +25

      Christian Dauz I don’t think that’s how things work. Judaism and Christianity are perfectly capable of coexisting, as Jerusalem’s population and the current state of the globalization of the west have proven.

    • @prestonjones1653
      @prestonjones1653 Před 5 lety +9

      @@christiandauz3742
      Also a fun fact, Hindu Indian pricipalities (and to a slightly lesser extent the Muslim Mughals) has been one of the two best places on Earth to be a Jewish minority (the other being Japan). To this day there is still a maassively Jewish area in India called Kochin (ofc given that Israel exists now it's been mostly depopulated due to emigration or aliyah), originally a trading port city started up in the Bronze Age, supposedly by merchants sent by King Solomon/Shlomo himself, it grew into a Jewish cultural and religious center for over 2500 years.
      Also, Jews who were fleeing the Holocaust and were barred from Britain and the US fled to the German ally Japan, and the Japanese Empire would guarantee their safety. Mussolini's Italy also attempted this but, being Mussolini's Italy, it didn't go over very well and towards the end they were forced to comply with Berlin. Ironically, Jews were the only gaijin the Japanese didn't hate at that time, mostly due to how similar Jewish practices and Japanese culture were. Also the stark contrast between the Jews, who shut up, sat in their corner shops, and paid theor taxes with a smile, vs the Christians who held up a map of the Spanish Empire and said "Convert or die," probably had a little something to do with it too.

    • @notajalapeno4442
      @notajalapeno4442 Před 5 lety

      Thanks

  • @DoReMi123acb
    @DoReMi123acb Před 7 lety +53

    Thank you so much for this :) I am not Jewish, but i am friends with a lot of Jewish people. They are one of the most tenacious and forward thinking people out there (next to Rwandans). Despite all the centuries of persecution they received, they continued to better themselves and their society, rather than act like victims. As a black man, I am always inspired by their strength of character.

  • @batyalivni3577
    @batyalivni3577 Před 4 lety +63

    I cannot begin to describe the enormous amount of pride I hold as a Jew. My people are the strongest, the most faithful people. *Thank you* for talking about this. I'm so used to casual anti-Semitism at this point, this more positive viewpoint can _not_ be taken for granted. Thank you, blue.

    • @bananaeclipse3324
      @bananaeclipse3324 Před rokem +4

      Fellow Jew here, while I count myself as atheist, I still participate in the culture, because it is still very important to me.
      Also do you also find it almost funny that Christianity is one of the most oppressive religions to Judaism and yet it is literally AN OFFSHOOT of it!

  • @GingerwillowTheFeatheryOwl
    @GingerwillowTheFeatheryOwl Před 3 lety +15

    11:21 Hebrew does have vowels you just don't write them. When I was learning the language I used vowels but eventually you don't need them anymore since you know the word. That's why you don't seen any vowels on signs, in books, etc.
    By the way, I adore your videos and have learned so much more from them then I have in school. They have really helped me especially with online learning. So thank you so much!

    • @user-uo9gg2zc6j
      @user-uo9gg2zc6j Před 3 lety +2

      Nikud is not exactly vowels since they're not letters.
      Except for 5 letters that can also be used as vowels and do get written in texts

  • @andrewfrumkin9632
    @andrewfrumkin9632 Před 6 lety +57

    You know, that joke is actually a famous Talmudic debate that happened (maybe or whatever), and is often used to demonstrate how after the Torah was given, the interpretation of the laws and their execution in the world was given to mankind to debate and discuss on their own, so that even though the original intent of the law (from god) went along with "Jacob", the details of the law went along with the majority of the Rabbis decision. There are a bunch of other things like this too around the books

    • @adamfreed2291
      @adamfreed2291 Před 4 lety +5

      God gave a set of rules that were best for the people of the time, but the rules must evolve alongside the people. The word of God we follow is there to keep us on the same spirit of the law, even if the rules themselves change to fit an ever-changing world.

    • @pudgeboyardee32
      @pudgeboyardee32 Před 4 lety +4

      I was raised as a lutheran and so my teachers tried always to take us back to simpler, older worship and they even encouraged questions on theistic matters based on accounts from the bible of temple life, in particular, jesus and his debates in the temple as a child. Lutheranism was conceived to take christianity back to its judaic roots in many ways(not intentionally perhaps, but it was the only well to go to) so it seemed important to my teachers that we have that sort of lively debate around the nature of god and faith. They tried to help raise us according to the law from the book. They tried to teach the ideas behind the stories instead of just recitation. Why Lot opened his doors and gave his daughters to the crowd was explained not just as sacrifice for its own sake but as a function of the rules of hospitality. I dont know if im atheistic now but im sure temples should be for debate and not a matter of simple attendance. As ive gotten older ive appreciated judaism more and more and realized i decided a long time ago for myself to hold to the book, with a few exceptions for diet. I honestly consider myself more culturally jewish than anything else and its because of how the bible was taught to me by christians. And i feel like that fits pretty well with judaism in general: it is a body of law but it is also, at the same time, a nebulous thing representative of a nebulous and varied people. Am i a jew? Probably not. Do i love getting into it with rabbis? Definitely. Ill leave it to you what that really makes me lol hebrew curious? Gentile with benefits? Who knows but i do love debating the faith and the book and the context of the history around it

    • @eliloeb7760
      @eliloeb7760 Před 4 lety +4

      @@pudgeboyardee32 you might want to look into the noahide movement as I'm an orthodox Jew myself but Judaism does not require that everyone be Jewish. May G-d aid you on your journey

    • @dawnadmin8119
      @dawnadmin8119 Před 3 lety +1

      “My children have defeated me!”

  • @horseofkhorne
    @horseofkhorne Před 6 lety +120

    Islam was very hit and miss with Judaism. It’s very dependant on the region and the culture and the ruler. There were massacres in Arabia and the Levant but peace and prosperity in Spain and Egypt. Baghdad saw both oppression and great harmony.

    • @user-dl5ln3wd6f
      @user-dl5ln3wd6f Před 5 lety +1

      Name me some of these massacres?

    • @alucard347
      @alucard347 Před 5 lety +13

      @@user-dl5ln3wd6f
      The ones I know of are mostly from the later 19th century and early 20th century, but I heard there were some others across the years.
      however, For the most part, while still being second class citizens, jews were living pretty normal lives in muslim coutnries.

