The whole mizrachi/sephardi vs. ashkenazi seperation is slowly becoming a thing of the past- most Jews in Israel are now mixed in someway so it's a pretty redundant question to ask if they hate each other. Main difference is in terms of the minhag (religious customs) between the 2 groups. Other than that, they are all Jews.
Im a Mizrahi Jew and I love Ashkenazi Jews Why? Cause I am a Jew and they are Jews. Jews are brothers and came from the same tribe . Even 2000 years of diaspora can't change it.
@Shalom Shalom thanks for the clarification! I think John the Baptist peace be upon him or "prophet Yehya" (same person) pbuh also confirms what you just said
@Shalom Shalom at that time there were no Greeks but Hellenes and the hellenes were not a homogeneous people but a mix of different populations..many illyrian thracian macedonian paeonian tribes ect even some Jews were part of that culture.. Hellenism was a culture it was not a nation instead the Koine language was a lingua franca at that time
@@tamar4887 Today? How? They all eat the same food, listen to the same music, live in the same cities. I really don't see (today) any significant cultural difference between the two groups.
@@chugalongway01 I don't know man... Mainstream food in Israel is middle eastern. Mainstream music is middle eastern. So I think it's convenient for you to think that there's racism between Ashkenazi and Mizrachi but that's not the truth
Yes we say because romanians have a more warm mentality compared to other ashkenazi like germans or poles and they are more open to oriental music and food espcially turkish at least from our point of view
People outside of Israel (mostly Arabs) have this weird perception that Ashkenazis and Mizrachis are at each other throats. And are weirdly disappointed learning that we get get a long well.
Not only Jews from all backgrounds get along well, but also Jews and Israeli Arabs. Arabs go to malls and supermarkets and coffeeshops in Jewish majority cities, and Jews go to Arab towns and villages to the Markets and stores. I actually went to an Arab town to get my Covid vaccine.
@محايد قدر المستطاع It is very normal to see Muslim women wearing a Hijab or Niqab is Israel, and no one will say anything or even look at her strangely. I have only seen one or two women wearing a Burka, and this might cause some people to stare. Muslim men are less conspicuous, because nowadays most men wear western clothing, although I did notice that most of them never wear shorts 😆. I think that most Israeli Arabs appreciate the good life they have in Israel in comparison to their brothers in the West bank and in Gaza (not because of the occupation there, but because of the corruption of the Palestinian authority, and the oppression living under Hamas).
@@daves465 Any idea what percentage of Arabs are happy in Israel? Any idea why it looks like zero percentage of the Arab list Party are happy in Israel?
Corey holy shit, I used to watch ur channel for so long but I haven't really checked on here for a couple years but WOW you've lost so much weight. I'm really proud of you, I'm so happy to see that you're doing betterr (meaning that I can see you're mentally better aswell) anyway, love the content and WOW!!!!! Good job Corey!!!
We Ashkanzi are too hard in ourselves when it comes to food. My Family is Old Yeshuv. Lithuanian Jews that settled in Jerusalem in 1808 (almost a century prior to Zionism) and our Ashkenazi food became gradually "Arabized" over the years - we started to use local spices, make Baba Ganosh, Fresh chopped Salads with Parsley, My great Grandmother stuffed Zucchini with minced meat tomatoes and onions. eating Pitta and such in addition to Ashkenazi food. But we still love Gefilte Fish (my great Grandmother infused dried red papers with in them)8 , Lux , Chooped Liver and Egg salad. They are unironically delicacies. Mothers (and fathers now) from all races want their children to be healthy and enjoy food. We should share food not politicize it and stigmatized it.
@@goodputin4324 In some aspects yes, but they still kept their distinct Ashkenazi identity. They wore Ashkenazi dress (which did had Oriental elements such as more loose flowing robes with stripes- an Arab design) They spoke Arabic and Turkish to deal with Arab merchants and Ottoman officials. But spoke Yiddish within themselves. They were easily Distinguishable as Jews with Bright beards and Shtrimel fox fur hats (way smaller then the excessive Modern Shtrimel) and a Talit praying shawl upon their shoulders.
My guess is that pickled herring just wasn't readily available in the Mediterranean basin, and stodgy food doesn't make so much sense in a warmer climate. It was also very reasonable to start eating unfamiliar foodstuffs that met kosher dietary requirements, and what better way to do so than by adopting and adapting local recipes. It happens all the time to all people. Even to the British who have perhaps the most conservative of tastes.
how can you tell there's no Mizrahi-Ahskenazi divide in Israel (outside some media)? because half the Jewish weddings are of "mixed" couples and it's been this way for decades. good for us!
My culture uses very similar language when we MIX the likes of peanut butter and honey 🍯, nutella and banana pancakes are good couple examples that's been used for many decades too. 😌😌📈📉📊 Perhaps, the inhabitants of the earth are not so radically different after all. ❤️🍯
I've seen video of matching for weddings in Israel where people specifically asked for only Sephardim or only Ashkenazi possible spouse, but I get from Corey's videos that maybe it just happens in strict traditional groups.
@@negy2570 That's accurate - in Haredi/Ultra-Orthodox communities this happens when matching bride and groom, but outside these communities, where people choose who they marry, it's not a thing at all. I don't have statistics but likely half if not more of all non-Haredi marriages are mixed ethnicity.
Hey corey, i think it would br appropriate if you added a screen at the end with some info about the question you asked So for example if you added a screen explaining how many ashkenaIs there are or a bit of history about them would be very interesting imo
@@loveydovey4566 מר לאבי, אני אשכנזי 100% (מה לעשות) ואחי היהודים הישראלים מכל העדות - התנדבנו יחד, שירתנו יחד, הגנו יחד על המדינה, לומדים ועובדים יחד - ואם מישהו אומר לך שאתה לא חלק מהעם שלהם בגלל המוצא שלך - יש לו עסק איתי - ואני מקווה שאותו דבר מהצד שלך.
Ashkenazi Jews are Jews who traditionally lived in Europe and spoke Yiddish. Mizrahi is an umbrella term for Jews who lived in the Middle East, Central Asia and North Africa.
Ashkenazi Jews - Jews who came from Europe, mostly with white skin and European mentality... Mizrahi Jews- Jews who came to Israel from the Arab world ( Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Egypt, and Lebanon) Iran, and north Africa ( Morroco , Tunisia, Lybia) so basically Mizrahi Jews are middle eastern Jews with brown skin, and middle eastern culture and mentality...its estimated that the Mizrahi Jews are between 50-60% of the Jewish population In Israel (they are the majority).
@@LegoRomania28 not necessarily speaking Yiddish for instance my family are jekkers from west Germany and at best spoke judisch-Deutsch but never yiddish. Yiddish was only really prevalent in the east.
"Sababa", "Yalla" and "Ahla" (احلا) are probably the most used words in Hebrew. You can hear them all the time, everywhere. It's quite fascinating to see how Hebrew and Arabic in Israel influence one another. For started, a lot of words are very similar, or almost identical, which makes the two languages close sisters (for example: ward=vered; walad=yeled; yad=yad; labas=lavash; yom=yom). In modern and daily-spoken Hebrew, a lot of Arabic words are used (Hafla, magnun, fashla, ashkara, hafif, fadiha, dir balak). The Israeli-Arabic is almost a mixed Arabic, a Palestine-dialect Arabic that integrate a lot of words, phrases and terms from Hebrew.
