Being a Jew, one learns to believe in the reality of cruelty and one learns to recognize indifference to human suffering as a fact.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Something about the cultural tradition of Jews is way, way more sympathetic to science and learning and intellectual pursuits than Islam.
The key to Judaism's survival is the emotional attachment to the religion.
Israel has created a new image of the Jew in the world - the image of a working and an intellectual people, of a people that can fight with heroism.
The good Jew is ritually observant and resists assimilation, in some sense living apart, never fitting comfortably into American or any other society.
The observant Jew has his own sense of values. Torah Judaism is his blueprint for this life, his target for existence.
Something fundamental about the myth of the Jew has resurfaced.
Judaism is interesting in that there is something there that I think you just can't understand if you're not a Jew - it moves into a realm of true mystery.
Being a Jew is like walking in the wind or swimming: you are touched at all points and conscious everywhere.
I believe Jews are compassionate people because of what we've suffered. We must not put that suffering onto others.
All a Jew has to do is recite a few proverbs or anecdotes to consider himself an expert on 'Jewishness.'