    • @aredjayc2858
      @aredjayc2858 Před 5 lety +14

      @@user-dl5ln3wd6f The Banu Qurayza were slaughtered by Muhammed. That's one Islamic sources agree on, there are others that are disputed so I only gave the one that Islamic sources agree on

    • @user-dl5ln3wd6f
      @user-dl5ln3wd6f Před 5 lety +21

      ARedJay C
      If I remember correctly, there was a peace treaty between the Muslims and the Banu Qurayza who broke that treaty.

    • @smashing-3291
      @smashing-3291 Před 3 lety

      @negro bsr as we can see from what? don't make shit up...

  • @TheAwesomeprogrammer
    @TheAwesomeprogrammer Před 2 lety +17

    At 14:35 , a Rabbi I know actually wrote his Master's thesis on the similarities between Daoism and Judaism so even within Jewish communities this similarity is known lol

  • @tentavision5019
    @tentavision5019 Před 4 lety +23

    11:38
    A: The Bible.
    B: That says The Buble.
    A: YOU DARE QUESTION THE WORDS-

  • @nickshaffer80
    @nickshaffer80 Před 6 lety +104

    What is the exact conversion of Carthages to Kilograms?

  • @someguy4384
    @someguy4384 Před 7 lety +419

    Dang. This was pretty accurate. I've never seen/heard anyone, besides other Jews, tell the history of our people so... correctly.
    And that end joke is very funny. Very, very funny. I mean "fell out of my bed and hurt my back, but kept laughing," funny. Jesus, man.

    • @MrEvanfriend
      @MrEvanfriend Před 6 lety +11

      It kinda completely ignored/denied the centuries of persecution the Jews suffered at the hands of the paynim, and even claimed that there was harmony between the Jews and a death cult whose holy book specifically mentions slaughtering the Jews by name in more than one place.

    • @someguy4384
      @someguy4384 Před 6 lety +19

      Evan Friend
      There was actually a few centuries where Jews were treated as... well, sort of like "Slaves, but better." Many Jews were able to live happy lives.
      But yeah... golden chains still bite the skin. Can't deny that.

    • @MrEvanfriend
      @MrEvanfriend Před 6 lety +3

      Trent Pattillo There were also relatively routine pogroms.

    • @adamsbja
      @adamsbja Před 6 lety +32

      I love that end joke, though I've heard it in the form of a parable.
      Shammai says "if I am correct, let this river flow backwards" and Hillel replies "what does a river know of the Law?"
      Shammai says "if I am correct, may the wall of the synagogue fall down" and Hillel's response is "the shul houses learning, but that does not make it a scholar."
      Then Shammai invokes God, to whom Hillel responds with "stay out of this! You gave us the Laws, and now they're ours to interpret. Let Shammai make his own argument."
      And God left pleased in his children.

    • @Pixelated__Vision
      @Pixelated__Vision Před 5 lety +3

      How do you know he doesn't have a Jewish background?

  • @baronvonbeandip
    @baronvonbeandip Před 3 lety +10

    17:59 I think there's a very interesting parallel in Shintoism. It's not that you worship kami every sunday (though you could). It's the practice of respect and mindfulness because god(s) are everywhere.

  • @CrimsonFox36
    @CrimsonFox36 Před 3 lety +115

    I admire the Hebrews. They've existed fro thousands of years despite the perpetual existence of those who would rather they not.
    Better still, part of their culture is remembering their ancestors who told said hateful people to "Fuck off!"
    Party strong, my dudes!

    • @roeypervo3688
      @roeypervo3688 Před 2 lety +3

      thx homie!

    • @TheXtremeBoltGuy
      @TheXtremeBoltGuy Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you, my good man

    • @HumorHouse42
      @HumorHouse42 Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you :D

    • @danfrancis2707
      @danfrancis2707 Před 2 lety

      Why do they keep getting kicked out of places?

    • @kiraina25
      @kiraina25 Před 2 lety +5

      @@danfrancis2707 There's no real one answer to this. Part of it is tribalism - just about every person in the Middle East has claimed rightful ownership over all of it (which is why modern Jerusalem is an enormous mishmash of Christian, Jewish, and Muslim inhabitants, and why the current Israeli parliament is made up of about 1/6 ethnic Arabs), so there's always been conflict and different groups driving other groups out. Part of it is conquest - c.f. the Babylonians kicking our sand castle over at the start of the video for no other real reason than "nice place you've got here, I own it now."
      But a lot of it hinges on the way the Church has tried to have it both ways with Jews since... basically the first or second century CE. Strap in, this is a long one - long enough that noted Catholic historian James Carroll was able to write a nearly-700 page treatise on the subject, which explains this in far more detail and sobering revelation than I can muster in a CZcams comment - if you'd rather do that, "Constantine's Sword" is your berth. If you'd rather just see my attempts to sum up one of his core theses... strap in.
      As you probably are aware, Church tradition holds that the Pharisees, the forerunners of Rabbinic Judaism, arrested Jesus of Nazareth for blasphemy, brought him before Pontius Pilate, and demanded that he be put to death. The story has a number of, shall we say, aspects which appear to have been embelished, on top of this. Most notably, Pontius Pilate by all historical records was a brutal and vicious man, making the idea that he pleaded with the Pharisees to spare Jesus and then "washed his hands" of the crime. The sum total of this is that the core story of Christ's crucifixion is also an open and direct condemnation of the Jews _as a people._ And if you look at the liturgies of Mass up until around the 1950s, you see this position clear as a bell in the text; John Paul XXIII had a _lot_ of work to do trying to scrub out things like "wicked Jews" from the text.
      So you have, essentially at the core of Christian learning, the exhortation that the Jews killed Jesus, that the Jews reject the Bible - this is even why the Tanakh becomes the "Old" Testament, because it is supposed to be supplanted by the "New" Testament comprised of the Gospels and attendant works. This learned animus is the source of many endemic lies about the Jews, like the blood libel, a false charge that -Hollywood elites- Jews are kidnapping children and using their blood -to get high on adrenochrome- in blasphemous rituals. Because the Jews, after all, don't follow God, they _refuse_ to follow God, else why wouldn't they follow the _New_ covenant between God and Their people and accept Christ as their messiah?
      At the same time, the Church wanted the Jews alive to serve as an _example._ We were a useful boogeyman to have around to point to and say, "thus are the wages of sin, this is what you must not become" - and also to _punish_ as an example to show people what should happen to sinners and to those who reject the Most High. This is where we got things like edicts banning Jews from owning property (thereby forcing them to subsist as bankers and moneylenders) and the ghettos, the first of which was established in _the Vatican_ and surrounded by a -big, beautiful- wall which -Mexico- the Jews were forced to pay for the construction of.
      The Church wanted the Jews to go on existing, but also to subject them to perpetual punishment. It's perhaps no surprise that this dissonance, bordering on doublethink, led to murder and massacre again, and again, and again, and again. As early as the 400s, there were high-ranking Church officials like Ambrose who would hold the position that it was not only right but a moral imperative to _burn synagogues_ but also that the Jews should not be _killed._ (Said official was later canonized as a saint, and remains on the rolls to this day, just in case you thought that the Church is actually ready to make a serious committment to rooting this shit out.)
      On top of this, as Blue points out, Jews were frequently _forced_ into purely commerce-based careers like moneylending. But the same people who enacted these edicts also fostered a stigma against usury and banking; both forcing Jews into a single small sector of the workforce and then villainizing that very sector. It's no surprise that Jews came to be seen as pariahs, because yes, Varis, *it was by design.*
      (Why yes, this is also why _certain people_ refuse to shut the hell up about the Rothschilds in parts of society that have deemed it unacceptable to -hold up signs as a "joke" that- say "death to all Jews".)
      But of course it's also true that at the heart of it, Jews were severed from their homeland. Perhaps that's why it's so easy to draw parallels between us and the Romani, who are one of the only other major ethnic groups to go through a diaspora that spans centuries? They even have their own version of the blood libel, although theirs is more an excuse for authority figures to raid their camps and make off with anyone with the audacity to not "look like a g*psy".