@@tzachiyosef5561 That's really more than interesting. Actually, I know that Arabic and Hebrew are of semitic origin, but I never expected that some words are used in both languages with the same meaning and same pronunciation.
Yea, but still, there is probably going to be an education and wealth gap between the Ashkenazi and the rest of the groups.....even in the USA, the Ashkenazi tend to be wealthier and better educated than the average.
@@SocialSchism , the only source I could find via wikipedia, ....According to a survey by the Adva Center,[171] the average income of Ashkenazim was 36 percent higher than that of Mizrahim in 2004.
@@rgsxyz1105 These things change and are not black and white. In Northwestern Europe, for example in the Netherlands, Sephardim were far wealthier than Ashkenazim. I'm pretty sure the Syrian Jewish community of NY is on average much wealthier than their Ashkenazi neighbors.
Just to clarify to the viewers: when they speak of being from other countries such as Morocco or Poland for example, they mean of their ethnic sub group of Judaism, sphardi, mizrachi and Ashkenazi Jews share very very similar genetics and culture that have slight differences (for example in food variations and Hebrew accent)
@@OmarOsman98 Judaism is called after the last Hebrew kingdom of Judea. In a different reality where's the kingdoms of Israel and Judea both were survived perfectly the Jews would be recognized simpley by the name Hebrews and the religion named will be named the teaching of moses. Arabs are the true occupiers in the middle east that only know to cry crocodile tears open Google unlike other middle eastern groups u don't belong here.
@@OmarOsman98 write on Google indigenous to the middle east. Spoiler u will find jews kurds Azerbaijanis levantines but not Arabs . Maybe u can't stand the facts thah while arabs usually cry on the tv they were the biggest army of Muhammad doing what u blame Israel for. Muhammad acted like the Zionist u hate😳
@@OmarOsman98 and its its not just about Israel arabs are conquers in Egypt Morocco Lebanon and many more. I don't blame u for being a good army that taked over other nations i only want u to open your to reality. U are not the sheep you're the wolf wearing the sheep skin.
As an Australian Ashkenazi Jew married to an Israeli of Moroccan descent, the is no contest on the food issue. Give me spicy Mizrachi food any day of the week. Of course we have different customs, a different way of praying etc etc. But we are all Jewish. I have very fair skin, blue eyes and freckles, but have always felt welcomed in any Synagogue in Israel regardless of the community it represents.
Absolutely: give me the spices every time! Cinnamon and raisins don't have to be limited to apple based puddings; (although I must say Ashkenazi spiced apple cake is good) they also go so well with chillis and cumin, coriander, black pepper in rice or cous cous. The funniest Ashkenazi dish is aubergine ersatz chopped "liver". Aubergine does not taste anything like liver, but hey...do people even make that stuff any more? Yeah, spices win every time!
@@skellingtonmeteoryballoon Haha! Well speaking of airport security, I once had some super hot chilli peppers confiscated at customs. I hope the thieves of my lovely hot peppers were acCUSTOMed to their spiciness! The cheek of it!
In the USA most Jews are of Ashkenazi descent, as is my ex-wife. My family came from northern Greece (Macedonia). The food difference, YES, I agree, but other cultural elements are not that different.
@@solvingpolitics3172 I like the mix of old architecture with modern culture. I like the people. The general vibe reminded me of my home country in the middle east. I like the young people there, they seemed more mature then the young people where I live (Canada). I didn't like the confusing bus and train system, but maybe it was just confusing because I was new. I didn't like the lack of wifi connection for public use
This is super interesting. I think the response would be different from those of us who live outside of Israel and are mostly used to encountering their own branch of Judaism. In France the perceived difference between Sephardi and Ashkenazi is huge! It’s one of those situations where when travelling around one is really excited to meet another Jew, and the similarities in our upbringing and traditions bring us automatically closer, but back home it feels like a huge gap to cross.
i dont think this "divide" is really being much of a factor anymore at this point, other than for some politicians and people from older generations im half saphardic and half ashkenazi, i just think of myself as jewish, i dont really see much of a difference between me and anyone i know from any other kind of origin who is also jewish, i dont feel like friends who are mizrahi ashkenazi and saphardic are different from me or have a "different culture" at all
BH, The Jewish sons and daughters have returned to their ancient ancestral borders in Israel. AM YISROEL CHAI LE'NETZACH ISRAEL LIVES FOREVER FROM THE JORDAN RIVER TO THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
@@curlysue9436 Salvation* can be found in no other name under Heaven other than THE NAME of Jesus THE CHRIST/BSHEM *YESHUA* HA MASHIACH. for HE alone IS THE ONLY WAY THE ONLY TRUTH and THE ONLY WAY to Eternal life and no one gets to HASHEM/GOD ecept through HIM. so i only ask all who are here if not already to please choose this day to trust in YESHUA HA MASHIACH that HE died in your place to make atonement for your sins that was seperating you from GOD so that by believing this and trusting in HIM that HE rose from the grave that you too by believing in HIM will one day rise from the dead and have eternal life and be saved from The Terrifying Wrath of HASHEM that is to come to all who reject YESHUA as THE MESSIAH of Israel and SAVIOR of The Whole World that HE rightly, truly IS. i ask please do this so that even today will be your *Day of Salvation*
Why would corey only ask them about what they don't like about Ashkenazi but notice not one said anything but good things. And BTW, if you look at stats there are 50% Ashkenazim in Israel. The rest are either Mizrahi and Sephardic or intermarriage of all Jews. Quit trying to minimize Ashkenazim or divide us Jews. You won't be able to.
When jews forget that we are as jews one family🙄 Who cares if your roots from iraq, ethiopia, india, poland.. we are as jews can't forget that we are finally one family and our home is israel.
What I have learned from Wikipedia is that Ashkenazi Jews are a jewish diaspora population that lived in Germany, France and eastern Europe. What I have learned from this video is that they are great people, but their food sucks. I may be biased, but the food in these countries is great! I would love to learn more about these groups. For example what is a typical Ashkenazi meal and where does it come from.
Again a ridiculous question. What is your aim? To cause dissent among the people?. Most families today in Israel have families of different cultures from Mizrachi to Ashkenazi to Ethiopian and others. You get a thumbs down again.
I don’t get why other religions think Ashkenazim Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews hate each other, I’ve never met an actual Jewish person of any culture who hates or dislikes others.
I understand that your channel is all about seeing how people react to generalizations and stereotypes and myths, but this generalization is so broad that it's meaningless and probably made people feel uncomfortable answering a question that cannot have a concrete answer.
