There are a number of things to do. First, many Jews took on last names that were place names, especially in Germany and Italy. Is there anyone in your family whose last name is a place? Also, amongst German Jews, you often see last names with Stein, Burg, Heim in the name, or with an 'er' at the end, which means someone from that town. Like "Hamburger" means someone from Hamburg. Also, look for odd customs in your family, like lighting candles but keeping them in a closet, which might indicate a family that was forced to convert. You might also want to just go to a synagogue and start talking to people and see if anyone there might know of something. Just say that you wonder if there's someone Jewish in your family and see what questions people ask you and what your answers are.
2007-04-03 16:46:55
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answer #1
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answered by Katherine W 7
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I suppose that you mean how to find out if some of your ancestors were Jewish. You need to start building your genealogical tree. Start collecting names and getting birth and death certificates. It is a long process,but there is no other way to get around. If you suspect that any of your family names is Jewish, you may get in touch with the Jewish Archives, but a name is nothing if you cannot prove the blood line with a trail of papers.
Cheers,
2007-04-03 15:40:39
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answer #2
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answered by Fata Morgana 3
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There are Ethiopian black jews, jews who've been residing in the portion of Palestine on the grounds that historic situations, jews from extremely some aspects in the middle east, jews from Europe, jews from East Asia. How do you certainly comprehend which one is the descendent of those biblical secret adult males? Noah? Moses? Abraham? you will desire to bypass via relation to skeletons chanced on in the Israel area throughout the time of specific time sessions yet even Jewish non secular texts state many diverse races and ethnic communities lived in the area. So? What are you going to do? * properly there's a widely used step, be suspicious of those tests through fact how do they comprehend who's a jew and who isn't? perhaps those distinctive ethnic communities they are speaking approximately are certainly purely Europeans? perhaps they are measuring them on the topic of three different team they arrive across as being heavily bearing directly to historic jewish populations like Arabs? they are needless to say notably skewed tests.
2016-10-02 03:31:36
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answer #3
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answered by guyden 4
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Jewish genealogy?
Last time i checked, judaism was a religion, not a race.
2007-04-03 15:02:09
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answer #4
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answered by Just Mara 3
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you're mother would have to be jewish for you to be religiously considered a Jew. I don't know about tracing it farther than that.
2007-04-03 16:17:26
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Would it not make more sense to ask this question of a member of that faith?
2007-04-03 14:54:31
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answer #6
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answered by Ashleigh 7
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Judism is a religion, not ethnicity. You can be of any ethnicity and be Jewish.
2007-04-03 14:55:32
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answer #7
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answered by sugaronmytongue 2
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