  • @MrJordanK
    @MrJordanK Před 5 lety +49

    Great attempt to summarize a complex history of the Jewish people. I found every few sentences of this video to weigh heavy. As a non traditional god believing Jew, I do like the explanation of the laws at the end. It is these rules that have given us a culture that has lasted through the centuries. I will also mention that one thing that I find has held the culture together is the emphasis on keeping the tradition of the holidays. Great video!

  • @milfmereel4586
    @milfmereel4586 Před 6 lety +34

    also, a lot of times if you ask a Jew what the bible is they'll say that its a guideline for being a good person and being the best you can be. and they like to point out that being your best does not mean perfect. they teach the kind of stories other people might 'push under a rug' of some of our most celebrated leaders. they show that we have limits and we should strive to reach them.

  • @cediviannareeda4305
    @cediviannareeda4305 Před 4 lety +32

    Ah, the Bmehheimeieh period, your pronunciation is flawless

  • @maxk4324
    @maxk4324 Před 2 lety +14

    As a jew with a much more agnostic view of God, thank you for explaining the cultural and historical contexts of Judaism so that everyone else can understand what I try (and usually fail) to explain when the topic of religion VS ethnicity comes up.

  • @joshuahauser9050
    @joshuahauser9050 Před 6 lety +47

    Very impressed! I'm a religious Jew and you very accurately and respectfully described a lot of my heritage. Thank you for being factual and truthful! B'vakasha achi

    • @ianlilley2577
      @ianlilley2577 Před 4 lety

      Since your religious and not secular what did you think of him calling the Bible allegorical?

  • @davemonkey26
    @davemonkey26 Před 5 lety +503

    The Old Testament could of been called the Buble?
    Buble...
    I always knew Micheal Buble was holy.

    • @edpankov
      @edpankov Před 4 lety +26

      In that alternate reality, rome would have become "reme" and justin bieber would become "theo boober"

    • @TheWeeabooCrewGamers
      @TheWeeabooCrewGamers Před 4 lety +15

      “That says the Bibble”

    • @SeaJay_Oceans
      @SeaJay_Oceans Před 4 lety +4

      11:28 Going to Booble study sounds a bit different - but hey, BIBAION / BUBLION ... same contents.

    • @TheOne-fe8wk
      @TheOne-fe8wk Před 4 lety +1

      A Nigerian Prince that’s why he only appear at Xmas, to praise Jesus

    • @PlanetZoidstar
      @PlanetZoidstar Před 4 lety +2

      @@TheWeeabooCrewGamers *"YOU DARE MOCK THE WORD OF THE GREAT JIMMY?!"*

  • @miraf.3432
    @miraf.3432 Před 3 lety +13

    'so it's one explanation that I happen to quite like amidst multiple viable options'
    good job, blue, you're already in the jewish mindset!

  • @maraiilavan7012
    @maraiilavan7012 Před 4 lety +23

    “Moses Maimonides-“
    HOLY SHIT ITS RAMBAAAAAAAAM

  • @nickpinto9181
    @nickpinto9181 Před 6 lety +206

    "Hebrew doesn't have vowels"?????? No. The Hebrew script doesn't write short vowels by default, but the language most definitely has vowels.

    • @yonatanbeer3475
      @yonatanbeer3475 Před 6 lety +1

      Nick Pinto which letters?

    • @phinhager6509
      @phinhager6509 Před 5 lety +20

      @@yonatanbeer3475 they are added in under the letters.

    • @jackielinde7568
      @jackielinde7568 Před 5 lety +38

      @Nick Pinto Eh, from a certain perspective, he's correct. Outside of prayer books (written for the benefit of poor slobs like me) and early grade school books, vowel markings are pretty much non-existent. And, Hebrew's perchance for playing with letters to make new words probably only includes the consonant letters, and not the vowels. If he's correct on the origin of the world "Tanakh", notice there is no O sound following the Tav character, but Torah does have the O sound following it's Tav. Simply put, yeah, they're there, but they're so rarely used they might as well not be there.

    • @_chew_
      @_chew_ Před 5 lety +17

      @@jackielinde7568 The O sound in Torah comes from the letter Vav. Since the acronym only uses the first letter of each word, it only takes the Tav from Torah. Vav is sometimes pronounced like an O, sometimes a U, and other times a V, so depending on the context, it can be a vowel.