If I may ask, in your opinion, would you say the question,➿ " what do you think about the Navajo windtalkers?" ➿ Is ALSO like answering a question that cannot have a concrete answer ? 🐌🐚
@@skellingtonmeteoryballoon Salvation* can be found in no other name under Heaven other than THE NAME of Jesus THE CHRIST/BSHEM *YESHUA* HA MASHIACH. for HE alone IS THE ONLY WAY THE ONLY TRUTH and THE ONLY WAY to Eternal life and no one gets to HASHEM/GOD ecept through HIM. so i only ask all who are here if not already to please choose this day to trust in YESHUA HA MASHIACH that HE died in your place to make atonement for your sins that was seperating you from GOD so that by believing this and trusting in HIM that HE rose from the grave that you too by believing in HIM will one day rise from the dead and have eternal life and be saved from The Terrifying Wrath of HASHEM that is to come to all who reject YESHUA as THE MESSIAH of Israel and SAVIOR of The Whole World that HE rightly, truly IS. i ask please do this so that even today will be your *Day of Salvation*
@@michaelacohen3308 Salvation* can be found in no other name under Heaven other than THE NAME of Jesus THE CHRIST/BSHEM *YESHUA* HA MASHIACH. for HE alone IS THE ONLY WAY THE ONLY TRUTH and THE ONLY WAY to Eternal life and no one gets to HASHEM/GOD ecept through HIM. so i only ask all who are here if not already to please choose this day to trust in YESHUA HA MASHIACH that HE died in your place to make atonement for your sins that was seperating you from GOD so that by believing this and trusting in HIM that HE rose from the grave that you too by believing in HIM will one day rise from the dead and have eternal life and be saved from The Terrifying Wrath of HASHEM that is to come to all who reject YESHUA as THE MESSIAH of Israel and SAVIOR of The Whole World that HE rightly, truly IS. i ask please do this so that even today will be your *Day of Salvation*
כל המזרחים ענו לו שהם מבסוטים שהם יוצאים עם אשכנזיות או מחותנים להם ומבסוטים מזה שהילדים שלהם יהיו חצי אשכנזים חחחחחח איזו הערכה עצמית נמוכה פשוט מעוררות רחמים. זה רק מראה על כלכך הרבה בעיות חברתיות בארץ.
@@afroange להיות גזען זו הערכה עצמית גבוהה? תגיד אתה בסדר? אני אשכנזי ויצאתי עם ספרדיות ויש לי בני עדות המזרח במשפחה, אז יש לי הערכה עצמית נמוכה? גזענות בין יהודים.... גועל נפש
I love how in every video he is posting he is somehow trying to say they shouldn't be shy to answer with a full heart and starts to act defensively that just gives his viewers the wrong idea...
The 13th tribe. The Ashkenazim are Turkic people whom converted to Judaism in 8th century. They moved in to mostly eastern european countries in 12th century after the collapse of the Khazar empire. The evangelicals support the zionist because the evangelics thinks that every jew must return to israel and 3/4 of them will be killed so the messiah, jesus, will return. The people of the book, bible or torah are the children of Sham (Shem) The ashkenazim aka the Khazars (Turk) are the children of the other son of Noah, called Yapeth. They have no bloodline to Sham. The Gog and Magog tribe was also children of Yapeth, son of Noah. Revelation 2:9 I know your afflictions and your poverty-yet you are rich! I know about the slander of those who say they are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan. Revelation 3:9 Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, who say they are Jews and are not, but do lie - behold, I will make them to come and worship at thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee.
@@segevkrespi8609 We are talking about 8th-12th century. We are today in 21th century. Do you know how many generations 700 years is? Of course people change, they inter marry and or assimilate
Did you know that in the 1970s the Mizrahis established the Israeli version of the "Black Panthers" to protest against discrimination by the Ashkenazi regime?
Yes this is true, I remember reading about this. There was definitely a problem of discrimination against Mizrahim/Sephardim. But hopefully not so much of a problem now.
I think the culture of Israel (at least the mostly secular culture) is based upon assimilating into the existing culture and over time slowly incorporating elements of diaspora culture into the dominant Ashkenazi Hebrew culture. There is mostly cordial coexistence today, but when Jewish communities were exiled from their historic Muslim homelands, they found themselves as refugees in an Israel that looked upon those new arrivals as backwards. The Maghreb, Levant, Persian Yemeni and to a lesser extent Sephardi Jews were subjected to what amounted to forced assimilation. They were stripped of their languages, traditions, dress and remade in the image of the Ashkenazi zionist idea. So, when you ask a Mizrahi "What do you think of Ashkenazim?" I suspect it's a difficult question to answer. If they are younger they will talk about superficial items like food. For older people it may be a more complicated question since they may still remember what they lost during their refugee and reeducation process. www.thejewishstar.com/stories/tragedy-triumph-of-mizrahi-jews-holds-real-key-to-mideast-peace,19793
_They were stripped of their languages, traditions, dress and remade in the image of the Ashkenazi zionist idea_ "Stripped of their languages." Such over-the-top, tendentious hyperbole! (1), it is the normal course and to be expected that a newcomer learns the language and adopts aspects of the culture of his new coutnry (2) Hebrew is literally the ancestral and historical national language of the Mizrahi Jews, just as it is for Ashkenazi Jews. (3) If Mizrahi Jews were stripped of their language, then by the same token Ashkenazi Jews were stripped of their languages. Ashkenazi Zionists willingly abandoned Yiddish for the modern Hebrew. But many Mizrahi and Sephardic Jews in the Land of Israel were at the forefront of the modern Hebrew spoken and literary revival., I am related to one very famous Sephardic Hebrew revivalist, the pedagogue Joseph Meyouhas, who was no less a part of the modern Hebrew revival than Eliezer Ben-Yehuda.(4) The Mizrahi Jews from Arabic-speaking backgrounds had an easier time assimilating to the Hebrew language than secular Ashkenazi Jew with little or no Hebrew language exposure prior to their aliyah. While earlier generations of Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazim who came from a religious background and had studied in yeshivot knew Hebrew even if they had abandoned religion, people from backgrounds like my that of my mother, who came from a secular, assimilated Hungarian-speaking Jewish family after WW2 had to learn Hebrew from scratch, and she married my native Hebrew-speaking Mizrahi/Sephardic father, whose family had lived in the Holy Land for many generations. Was my Ashkenazi Hungarian mother stripped of her language and culture when she became Israeli and learned Hebrew? Such nonsense you spout!
@Starhopper Jews had been in Baghdad for over 2,600 years. They were 40% of the population, and as much part of that culture as any muslim or christian Iraqi. They weren't backwards. They just weren't Western.
@@guywhousesapseudonymonyout4272 I can't imagine that there were many Mizrachi Jews who were not familiar with the use of Hebrew for ritual purposes, and it is not a big step to move from that to Modern Hebrew as a daily language. I have no idea how many Ashkenazi in Eastern Europe were monolingual Yiddish speakers. To the best of my knowledge, many were multi-lingual as they had to deal with officialdom and their neighbours on a daily basis. The rise of monoglot Jewish communities is mainly something from the large English and Spanish speaking communities in the Americas. In UK today I think some proficiency in other languages is more usual amongst Jews than the general population. Otherwise, cross Europe knowledge of English is generally a marker of having a good education and is very widespread. Once you have learnt several languages acquisition of a new one isn't so daunting. I think the only other exception is Russian speakers, and this was down to the promotion of the language as the _lingua franca_ across the former Soviet Union.
@@marksimons8861 That was basically my point. Most Mizrahi Jews were familiar with liturgical Hebrew and the few who weren't could learn it easier as it was close to Arabic (excluding perhaps Mizrahi groups like Persian or Georgian Jews who didn't know Arabic, but they often were more familiar with Hebrew until modern times). Ashkenazi Jews like ex-Soviet Jews who came in the 1990s wio had no experience with Hebrew (except the ones who secretly learned it as Zionist refuseniks and passed around samizdat textbooks)were very unfamiliar with Hebrew and certainly found it a bigger culture shock. My mother's family, who were assimilated Hungarian-speaking bourgeois Central Europeans (pre-Holocaust, which tuned them into desperate refugees) certainly experienced a great cultural shock in 1950s Israel. They also were housed in a ma'abarah (transit camp/tent city). But there is no rhetoric of them being stripped of their language and culture and forced to assimilate like certain far Left anti-Zionist talking points. Naturally, Mizrahi immigrants underwent trauma and culture shock. Yes, there was patronizing attitudes towards them and discrimination from the elites of the society. But what do you expect in a society in transition? Doug Winfield talks as if "the Ashkenazim" did this to them out of pure hate and contempt for Mizrahi culture and ignores that the spirit of the time also forced Ashkenazim to adopt a new identity. And immigrants should adapt and become part of a new society anyway.. No, they shouldn't erase their past, but they have to become part of something new. That is to be expected and it is not a crime and not a tragedy.