    • @jackielinde7568
      @jackielinde7568 Před 5 lety +4

      @@_chew_ well, it's been years since I last flunked Hebrew 101 in college. :P

  • @IONATVS
    @IONATVS Před 5 lety +79

    When someone asks “Do you believe the Bible is true?” the best answer is “Do you believe the library is true?” The Bible, old testament AND new are compilations, not single continuous works like the Qu’ran. And the different books making up the Bible are often in completely different genres, written down by different human authors (even if you believe the words were dictated directly by the big man himself, He at least gave them words that matched their writing style) intended for different audiences with different expectations for the mixture of historical fact, allegorical truism, and artistic license to be included.
    (For the record I’m a Catholic, and the official stance of the Church on the Bible is that God inspired the right people to write about the right subjects, and do so without introducing anything obviously errant-at least not when read in the light of the full Bible and surrounding Tradition of apostolic teachings-but didn’t dictate their exact words, so metaphors, artistic license, and phrases that, when taken out of that proper context, teach the wrong things (like the half the book of Jonah) are absolutely present)

    • @jmercedesd
      @jmercedesd Před 3 lety +11

      Going to insert myself here as a no-longer-practicing Catholic (unless you count that OVERWHELMING guilt complex) to say that even that Church's view of the Bible is extremely tilted as they decided entire books weren't REALLY meant to be part of the Bible at all and you should just ignore those (re: everything considered apocryphal). Then again, it was basically the Catholic Church going "we need to make sure only OUR version of the Bible gets read and obeyed! Chuck all those books describing heaven and the fall of Lucifer and the ones that might have been written by women".

    • @albehoe2327
      @albehoe2327 Před 3 lety +2

      At least, in a Library, the books are codified and classified according to genre, date published, etc. The Bible is just a mix of mysticism interspersed with a little pinch of history.

    • @melofiloxd1429
      @melofiloxd1429 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jmercedesd what the hell are you on about?
      1- it was the Catholic Church that compiled the Bible in the first place, ask around the first few centuries of Christianity for a Bible and they'll say to you "a what?"
      2- If they compiled the Bible, and they did, what the hell would they be "removing" from? Indeed, the only dude who removed Books from Holy Scripture was Martin Luther (The Deuterocanons, what he called "Apocrypha").
      3- When Martin Luther removed several books of the Holy Scripture (for in there he found evidence that his heretical schism could not have been justified), he kept them as part of the Bible (apparently he thought a book could be Biblical but not Holy Scripture) but a century and a half later prots ultimately removed the Deuterocanons from the Bible as a whole, and after that you'll struggle to even find a mere mention of them among protestant circles, so the only one going "we need to make sure only OUR version of the Bible gets read and obeyed" were the heretical protestants.
      But hey, Protestants accusing Catholics of what they did? Nothing new to see here.

    • @melofiloxd1429
      @melofiloxd1429 Před 2 lety

      @@albehoe2327 hey, if there was only an infallible authority to guide us all on Biblical readings...

    • @phillipholland6795
      @phillipholland6795 Před 2 lety

      @@aryanpandey7284 False. It was not compiled after his death, no mention anywhere that it needs to be sung or vocalized although it happens often. Education is important!

  • @sharkbit123
    @sharkbit123 Před 9 měsíci +9

    This is the best Jewish history video on CZcams. Very well done, and thank you.
    עם ישראל חי

  • @user-kk9sw2sx3o
    @user-kk9sw2sx3o Před 8 měsíci +3

    All right. So.
    A Jew here, from Israel. Great video! It's mostly accurate, there were a few slips when you showed the content of some books. You showed the Mishna, which was written in Israel, while talking about books codified in Babylon, and when showing the Midrash (and that's a fun one, actually, I really hope someone else noted it already), the text you claimed to be quotes from the Torah is actually the Midrash, what you said was commentary is actually commentary on the Midrash, written throughout the centuries (mostly during the second millenium to the Christian count of years). Meaning, not only there's a lot of commentary in the Midrash, there's a lot of commentary on it.
    The Torah is a somewhat fluid term. It can be used only for the Pentateuch, for the entire written Torah or for the entirety of Jewish religious writings ever.
    There is something to be said about the point that half of modern American Jews have doubts about G-d existing. It's interesting to claim we are first an ethnicity and then a religion, and base it on things that happen with diaspora Jews, when you have the State of Israel - which is full of people taking culture and ethnicity over religion. The founders of the state were exactly this kind of people - who loved the Tanakh but didn't see it as obliging.
    I actually kind of have a berserk button over the "most Jews don't believe in G-d" thing because it was pulled against me in an argument and to this day I don't get the point of it being raised at all. But that's a personal thing, really.

  • @JohnSmith-yw9nk
    @JohnSmith-yw9nk Před 6 lety +79

    Archaelogical and literary evidence has established that during the Bronze Age, the people of that region worshipped the same or similar deities. The Bible is actually one source of that evidence. Some books of the Tanakh/Old Testament describe communities where monotheism competed with polytheism, and name a few of the deities worshipped by the polytheists, including Ba'al, Astarte, Asherah, and El. Those deities were worshipped under similar names from Egypt to Mesopotamia. So there's no question that proto-Judaism developed in a polytheistic context.
    You start seeing controversy when you discuss the relationship between proto-Judaism and the surrounding polytheism. The "official" story (i.e. the narrative in the modern Tanakh/Old Testament) is that monotheism begins when Abraham makes his covenant with Yahweh, is affirmed on Sinai when Yahweh reveals the Ten Commandments, and triumphs when the monotheists slowly but surely stamp out the polytheistic apostasy. A lot of people believe the Bible is correct about this. However, most secular historians do not.
    Right now, the dominant theory among secular historians goes like this:
    There is no compelling archaelogical evidence for the exodus from Egypt, so it's likely that the Israelites were native to the area, just one Canaanite tribe among many.
    If they didn't come to the area from elsewhere, that means they couldn't have brought monotheism into the area. It's likely that their monotheism developed in Canaan.
    There is evidence that Yahweh was worshipped in several places in the near east. He was worshipped as one god in a great pantheon, not as the only divine being in existence and not as the creator of the universe.
    There is also evidence that some people in Canaan worshipped Asherah and Yahweh at the same time, believing Asherah was Yahweh's consort (i.e. wife or lover). The Bible supports this, actually, since Josiah is said to have removed Asherah paraphernalia from Yahweh's temple. Which suggests that Yahweh-Asherah worship was not a fringe practice.
    There's extensive evidence that near eastern cultures believed that dozens or hundreds of deities existed, but chose one to be their special patrons. For example, when one culture defeated another in battle, it was suggested that the victor's patron deity was better than the loser's.
    Consistent with this trend, Yahweh was the special patron deity of the Israelites. They thought he was their favorite, but they didn't think he was the only. This is called henotheism.
    Worship of Yahweh merged with worship of El, another near eastern deity, a father-god and head of the pantheon.
    At some point, the Israelites demoted or denied all deities other than Yahweh, becoming truly monotheistic. I believe the most popular theory dates this to the Babylonian captivity.
    In a massive ret-con, much of the Tanakh was written or re-written at this time to suggest that Yahweh's followers had always been monotheists and the names Yahweh and El/Elyon/Elohim had always referred to the same entity.
    In short, the theory suggests that incremental changes took the Israelites from "Yahweh is our god" to "Yahweh is not only our god, he's also the father/creator god" to "Yahweh is the creator god, and in fact the only god." This is probably the theory behind the show you saw on the History Channel. It's not the only way to make sense of the evidence, but it's a popular way.
    You asked about "remnants" of polytheism in the Bible. There are quite a few. Here are some things that might support the polytheistic-origin theory:
    "Elohim" is plural. This might mean that it once referred to a pantheon rather than an individual deity.
    Sometimes the Bible calls God "Yahweh," sometimes "Elohim," sometimes "El," sometimes "Elyon," etc. That could be a holdover from a time before a Yahweh-El merge.
    Psalms frequently refers to multiple gods. Yahweh is "the great King above all gods," the deity "all the gods bow down before," the one who makes decisions "in the midst of the gods," and "superior to all gods."
    At a few points in Genesis, God seems to be talking to other divine beings: "Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness." "The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil."
    The wording "You shall have no other gods before me" fits the theory that Yahweh was going to be the Israelites' patron deity but was not recognized as the only god. After all, it's not asserting that no other gods exist; it requires the people to stick with Yahweh instead of choosing a different god.
    Obviously Jewish and Christian traditions have other interpretations of these passages. Sometimes, translators have fudged a bit to support those interpretations. Whenever you're exploring what the original writers of the Bible meant to say, look at lots of different translations, and look for commentary that talks about the words in the original language. (I'd also encourage you to remember that our translations are not based on the original words. We're talking copies of copies of copies, sometimes filtered through several languages. Just saying.)
    In closing, I'll say this: You asked what we "know" about the origins of Judaism. Not to go on a big philosophical tangent but, like, how do you know that you know anything, man? [keanu_whoa.jpg] We're talking about events that occurred 2,500-4,000 years ago. Sometimes we dig things up from that time period. Sometimes we find texts, often on broken clay or crumbling papyrus. We're trying to build a car with bolts and scotch tape. That doesn't mean this theory, or any theory about history, is wrong. It means there's lots we can't know and probably will never know. We can't run experiments on historical narratives to determine whether or not they're true. We look at the new things we dug up and see if they fit the story, or if they stick out from the story like a sore thumb and suggest the story is bogus. Welcome to history.
    I've been madly clicking between tabs to write this and haven't included citations. If you want any, ask and I'll go back and find the source I used for it, up to and including pulling my undergrad textbooks off my bookshelf.

    • @talknight2
      @talknight2 Před 5 lety +8

      Great essay

    • @dmitrijones3064
      @dmitrijones3064 Před 5 lety +11

      An excellent analyses of the whole thing but if I could request you not use the Tetragrammaton with the vowels like that. As a jew it kinda makes me uncomfortable, even when couched in such a remarkable essay.

    • @ItamarWeilFireWind
      @ItamarWeilFireWind Před 5 lety +2

      Fantastically written, I'm keeping this for future use

    • @alucard347
      @alucard347 Před 5 lety +5

      a great essay!
      indeed, You can trace a lot of polytheism in proto-judaism.
      As a side note, about YHWH's origin, the most popular theory is that he is misstranslation of Ea, the Akkadian/Sumerian god of creation, slayer of the monster of the abyss (similar to the great aligators in genesis, and the whole abyss, or the Tohu VaBohu, which is akin to Absu, whom Ea slew), The omniscience and omnipotent God who was the father of the king of he gods, Merdukh, in Babylonian lore.
      According to most theories, his worshipped was widespread across the middle east, and his name, Ea, transformed into Yewa, which was eventually turned into Yaweh and then to Yehova, or Jehova.
      And of course, the word in hebrew for God, El, and Elohim, spesifically for that God, derive from the canaanite god El.

    • @bluesbest1
      @bluesbest1 Před 4 lety +4

      What's strange is how my own religion accounts for most of this, with Elohim being essentially the All-Father, Jehovah being essentially the God of this world, other primordial beings (children, but not heirs, of Elohim) helping Him create the Solar System, and Lucifer being (from what I understand, since I'm not as familiar with his backstory) a member of a High Council that was greedy and didn't really care about others. We get around being called Polytheistic or Trinitarian by saying that we believe in a Godhead. It's one of those "makes sense in context" things. Also, given the story of Abraham's two sons and Isaac's two sons, they probably stayed and worshiped Abraham's God while the Jews were in Egypt.

  • @randomhuman5374
    @randomhuman5374 Před 7 lety +155

    Thank you for that joke. I'm using that for the Passover sedar tonight.

    • @hgecds
      @hgecds Před 6 lety +2

      Skylar Potter
      Wel a similar story is writing in the Gmara
      search תנורו של החנאי

  • @kakashihatake454
    @kakashihatake454 Před 5 lety +1

    You and Historia Civilis are my new favourite channels. Thank you!

  • @andrewszigeti2174
    @andrewszigeti2174 Před 5 lety +2

    It's not often a summary of a subject adds so much to my understanding of it.
    Very nice job.

  • @seventyfive7597
    @seventyfive7597 Před 5 lety +48

    I'm Jewish, this was emotional.
    Thanks.

  • @juankaiser5774
    @juankaiser5774 Před 6 lety +22

    Extra points for Age of Mythology soundtrack.
    At various points of the video, I felt the words "prostagma" , "bulome", "leye", "isboli" in my head.