@Starhopper When Modern Hebrew was devised, much of the vocabulary came from the Arabic spoken by Jewish communities in the Maghreb. That certainly gave Mizrahi and Arab Sephardi groups a leg up when learning the language. ua-cam.com/video/4mrNVEJwrzI/v-deo.html
My mom made fish covered in jelly. I couldn't handle it then but today would give it a go. Ate with mayonnaise and horseradish but too many bones to deal with.
@@mydraftable6526 I guess it could be jarred gefilte fish with jelly but I think he's referring to where the entire food was jelly, so I assume petcha. I like gefilte but only if I add horseradish.
@@mydraftable6526 what do you think may be German? The fish with jelly broth? That's definitely traditional, and the gel is called kotchen in Yiddish. You can thicken the broth like that by adding the fish skin and bones to the pot. They even sell thickening powder specifically for that where I live. From what I've seen, he mentions gefilte fish a lot so that's why I think he would have said it if he meant it, and he wouldn't have forgotten the word. When he only described the unknown item as giggly, I thought it might be ptcha.
@@morehn Yes. I think that's it. My mom liked fish a lot. But gifilte fish was like for the holidays. She came from a secular upbringing whilst my dad was orthodox Jew. But he liked his German food no doubt.
Through the Y chromosome paternal DNA, they can be traced back to the Levant. This is likely that Judean men after the destruction of the Jewish temple were exiled and settled in Europe, mixed in with Eastern and Southern European women who converted to Judaism, and over time created the modern day Ashkenazi Jew.
philosophically I believe that to be true since no other two religions Christianity and Islam have had more influence on the world and both are deeply rooted in Judaism. All these different Jewish subcultures like Ashkenazi, Sephardic, Yemeni, Ethiopian, Georgian, etc.... are living proof that the Jewish people maintained a nation in exile and as someone who lived in Israel for three months pieces of all these cultures are alive in contemporary Israeli culture. Toda Raba.
@יהוה לא קיים because the Jewish civilization was formed and based in the Levant. Where a culture is born is incredibly important in discussing the indigeneity of that culture. A Jew has no connection to Persia, unless they’re Persian, or by some distant ancestor. All Jews, however have a connection to the Levant
Question-Proposal, whatever the group: "Do you want to tell a joke about your living situation or the political situation?" If they do: "Can you explain the joke or why you (dis)like it?" If they don't: "Why?"
I‘m German and half my ancestors were Jewish! (Mother’s side) Which I am proud of! My first name is Israeli too.... I’m wondering what Israelis in general think of German Jews
I am from Israel. Germany today has a sizable Jewish community. I lived in France for many years and know Berlin in particular has many Israelis. I encourage you to learn more about Judaism and your Jewish roots. There aren't many of us so we must perverse it best we can. 🇮🇱🇩🇪
@@ForeverRepublic I would love to I’m just unsure how to start! I live in the US now and after watching this video I actually searched for Jewish communities here in my area but I’m not sure if they would let me join since I am Christian and not Jewish and on top of that I am German
@@TheIritify if youre mother is jew you too. You dont need anything, you will be welcome in every jewish community. Its your right. Just care about liberal/reformist/ect ... Community, there are no judaism way just sects that claim to be a judaism part . orthodoxe/ultra orthodoxe/hassidi/ ect... Are real judaism way.
@@gabciel well my mom’s dad was Jewish! My mom is Christian too! So am I considered jewish? I don’t know ... thank you for letting me know about reformist etc ... I didn’t know
About 15-20 years ago, I met a middle-aged Mizrahi Israeli guy who was living in New York at the time. I remember that he was extremely bitter toward the Ashkenazim, feeling that they were racist toward people of his background. So, I was pleasantly surprised by the interviewees in this video, how benign they were in their views of the Ashkenazim. Perhaps that guy was more typical of an earlier generation.
@@yellowfish555 It's odd that Corey didn't run into any of them. He says that he doesn't edit out anything from his videos, so I guess he didn't meet such people. Then again, it could be mainly an older cohort, and perhaps it's they who are participating in the Israeli websites. I don't know. I'm just guessing.
People are people. We all come from Adam. We all bleed red. We are all related. In heaven everyone is family. Love is the Law. Those who accept Jesus Christ have the hope of eternal life. I've seen Him. If you seek Him you will find Him. Jeremiah 29:13 You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.
@Shalom Shalom The Quran tells Muslims to ask the Jews and Christians for truth. The Torah says Elijah is the final prophet. The New Testament says God's Two Witnesses are His final prophets. Muhammed is not mentioned in the lineage of the prophets. The Quran is a book of lies. Muslims also say Jesus Christ is not the Son of God. John 10:34-36 34Jesus answered them, “Is it not written in your Law, ‘I have said you are “gods” ’ d ? 35If he called them ‘gods,’ to whom the word of God came-and Scripture cannot be set aside- 36what about the one whom the Father set apart as his very own and sent into the world? Why then do you accuse me of blasphemy because I said, ‘I am God’s Son’? Jesus Christ calls Himself the Son of God. Everything written in the Quran is based off lies. If you seek Jesus Christ with all your heart, you will find Him. I've seen Him. He looks nothing like the famous pictures.
Daniel 7:13-14 13“In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, a coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. 14He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all nations and peoples of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed. Everyone who believes in Jesus Christ are family. We all came from Adam. Jesus Christ is the most important person in human history.
Point of constructive criticism: I would strongly recommend asking the interviewees whether they are religious prior to asking them any other questions. Even when engaging with people in hyper religious societies, it’s wrong to assume.
I LOVE Ashkenazi food and of course was raised in it but picha (not sure of the spelling) is one thing I could not ever get down. Gross. I'm not crazy about schmaltz herring either. Love kishka though.
why do jews say that mizarahim are hot headed and achkenazi the intellectual ones? i am curious. eastern europe was pretty poor until EU money poured in Poland and the likes...middle east and even south asia have been richer for majority of worlds history. western european jews however created the modern jewish intellectual movement.
@Starhopper I disagree. You don't see Israelis living in occupation. If they did they would be different. Its arabs not ar@bz :) I (a Palestinian) like the Israeli videos to see what they have to say from a different perspective . Don't try to minimize Palestinian occupation
*Fun Fact=* If you ever travel through Toronto City CANADA road construction signs have the M box logo *MIZRAHI* everywhere ! Named after owner Sam Mizrahi major real estate developer including high end luxury condominiums. Born in Tehran Iran he left as a child with his Abba Dad Shamoil and his Ima Mom Ziba two years before the 1979 Islaaamic Religious Revolution. He is set goal next year 2022 to build the tallest skyscraper 'The One' haECHAD in CahNahDah EH !