  • @nathangonzalez9710
    @nathangonzalez9710 Před rokem +2

    I work at a steel mill, and I listen to you and blue a lot while at work through an earbud. That joke at the end made crack up while calling out information over the radio. Great video as always.

  • @scoutisrael2184
    @scoutisrael2184 Před 4 lety +3

    One of the best summaries of Jewish History that I have heard yet. I very much appreciate how you try not to over simplify the subject., Good on you!

  • @nquisitiv3471
    @nquisitiv3471 Před 6 lety +53

    That age of empires soundtrack thoooooooo

    • @talknight2
      @talknight2 Před 5 lety +12

      It's Age of Mythology

    • @1232sam
      @1232sam Před 5 lety +2

      Sounds like Assassins creed 2 to me

    • @ALLxISxGONE
      @ALLxISxGONE Před 5 lety +3

      Nope, Age of Mythology. Though OP isn't technically wrong since AoM is a game made by the same people that for a time made AoE games.

    • @ThatWeirdGuyFromWork
      @ThatWeirdGuyFromWork Před 4 lety

      BazongaMelons AC2 and AC:R.

  • @jackcoleman1222
    @jackcoleman1222 Před 7 lety +1456

    Friendly reminder: DON'T FEED THE TROLLS.

  • @yahelgoren9111
    @yahelgoren9111 Před 3 lety +13

    As an Israeli Jew I have to say I loved this video!!!
    Also you're amazing keep up the good work

  • @adamg3291
    @adamg3291 Před 4 lety +1

    I love this video so much I come back it all the time. So I just wanted to say thank you! 💖

  • @CRAZY42448
    @CRAZY42448 Před 6 lety +61

    דרך ארץ קדמה לתורה
    being a good man came before the thora
    ita a basic saying thet means: first be a good man only after then be a beliver

    • @anthonywilkes5290
      @anthonywilkes5290 Před 5 lety

      free.messianicbible.com/

    • @eitans.nissel9056
      @eitans.nissel9056 Před 4 lety +3

      But Judaism doesn't say "you can ignore the Torah, if you share".
      I interpret it as such: Being a good person is a foundation. You need it for a Jewish life, but it isn't the end goal.

    • @universalcitizen9429
      @universalcitizen9429 Před 4 lety +1

      Tell this to the Israelis that stick guns in my face everyday. I’m an American living in the West Bank.

    • @tobistein6639
      @tobistein6639 Před 4 lety +4

      @@universalcitizen9429 Unfortunately, Israeli culture has always been military. It has to be as a matter of survival. Israelis (thought it may seem hard to believe) are much more comfortable around firearms on average than Americans because 99% of them go through compulsory military service directly out of high school.
      Also you're living in the West Bank dude lol what did you expect. It's been violently contested since 1948.

    • @universalcitizen9429
      @universalcitizen9429 Před 4 lety

      Tobi Stein it’s a matter of survival for Israelis because they’re the colonists. The colonists always have to militarize to maintain control of the colony from the natives they colonized. It always fails in the end.
      Also understand me. Israelis point guns in my face, not Palestinians. Not ever has a Palestinian threatened my life. But an Israeli will happily do so for some zealous blind faith bullshit reason and on Palestinian soil.

  • @DarkTrevort
    @DarkTrevort Před 5 lety +10

    I'm currently studying history and I'm attending several courses that heavily focus on judaism... and I gotta say that this video is very well made! Historically very accurate! Loved that you mentioned Maimonides who really is a great example of jews and muslims being able to live together :)

    • @user-dl5ln3wd6f
      @user-dl5ln3wd6f Před 5 lety

      Muslims and Jews Living peacefully together will hopefully never happen again in the future, you can be sure on that.

  • @Mystakaphoros
    @Mystakaphoros Před 5 lety +11

    "the great ganking of the Second Temple"
    I am CACKLING.

  • @davidkelley5382
    @davidkelley5382 Před 3 lety +2

    Good on you Blue for pointing out that this is your opinion on how things came about. So many omit that detail.

  • @Thessaloz
    @Thessaloz Před 5 lety +24

    You didn't spoke about the relationship that Byzantines had with Jewish people. I have met some Israelis and they said that our people have a long friendship. My Grandmother visited Jerusalem and she said that Greek priests always get more respect than the others. For example Israelis give the holy light to Greeks first as a tradition

    • @IC79
      @IC79 Před 5 lety +3

      Thessaloz George The Byzantines were cool for the most part. FAR better than the Arab and Ottoman Muslims that replaced them.

  • @thehopeofeden597
    @thehopeofeden597 Před 6 lety +30

    I think Blue just solved almost every conflict I ever had with religion...And I'm not even Jewish!

    • @jacobbohl192
      @jacobbohl192 Před 3 lety +4

      A very late response, but I found as I learned more about Judaism, as an Atheist, the more I stopped disrespecting faith itself, and more finding a burning rage at the shallowness of a lot of modern, post-Revivalist Christian sects.

    • @TheDiplomancer
      @TheDiplomancer Před 3 lety +4

      @@jacobbohl192 I have a lot of Atheist friends who grew up Christian, and one thing they always seem confused about is why I feel comfortable telling my Rabbi that I don't believe in God, or why I can ask, "Why this thing, but not the other?" The fact that I can debate religious leader as a lay person and have a fun time doing it absolutely blows their mind.

    • @RelativelyBest
      @RelativelyBest Před 3 lety +1

      _He is the Kwisatz Haderach!_

  • @NathanSimonGottemer
    @NathanSimonGottemer Před 2 lety +1

    This is very well thought-out and actually mirrors some of what I learned in the study I did in the high school summer program where I spent 6 weeks in Israel. The idea of the Jewish People (using the word People here rather than faith or religion is important) is tough to sum up in such a short time but you did a good job of hitting a lot of the important points so good on you!

  • @juliaburkholder4213
    @juliaburkholder4213 Před 2 lety

    This offers a lot of really cool info some fascinating perspectives. Thanks!😊

  • @oximoron613
    @oximoron613 Před 6 lety +28

    Lovely video, overall a very respectful look at Judaism from an outsiders perspective. I feel that most of this is as accurate as a person can get sticking to the facts, but the only thing I feel is "wrong" is the way the Tanakh is described as being written or compiled during the Diaspora, when in reality the last work added was during the Babylonian Exile. Thats not to say that the stories of the Tanakh aren't a guide for Jews after the destruction of the Temples, but to say the Tanakh was a result of the Diaspora ignores the purpose the Tanakh had for hundreds of years before exile. The part about the Oral Torah is true though, the Rabbis feared that the oral commentary would be lost in exile if they didn't write it down. Love to answer any questions if anyone has any, I'm an ultra-orthodox Jew who had to take many, many Jewish history classes

    • @dominicguye8058
      @dominicguye8058 Před 5 lety +6

      I think Blue meant to say that the texts were _codified_ after the end of Second Temple era, not written for the first time. It's exactly the same as legal codification; the already-existing texts are collected and compiled into a book.