Thanks to Corey for a beautiful excursus. The main finding of the study: ITS MOSTLY ABOUT GEFILTE FISH for how we are different (which i am crazy about, even though not spicy at all)... Now are the tastes of two brothers or sisters identical?? Very rarely, if only they are not identical twins which is rare. So it is MUCH MORE important that we Jews have always that family attitude towards each other, like true brothers and sisters, all the more cuisine precerences are such a tiny part of our life. But the history, traditions, religion, and genes that we share - this is so much more important. Ve-ahavta le-reacha KEMOCHA. This is a magnificent Torah rule. One family, one nation. Different views. ( N+1 ) opinions. But respect, no hate and LOVE TO YOUR FELLOW JEW. That is what we made our existence through. By the way it is so natural and SIMPLE that our brothers and sisters with Mizrachi rootso e spicy food and dont understand Ashkenazi cuizine: where could you find all this paradise of spices in the winter poland or ukraine?? Kuskus, tahina, hummus, shumshum, pilpel..... where??? For 90% of families in shtettl, the only meat they could afford was for a Shabbes (Shabbat) cholent, once a week - mixed with potatos in proportion 1:5 in order to make all your big family enjoy the festive meals. Fish was all the way much cheaper and easily (relatively) got even in winter. Lechaim Yidden ha-yakarim!!
The existence of Ashkenazi, Sephardi and Mizrachi Jews (amongst others) is very well known nowadays, but I doubt it was always so. Until the 19th century the world beyond one's immediate locality was not so well known. I wonder what outsiders make of these different groups of Jews. Do they project the sort of doctrinal differences that exist in Islam between Sunni and Shi'a (amongst others) and in Christianity between Catholicism, Protestantism and Orthodox (amongst others)? Could you share your thoughts?
There are some religious differences between Ashkenazis and Mizrahis but they are negligible, and these are usually halakhic customs differences and less philosophical (Within the Ashkenazim there is a dispute between 2 different doctrines - Hasidim and Mitnagdim, but even that is already less than it was in the past) The Ashkenazim and the Mizrahim in the Diaspora knew each other and there was broad cooperation between them, in trade, religion, and mutual immigration. The main differences are cultural differences, as you can see in the video they are talking about food etc. The melting pot in Israel, together with the intermarriage of Ashkenazis and Mizrahis, ultimately makes these terms almost meaningless ,of course there are still those who try to cling to these terms for political reasons.
@@cabg1266 Exactly! Variations in halachic custom is quite different from doctrinal differences. To the best of my knowledge local customs (minhagim) override the general halachic position.
Corey can ask both sides on what's happening, it would be interesting to see their repsonse now that more people are seeing what's happening live via social media
Why would Mizrachi have an issue with Ashkenazi? We are all Jewish with some different traditions due to where we went during our exile. We're now all returning home.🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱❤️💙❤️
He are some points some may not be enthusiastic to admit: 1. The Ashkenazim are the founding population of modern Israel in every sense of the word, 2. They are heading the country on economic and scientific developments, 3- They connect Israel with Europe and the developed world. So to put it mildly, Israel would not be as developed as it is today without the Ashkenazim.
@@Linda43 Jews were flocking into Israel from 1880s onward to add to the mix of Jews already living in the Old Yishuv. I'd suggest that it was mainly Americans who were not adding to the mix, primarily because many Ashkenazim and Mizrachim of the USA (but not all) were new immigrants there at exactly the same time point in time. American immigration to Israel didn't kick off until the time of Israeli independence, and onwards.
@@Linda43 I'm just highlighting that Ashkenazim and Mizrachim were there together from the very outset of modern Zionism, contrary to what Willie claimed. I merely felt you didn't highlight sufficiently that the building process is ongoing. I'm afraid I clicked oh you inadvertently as you were the bottom of the list at the time and it was a very short post.
The Arab world has been boycotting Israel, more or less, for 70+ years, and done a lot to discourage the developing world from engaging with Israel, advantageous as that might be. It's hardly surprising therefore you'll find greater contact with the developed world, is it?
The whole mizrachi/sephardi vs. ashkenazi seperation is slowly becoming a thing of the past- most Jews in Israel are now mixed in someway so it's a pretty redundant question to ask if they hate each other. Main difference is in terms of the minhag (religious customs) between the 2 groups. Other than that, they are all Jews.
True but Mizrahim are still warmer. More hugs and kisses and more willing to speak to people they don't know. I love them.
@@judahdaneshtaol Obviously, Ashkenazis are generally much colder. It is emblematic of the area they came from (Europe vs. Middle-East).
As a moroccan Muslim i like the mizrahim Jews. They our cousins. You guys always welcome, back home.
@@WestSide1207 Mizrahim are more hot blooded, Ashkenazim more intellectual
@@morehn I'm half and half, so what does that make me? Lol
Im a Mizrahi Jew and I love Ashkenazi Jews
Why? Cause I am a Jew and they are Jews.
Jews are brothers and came from the same tribe .
Even 2000 years of diaspora can't change it.
@Shalom Shalom thanks for the clarification! I think John the Baptist peace be upon him or "prophet Yehya" (same person) pbuh also confirms what you just said
@Shalom Shalom the translation of the bible into the koine language it was made by the egyptian Jews not by the Greeks...
@Shalom Shalom at that time there were no Greeks but Hellenes and the hellenes were not a homogeneous people but a mix of different populations..many illyrian thracian macedonian paeonian tribes ect even some Jews were part of that culture.. Hellenism was a culture it was not a nation instead the Koine language was a lingua franca at that time
How did you come from the same tribe while you’re nearly from every country in the world from Yemen to Brazil??
Basically we all (jews and non-jews) came from the same place so you need to love every human being. Right?
Today, in 2021, I don't think Mizrachi Jews who are 50 or below, see Ashkenazi Jews as any different than them. Even culturally.
But we ARE culturally different
I hear people whingeing about not understanding "the Askenazi accent", and others saying "there's no longer such an accent, we all just speak Hebrew!"
@@tamar4887
Today? How?
They all eat the same food, listen to the same music, live in the same cities.
I really don't see (today) any significant cultural difference between the two groups.
It pays to be white Euro in the Land Of Israel
@@chugalongway01
I don't know man... Mainstream food in Israel is middle eastern. Mainstream music is middle eastern.
So I think it's convenient for you to think that there's racism between Ashkenazi and Mizrachi but that's not the truth
"Romanian Jews are the Mizrahim of Ashkenazim" haha I love it
Yes we say because romanians have a more warm mentality compared to other ashkenazi like germans or poles and they are more open to oriental music and food espcially turkish
at least from our point of view
Made me laugh out loud. Poor Romanians are always considered 'the outsiders' 🤣
@@DonMrLennyCrimean Jews also embraced Turkish culture. But admittedly, most aren’t Ashkenazim.
@@FatiFleur-jn7kyThat's what being a Latin "island" around non-Latin countries does to people I guess...makes a very unique mix of people.
@@DonMrLennyRomanians have their own music ,not similar to Turkish nor oriental ,same as us Serbs ,we had those cultures before Turks came to balkans
This channel is perfect for language learning! I'm currently learning Hebrew and this has been such a great help!
Good for you. Come visit
Me too 😊
Corey's losing weight. Good for you Corey
Looks younger
I liked fat Corey better
@מחמד חנזיר Phenotypes take generations to morph. Corey is still caucasian :) lol
Maybe we should actually listen to his pleads and donate some more.
Wtf no obesity is epic
People outside of Israel (mostly Arabs) have this weird perception that Ashkenazis and Mizrachis are at each other throats. And are weirdly disappointed learning that we get get a long well.
Not only Jews from all backgrounds get along well, but also Jews and Israeli Arabs. Arabs go to malls and supermarkets and coffeeshops in Jewish majority cities, and Jews go to Arab towns and villages to the Markets and stores. I actually went to an Arab town to get my Covid vaccine.
@محايد قدر المستطاع me too
@محايد قدر المستطاع It is very normal to see Muslim women wearing a Hijab or Niqab is Israel, and no one will say anything or even look at her strangely. I have only seen one or two women wearing a Burka, and this might cause some people to stare. Muslim men are less conspicuous, because nowadays most men wear western clothing, although I did notice that most of them never wear shorts 😆.
I think that most Israeli Arabs appreciate the good life they have in Israel in comparison to their brothers in the West bank and in Gaza (not because of the occupation there, but because of the corruption of the Palestinian authority, and the oppression living under Hamas).
@@daves465 What do Arab gents wear to the beach?
@@daves465 Any idea what percentage of Arabs are happy in Israel? Any idea why it looks like zero percentage of the Arab list Party are happy in Israel?
Corey holy shit, I used to watch ur channel for so long but I haven't really checked on here for a couple years but WOW you've lost so much weight. I'm really proud of you, I'm so happy to see that you're doing betterr (meaning that I can see you're mentally better aswell) anyway, love the content and WOW!!!!! Good job Corey!!!
We Ashkanzi are too hard in ourselves when it comes to food.
My Family is Old Yeshuv.
Lithuanian Jews that settled in Jerusalem in 1808 (almost a century prior to Zionism) and our Ashkenazi food became gradually "Arabized" over the years - we started to use local spices, make Baba Ganosh, Fresh chopped Salads with Parsley, My great Grandmother stuffed Zucchini with minced meat tomatoes and onions. eating Pitta and such in addition to Ashkenazi food.
But we still love Gefilte Fish (my great Grandmother infused dried red papers with in them)8 , Lux
, Chooped Liver and Egg salad.
They are unironically delicacies.
Mothers (and fathers now) from all races want their children to be healthy and enjoy food.
We should share food not politicize it and stigmatized it.
So you're a Mistaravim
Great post.
"Variety is the spice of life "
@@goodputin4324 In some aspects yes, but they still kept their distinct Ashkenazi identity.
They wore Ashkenazi dress (which did had Oriental elements such as more loose flowing robes with stripes- an Arab design)
They spoke Arabic and Turkish to deal with Arab merchants and Ottoman officials.
But spoke Yiddish within themselves.
They were easily Distinguishable as Jews with Bright beards and Shtrimel fox fur hats (way smaller then the excessive Modern Shtrimel) and a Talit praying shawl upon their shoulders.
@@ValerieTgirl i see. Good explanation
My guess is that pickled herring just wasn't readily available in the Mediterranean basin, and stodgy food doesn't make so much sense in a warmer climate.
It was also very reasonable to start eating unfamiliar foodstuffs that met kosher dietary requirements, and what better way to do so than by adopting and adapting local recipes.
It happens all the time to all people. Even to the British who have perhaps the most conservative of tastes.
They are nice people ..I work with them ..they respect other cultures regardless of any differences and they avoid politics.
You work with these particular people or just people in Israel? Just curious
@@cl9615 with ashkenazi Jews also Ethiopian Jews and almost all Jews different cultures.
@@sherryidibo2304 In Israel?
@@cl9615 on Jupiter 🙄🙄🙄🙄..are you serious with this question?
@@sherryidibo2304 🤣
how can you tell there's no Mizrahi-Ahskenazi divide in Israel (outside some media)?
because half the Jewish weddings are of "mixed" couples and it's been this way for decades.
good for us!
My culture uses very similar language when we MIX the likes of peanut butter and honey 🍯, nutella and banana pancakes are good couple examples that's been used for many decades too.
😌😌📈📉📊 Perhaps, the inhabitants of the earth are not so radically different after all. ❤️🍯
I've seen video of matching for weddings in Israel where people specifically asked for only Sephardim or only Ashkenazi possible spouse, but I get from Corey's videos that maybe it just happens in strict traditional groups.
@@negy2570 That's accurate - in Haredi/Ultra-Orthodox communities this happens when matching bride and groom, but outside these communities, where people choose who they marry, it's not a thing at all.
I don't have statistics but likely half if not more of all non-Haredi marriages are mixed ethnicity.
im learning a little hebrew just form watching this channel haha
Me too
So is Corey and I must admit he's made a lot of progress..
There are some good programs on FB for learning Hebrew.
@@Linda43 Hebrew is easy to speak but hard to read.
@Yoav Daniel It is hard when a person starts learning the alef-beyt at the age of 20.
You can tell it’s a st u p I’d question when more people are commenting on Corey’s weight than the question itself.
First
Stupid questions are early signs of healing from the damages of believing assumptions. 🌬️🌀🍂🍃🌱🌿🌾
@@skellingtonmeteoryballoon Never heard that one before.
@@mohamedmostafa1375 Very funny Mr. Mostafa!
@@solvingpolitics3172 Thanks.
What I learned- Ashkenazi food isn't great, because they make fish without spice, but it has improved now.
Hey corey, i think it would br appropriate if you added a screen at the end with some info about the question you asked
So for example if you added a screen explaining how many ashkenaIs there are or a bit of history about them would be very interesting imo
Woahh... Inspiring idea 💡 imagine if the ask project did co-marketing/co-branding with the ancestry DNA database organizations 🤯💗💥💯
Mizrahis are people who came to Israel from the Arab countries,
Ashkenazis are the white, European, Westerns.
Shalom Israeli brothers from Morocco 🇲🇦🇮🇱
Love to Morocco 🇲🇦❤ Home for my family for many centuries. 🇮🇱
Shalom from Israel
Lol you no Moroccan get lost shalom fi tizak ya khar
@@Linda43
Linda expired women u here 😳
@@Linda43 oh hi Linda
You really look amazing, keep up the good work
All Jews are brothers and sisters,we can argue about the nonsense you know but no matter what you love your brother the way he is.
This attempt by our enemies to divide the Jewish people is really stupid, specially today.
@@ferdinanddaratenas3447 Corey is part of that attempt, don't forget that. But yes, it's quite petty, not to say pathetic.
@@Tamir-Barkahan No he’s not
@@tamar4887 Yes he is.
@Shalom Shalom Enough of this nonsense.
יופי של סרטון. אהבת ישראל. יהודים צריכים לאהוב זה את זה. שונאים יש לנו מספיק.
אמן ואמן 💖
אני רואה באשכנזים חלק מהעם שלי.
לצערי הם לא רואים בי כמזרחיה חלק מהעם שלהם...
@@loveydovey4566 מר לאבי, אני אשכנזי 100% (מה לעשות) ואחי היהודים הישראלים מכל העדות - התנדבנו יחד, שירתנו יחד, הגנו יחד על המדינה, לומדים ועובדים יחד - ואם מישהו אומר לך שאתה לא חלק מהעם שלהם בגלל המוצא שלך - יש לו עסק איתי - ואני מקווה שאותו דבר מהצד שלך.
@@loveydovey4566 אין דבר כזה מה את בת 80
אחותי תשחררי
I love watching your vids.its informative.. watching from the philippines..
what is aszkinazhem and mizrahi?😁
Ashkenazi Jews are Jews who traditionally lived in Europe and spoke Yiddish.
Mizrahi is an umbrella term for Jews who lived in the Middle East, Central Asia and North Africa.