  • @gwenc1371
    @gwenc1371 Před 6 lety +16

    Good video! I thought it was a really nice touch that you mentioned the amount of religious Jews who are a bit iffy on the whole Gd thing. I remember hearing a conservative Rabbi talking about this: he made the mistake of asking his congregation, on Rosh Hashana(one of the biggest holy days of the year) to raise their hand if they believed in Gd. About a third raised their hand, another third didn't, and the final third awkwardly looked around and kinda-sorta raised their hand if their neighbors were.
    I do think the assertion that Jewish identity is ethnic first and religious second is a bit off, though. Those two aspects of Jewish identity are too interconnected to be separated like that. If it's mostly an ethnic identity, then you have to explain why not only why conversion is a thing, and why a valid convert is considered as Jewish as someone who can trace their Jewish ancestry back centuries.
    You can argue till you're blue in the face over which aspect is more important, and the best answer is simply "it's both."

  • @blackflameofcrimson
    @blackflameofcrimson Před 2 lety +1

    I love the AOE 2 music. Thank you for that. Really helped the atmosphere

  • @dallasgrey4247
    @dallasgrey4247 Před 2 lety +7

    What’s funny about the third tablet breaking, is that the tablets where smashed by Moses because of a certain story involving golden calf statue worship, and he had to go up the mountain for the second time so he could write the rules again

  • @rexpayasoinc9782
    @rexpayasoinc9782 Před 5 lety +14

    “So what now it’s three against two” is now my favorite punch line

  • @jasper2621
    @jasper2621 Před 6 lety +180

    The holy buble 😂😂😂

  • @shamarrundhawa2467
    @shamarrundhawa2467 Před 3 lety

    I love the music in these videos. Really takes me back to the good old days of AoM/E and rise of nations

  • @killerpro9922
    @killerpro9922 Před 4 lety +69

    I myself a muslim im disappointed in the current generation because this gen of muslims is all about hating jews and christians to all my jew and christian brothers out there ❤❤ we all bros!

    • @jalilebenaissa7495
      @jalilebenaissa7495 Před 3 lety +9

      we don't hate the Jewish people we hate the Zionists

    • @jalilebenaissa7495
      @jalilebenaissa7495 Před 3 lety +9

      @@fakebaguetteyou were treated right in north africa and you justifying the Zionists actions as a mean to defend your"land" reminds me of germans justifying Nazism to aquire more land and at the end Jerusalem will once again be muslims we lost it before against the latins but we retook it and we will retake it again

    • @silverstar4505
      @silverstar4505 Před 3 lety +6

      I honestly wish everyone would just calm down and stop hating people based on their world views.
      Humans can be so stupid.

    • @guyshnek6336
      @guyshnek6336 Před 3 lety +1

      @sneksnekitsasnek nah fam we do

    • @danfriedman2556
      @danfriedman2556 Před 3 lety +4

      @sneksnekitsasnek man I live in isreal and most of my teachers and even my favorite one in school are muslims and I love them with all of my heart and love learning about islam because we are cousins and our religion is based on the same principals

  • @darktracker9627
    @darktracker9627 Před 6 lety +196

    Cyrus the great IS the one man who deserve to be call to be great

    • @jeffgalus8454
      @jeffgalus8454 Před 5 lety +4

      True

    • @slook7094
      @slook7094 Před 5 lety +9

      And Casimir the Great! My ancestors came to Poland because of him.

    • @gunarsmiezis9321
      @gunarsmiezis9321 Před 4 lety +4

      No he isnt. He is one of many grate rulers trough out history.

    • @definitelynotobama6851
      @definitelynotobama6851 Před 4 lety +1

      Honestly, yeah. he was a pretty cool dude.

    • @gunarsmiezis9321
      @gunarsmiezis9321 Před 4 lety +4

      @@definitelynotobama6851 He was cool but not the only grate leader trough out history.

  • @Lycodrake
    @Lycodrake Před 5 lety +6

    "I don't want to change your mind, I just want to get you thinking" - bless you for that line alone.

  • @mads6433
    @mads6433 Před 4 lety +21

    Am I watching this instead of studying for my bat mitzvah? Absolutely

    • @shifra1967
      @shifra1967 Před 3 lety

      Mood

    • @ladyvincenza
      @ladyvincenza Před 3 lety

      You could include some information here into your portion/ceremony! Mazel tov.

    • @osnats7898
      @osnats7898 Před 3 lety

      I am a year late but congratulations? ⁦¯\_(ツ)_/¯⁩

  • @commenturthegreat2915
    @commenturthegreat2915 Před 2 lety +6

    The joke at the end is actually pretty similar to a real story from the Talmud.
    There is a rabbi that disagrees with the majority, and asks God to intervene. God gives them gradually clearer signs that he is right, finally speaking directly to them and saying so. Instead of giving up, the majority respond by basically saying "you gave us these rules to keep, their interpretation is in our hands now". At which point God himself admits defeat, the majority win, and the lone rabbi is cast out. It is a powerful allegory meant to illustrate the importance of shared discussion and unity - which are more important even than the truth.

  • @myohmy9000
    @myohmy9000 Před 7 lety +69

    2:51 Cyrus the Great is my main in Overwatch!

    • @myohmy9000
      @myohmy9000 Před 7 lety +4

      The enigmatic Account *Drop the Beat!* Also screw Vishkar

    • @joshuasarabia3754
      @joshuasarabia3754 Před 5 lety +2

      That has nothing to do with this video stay on topic.

    • @bad3nergytroll
      @bad3nergytroll Před 5 lety +1

      I'm already Cyrus the Great..