Ashkenazi Jews - Jews who came from Europe, mostly with white skin and European mentality... Mizrahi Jews- Jews who came to Israel from the Arab world ( Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Egypt, and Lebanon) Iran, and north Africa ( Morroco , Tunisia, Lybia) so basically Mizrahi Jews are middle eastern Jews with brown skin, and middle eastern culture and mentality...its estimated that the Mizrahi Jews are between 50-60% of the Jewish population In Israel (they are the majority).
@@LegoRomania28 not necessarily speaking Yiddish for instance my family are jekkers from west Germany and at best spoke judisch-Deutsch but never yiddish. Yiddish was only really prevalent in the east.
It's my first time I know that the Arabic word "sababa = صبابة" is used also in Hebrew 0:38 . That's amazing.
"Sababa", "Yalla" and "Ahla" (احلا) are probably the most used words in Hebrew. You can hear them all the time, everywhere. It's quite fascinating to see how Hebrew and Arabic in Israel influence one another. For started, a lot of words are very similar, or almost identical, which makes the two languages close sisters (for example: ward=vered; walad=yeled; yad=yad; labas=lavash; yom=yom). In modern and daily-spoken Hebrew, a lot of Arabic words are used (Hafla, magnun, fashla, ashkara, hafif, fadiha, dir balak). The Israeli-Arabic is almost a mixed Arabic, a Palestine-dialect Arabic that integrate a lot of words, phrases and terms from Hebrew.
@@tzachiyosef5561
That's really more than interesting. Actually, I know that Arabic and Hebrew are of semitic origin, but I never expected that some words are used in both languages with the same meaning and same pronunciation.
@Shani Isreal Would you prefer Hebrew curse words?
@Shani Isreal That's fair enough, but in real life would you rather your compatriots cursed in Hebrew or Arabic? It's hardly a difficult question.
هي اجت علي صبابة سارقو كل شى
Bruh. Ashkenazis and Mizrahis in Israel are not segregated ir anything. We live together, marry, and everything.
I dont understand thisnquestion
It's a tactic by Arabs to divide Jews in order to cause infighting
Literally lmao
It's just such an awkward weird question that people are lost for words.
Yea, but still, there is probably going to be an education and wealth gap between the Ashkenazi and the rest of the groups.....even in the USA, the Ashkenazi tend to be wealthier and better educated than the average.
@@rgsxyz1105 Barely at all, especially in the current generation. When I studied computer science in TAU, there were no more Ashkenazi than Mizrahi.
@@rgsxyz1105 that’s not the case in Israel.... you’re putting western issues on to something that isn’t western.
@@SocialSchism , the only source I could find via wikipedia, ....According to a survey by the Adva Center,[171] the average income of Ashkenazim was 36 percent higher than that of Mizrahim in 2004.
@@rgsxyz1105 These things change and are not black and white. In Northwestern Europe, for example in the Netherlands, Sephardim were far wealthier than Ashkenazim. I'm pretty sure the Syrian Jewish community of NY is on average much wealthier than their Ashkenazi neighbors.
Just to clarify to the viewers: when they speak of being from other countries such as Morocco or Poland for example, they mean of their ethnic sub group of Judaism, sphardi, mizrachi and Ashkenazi Jews share very very similar genetics and culture that have slight differences (for example in food variations and Hebrew accent)
Judaism is not an ethnicity nor a race. It is simply a religion.
@@OmarOsman98 Judaism is called after the last Hebrew kingdom of Judea. In a different reality where's the kingdoms of Israel and Judea both were survived perfectly the Jews would be recognized simpley by the name Hebrews and the religion named will be named the teaching of moses. Arabs are the true occupiers in the middle east that only know to cry crocodile tears open Google unlike other middle eastern groups u don't belong here.
@@meirneemany4078 I would correct you, but I feel that would be a waste of time. Take care.
@@OmarOsman98 write on Google indigenous to the middle east. Spoiler u will find jews kurds Azerbaijanis levantines but not Arabs . Maybe u can't stand the facts thah while arabs usually cry on the tv they were the biggest army of Muhammad doing what u blame Israel for. Muhammad acted like the Zionist u hate😳
@@OmarOsman98 and its its not just about Israel arabs are conquers in Egypt Morocco Lebanon and many more. I don't blame u for being a good army that taked over other nations i only want u to open your to reality. U are not the sheep you're the wolf wearing the sheep skin.
It's great when all jews love eachother. Unlike some anti semites that like to separate us
A commie J*w. Why am I not surprised?
@@TomorrowWeLive aint commie
This channel is amazing...I love how you physically go to places and talk with people.
We’re all brothers and sisters. No reason to hate a fellow Jew, nor anyone that isn’t an enemy for that matter.
True
As an Australian Ashkenazi Jew married to an Israeli of Moroccan descent, the is no contest on the food issue. Give me spicy Mizrachi food any day of the week.
Of course we have different customs, a different way of praying etc etc. But we are all Jewish. I have very fair skin, blue eyes and freckles, but have always felt welcomed in any Synagogue in Israel regardless of the community it represents.
Absolutely: give me the spices every time! Cinnamon and raisins don't have to be limited to apple based puddings; (although I must say Ashkenazi spiced apple cake is good) they also go so well with chillis and cumin, coriander, black pepper in rice or cous cous. The funniest Ashkenazi dish is aubergine ersatz chopped "liver". Aubergine does not taste anything like liver, but hey...do people even make that stuff any more? Yeah, spices win every time!
Peoples doing customs WAY before airport security ♥️🎉🎉✈️🛫🛬
@@skellingtonmeteoryballoon Haha! Well speaking of airport security, I once had some super hot chilli peppers confiscated at customs. I hope the thieves of my lovely hot peppers were acCUSTOMed to their spiciness! The cheek of it!
Ozzy ozzy ozzy Oi oi oi!
Yes but the mentality of mizrahi jews is very different than the ashkeneazi.
That's the great thing about the re-creation of Israel... the whole Jewish family has come back together.
In the USA most Jews are of Ashkenazi descent, as is my ex-wife. My family came from northern Greece (Macedonia). The food difference, YES, I agree, but other cultural elements are not that different.
So the Askhenazim are considered a bit the British of Israel: Cultured, more liberal and with a gastronomy not very appetizing.
@Mizrahi With Attitude You really think that Russians are liberals or Chechens are culturized? Despite all they are whites.
And they are less warm- less hugs and kisses. Less likely to talk to people they do not know.
@@judahdaneshtaolSo they're like Germans?
@@pluviophile4311 yes
Israel is the most fascinating country in the world
You should go visit
@@LindysRuffians I did and it was great
@@matinazadeh6870 خوشحالم که توانستید به اسرائیل سفر کنید.
@@matinazadeh6870 What did you like most? Least?
@@solvingpolitics3172 I like the mix of old architecture with modern culture. I like the people. The general vibe reminded me of my home country in the middle east. I like the young people there, they seemed more mature then the young people where I live (Canada). I didn't like the confusing bus and train system, but maybe it was just confusing because I was new. I didn't like the lack of wifi connection for public use
This is super interesting. I think the response would be different from those of us who live outside of Israel and are mostly used to encountering their own branch of Judaism. In France the perceived difference between Sephardi and Ashkenazi is huge! It’s one of those situations where when travelling around one is really excited to meet another Jew, and the similarities in our upbringing and traditions bring us automatically closer, but back home it feels like a huge gap to cross.
As a romanian jew , loved that one ..the romanian jews are the mizrahim of the ashkenazim :)))
You do a very very good job, we need this Thank you very much.