  • @lastfirst5863
    @lastfirst5863 Před 5 lety +31

    Hey, Jew here. Great job on the vid, man.
    The Mishnah was the only oral tradition. Talmud and Gemora are Mishnahs with commentary, and Talmud and Gemorah are different names for the same book.
    About the ethnicity vs religion thing, I'm not sure you're right. The whole being spread out in exile thing does wonders for assimilating cultures, so there isn't really one specific ethnicity to latch on to. It's more split into two ethnicities now, called Ashkenazi and Sefardic, with Ashkenazi being the more Germanic and European cultural blend, and Sefardic being the Middle-Eastern/Mediterranean archetype. The way we practice is at it's core mostly the same, but the traditions are wildly different in many cases.
    The more you know.

    • @slook7094
      @slook7094 Před 5 lety +14

      There's not just Sephardim and Ashkenazi. There's also Mizrahi, Karaites, Krymchaks, Maghrebi, and other Jewish groups. Ashkenazi and Sephardim are just the largest groups.

    • @alucard347
      @alucard347 Před 5 lety +3

      @@slook7094 it seems like he included the mizrachim (basically just means easterns) within the sepharadim (means spanish, because the majority of them originated from spain, and got spread all across europe and the mediterranean after the exile of 1492), which makes sense, as many of them are.
      Karaites are still not entierly accepted by the Orthodox Judaism, the biggest branch, as jews, and the Krymchaks are too small for anyone to even mention them (sorry for any Krymchak I might have just insulted).

    • @tobistein6639
      @tobistein6639 Před 4 lety +3

      This view of Judaism also unfortunately implies that Jewish converts are "second class" since they're not ethnically Jewish. Judaism is a people. Not specifically a religion, ethnicity, or culture. It's a people. There are through-lines, sure, but Jews come in all colors, ethnicities, nationalities, religious hybrids, levels of orthodoxy, political views (oh god the political views), and native languages. There's a large Mexican Jewish community in Mexico City. There are Chabad (a specific branch of Orthodox Judaism) houses and synagogues in Tokyo and Beijing just as sure as there are in London and New York. There are Jews who intermarry with Christians, Muslims, and other religions and have children who grow up with Jewish and other religious influences.
      It's a wide, wide world. And Jews are pretty much everywhere.

    • @tobistein6639
      @tobistein6639 Před 4 lety

      Ekaterina H Unfortunately... what? I don’t catch your meaning.

    • @lastfirst5863
      @lastfirst5863 Před 4 lety

      @@tobistein6639 When you say "This view of Judaism implies..." Are you referring to what I said? I didn't mention conversion at all, never mind anything about second class.

  • @ryanberkowitz5399
    @ryanberkowitz5399 Před rokem +5

    Love the idea of using Carthage as a unit of measurement

  • @SeRgEaNt_RaNdOm
    @SeRgEaNt_RaNdOm Před 3 lety +2

    Given that I've been playing through the Assassin's Creed series for a while, the fact that these videos have music from Assassin's Creed as background music is really calming to me

  • @srschriver
    @srschriver Před 5 lety +13

    One of the things that you touch on (re: ancient Judaism as a culture first, then a religion) but don't say definitively is that Judaism-- unlike most other religions-- is not proselytizing. Rather, it is considered a birthright, borne out through the first covenant between the Hebrew People and their God, and then reinforced through tradition and common knowledge of Jewish Law.
    Also, an important bit of context is that ancient Hebrews were likely not monotheists in the strict understanding of the word that we have today. In the English translation of that first commandment, it says (and I paraphrase): "I am the Lord your God (who delivered you from Egypt). You shall have no other gods *before* me." That "before" word is important, because the entire civilized world around the Jews was pantheistic or polytheistic, and their God, YHWH, told them that by His deliverance of their people from Israel, He had renewed for them that ancient compact, and that sure, there may be other gods in the pantheon, but He was the greatest and the one to be worshipped (and appeased) first and foremost.
    The view of course gradually evolved, and for a small and vulnerable population of people at the crossroads of some of history's mightiest and most expansion-minded empires, the belief in one God that usurped all others in a wide pantheon became a point of solidarity and cultural identity (why else would the Jews be delivered from exile so many times if it weren't for the fact that their God was more powerful than all others?).
    The Romans, of course, recognized this YHWH as a minor god of their own pantheon that the Jews-- for whatever reason-- had a special affinity for, and recognized the Jews themselves as a secondary, but civilized, People, who although did not enjoy all of what the Romans considered hallmarks of civilization (engineering, temple worship, medicine, writing, poetry, history, rule of law, etc), enjoyed far more of them than any barbarian Rome had encountered in Europe. Up until the time of Jesus and past it, Rome ruled Judea much like a client state, where an agent of Rome was present to keep law and order (along with the military), but where the day-to-day affairs of the Jewish people were delegated to the Pharisees in a form of quasi-self-governance.
    As an aside, this provides excellent context for the Passion. Pontius Pilate, Rome's agent-of-state in Judea, cannot understand why the Pharisees are so insistent on Jesus being executed when his crime-- heresy-- was not considered a capital offense in Jewish Law (those convicted of heresy I believe were supposed to live away from society for a while and if they recanted could then be reintegrated). To Pilate, the Pharisees wanting to crucify Jesus was inconsistent with his-- and Romans'-- perception of the Jews as a people ruled by law.

    • @kiraina25
      @kiraina25 Před 2 lety

      That is... likely because certain aspects of the Passion are likely... not literal. Historical records show Pilate as an absolute bastard who would very likely not have questioned for a second why the Pharisees wanted this man put to death. The crimes of Jesus of Nazareth likely go far beyond the simple claim in the text that "well he said he's the son of God and that's blasphemous". Carroll suggests that it may be connected to his actions in the Temple, especially considering that the traditional story that Jesus upended a bunch of greedy people who were doing _business_ in his Father's house would... not actually have been a bad or even unusual thing. It was a long-standing tradition at the time to sell, for a small pittance or tithe to the Temple's upkeep, things for people to offer up on the altar. And Jews coming into Jerusalem from afar for important observances (read: the High Holy Days) would likely need to be able to exchange the currency they used in whatever place they lived in for shekels.

    • @melofiloxd1429
      @melofiloxd1429 Před 2 lety

      @@kiraina25 No, Jesus was crime-less, sinless. Even if your Talmud encourages it, do not partake in defamation of the Son of God, *this is blasphemy against the own God*