Like, what's better than Pastrami from Katz's?
i dont think this "divide" is really being much of a factor anymore at this point, other than for some politicians and people from older generations
im half saphardic and half ashkenazi, i just think of myself as jewish, i dont really see much of a difference between me and anyone i know from any other kind of origin who is also jewish, i dont feel like friends who are mizrahi ashkenazi and saphardic are different from me or have a "different culture" at all
What kind of politician care about this division ?
@@shedar7387 those that want to benefit from amplifying it
@@dors.sc1 It doesn't answer my question
BH, The Jewish sons and daughters have returned to their ancient ancestral borders in Israel.
AM YISROEL CHAI LE'NETZACH
ISRAEL LIVES FOREVER FROM THE JORDAN RIVER TO THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
Israel is more than from the river to the sea.
@@mistergross5469
I know lol.
It's meant as a slogan and a response to the Arabs, " From the river to the sea, Fakenstein will be free" 😁
f* you guys. Palestine will be free and Israel nation will not be existent 😂
Palestinians with their fertility rate will have the last 😂 laugh
@@canmanlam
Actually Arab women are having fewer children as their education increases.
Bruh I'm convinced isreal is morocco version 2 LMAO
Israel is way richer more economically developed than Morocco LOL
@@curlysue9436 cool good for you
@@curlysue9436 No one cares 🇲🇦🤝🇮🇱
@@curlysue9436 Salvation* can be found in no other name under Heaven other than THE NAME of Jesus THE CHRIST/BSHEM *YESHUA* HA MASHIACH. for HE alone IS THE ONLY WAY THE ONLY TRUTH and THE ONLY WAY to Eternal life and no one gets to HASHEM/GOD ecept through HIM. so i only ask all who are here if not already to please choose this day to trust in YESHUA HA MASHIACH that HE died in your place to make atonement for your sins that was seperating you from GOD so that by believing this and trusting in HIM that HE rose from the grave that you too by believing in HIM will one day rise from the dead and have eternal life and be saved from The Terrifying Wrath of HASHEM that is to come to all who reject YESHUA as THE MESSIAH of Israel and SAVIOR of The Whole World that HE rightly, truly IS. i ask please do this so that even today will be your *Day of Salvation*
@@tamar4887
✨✌️🇲🇦I 🇵🇸 ✌️
🐒💭💩🇮🇱🐀🐀🐀🐜👣
I love the food talk. Food is so much more interesting than anti-semitism, racism and ethnic strife.
There is no sincerer love in the world than the love of food.
George Bernard Shaw
@@mohamedmostafa1375 Ha, I didn't know he said that, but those are wise words.
Mizrahi are not a minority group in Israel. Ever since around 1995 Mizrahi culture has dominated Israel.
Since 1977
All are Arab Jews
@@goodputin4324 no they are not.
Actually the 90s changed the demographics back, due to the influx of immigrants from the Soviet union.
@@goodputin4324 no lol they israeli origin
there is no such thing as arb jews lol
Why would corey only ask them about what they don't like about Ashkenazi but notice not one said anything but good things. And BTW, if you look at stats there are 50% Ashkenazim in Israel. The rest are either Mizrahi and Sephardic or intermarriage of all Jews. Quit trying to minimize Ashkenazim or divide us Jews. You won't be able to.
AMEN
Lol Arab Jews rule Israel
@Shani Isreal yeah Mizrahi aka Arab Jews
Thanks Corey.
Super informative videos.
Keep it up and all the best.
Damn Achi you look absolutely peng. That gym must be paying off.
I have some mezrahi dna, what does that mean?
You have some Jewish DNA, probably had a Jewish grandma/ grandfather.
When jews forget that we are as jews one family🙄
Who cares if your roots from iraq, ethiopia, india, poland.. we are as jews can't forget that we are finally one family and our home is israel.
Absolute truth 💞
I am an African-American Jew
😢..
@@AnthonyJones-bx5ij
Cool
@@AnthonyJones-bx5ij no such thing. Don't Come to Israel
@@zunoyo1028 We are Isreal !
What I have learned from Wikipedia is that Ashkenazi Jews are a jewish diaspora population that lived in Germany, France and eastern Europe. What I have learned from this video is that they are great people, but their food sucks. I may be biased, but the food in these countries is great!
I would love to learn more about these groups. For example what is a typical Ashkenazi meal and where does it come from.
You look very good Corey!
Ask them what do they think about Mizrahim next
He did that years ago if you go look
Again a ridiculous question. What is your aim? To cause dissent among the people?. Most families today in Israel have families of different cultures from Mizrachi to Ashkenazi to Ethiopian and others. You get a thumbs down again.
It's hard for those who live in societies that are much less open and diverse than Israel's to take this on board.
I don’t get why other religions think Ashkenazim Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews hate each other, I’ve never met an actual Jewish person of any culture who hates or dislikes others.
I understand that your channel is all about seeing how people react to generalizations and stereotypes and myths, but this generalization is so broad that it's meaningless and probably made people feel uncomfortable answering a question that cannot have a concrete answer.
If I may ask, in your opinion, would you say the question,➿ " what do you think about the Navajo windtalkers?" ➿
Is ALSO like answering a question that cannot have a concrete answer ?
🐌🐚
@@skellingtonmeteoryballoon Salvation* can be found in no other name under Heaven other than THE NAME of Jesus THE CHRIST/BSHEM *YESHUA* HA MASHIACH. for HE alone IS THE ONLY WAY THE ONLY TRUTH and THE ONLY WAY to Eternal life and no one gets to HASHEM/GOD ecept through HIM. so i only ask all who are here if not already to please choose this day to trust in YESHUA HA MASHIACH that HE died in your place to make atonement for your sins that was seperating you from GOD so that by believing this and trusting in HIM that HE rose from the grave that you too by believing in HIM will one day rise from the dead and have eternal life and be saved from The Terrifying Wrath of HASHEM that is to come to all who reject YESHUA as THE MESSIAH of Israel and SAVIOR of The Whole World that HE rightly, truly IS. i ask please do this so that even today will be your *Day of Salvation*
I am an Ashkenazi Jew
Same here
Shalom from a yemenite jew
@@Linda43 shalom
@@שלמה-נ1ח shalom
@@yanivsh4306
Shalom Yaniv
מה הם לא מבינים?? הוא לא שואל "האם הם סבבה או לא?" הוא רוצה שיחה, תדברו קצת, בחיאתץ תגידו שהם חמודים, לפלפים. כנסו לפרטים לגבי ההבדלי תרבות.
בשביל זה הוא צריך לשאול אנשים מקצועיים עם ידע בהיסטוריה ותרבות לא סתם אנשים ברחוב ובטח שלא צעירים
@@michaelacohen3308 Salvation* can be found in no other name under Heaven other than THE NAME of Jesus THE CHRIST/BSHEM *YESHUA* HA MASHIACH. for HE alone IS THE ONLY WAY THE ONLY TRUTH and THE ONLY WAY to Eternal life and no one gets to HASHEM/GOD ecept through HIM. so i only ask all who are here if not already to please choose this day to trust in YESHUA HA MASHIACH that HE died in your place to make atonement for your sins that was seperating you from GOD so that by believing this and trusting in HIM that HE rose from the grave that you too by believing in HIM will one day rise from the dead and have eternal life and be saved from The Terrifying Wrath of HASHEM that is to come to all who reject YESHUA as THE MESSIAH of Israel and SAVIOR of The Whole World that HE rightly, truly IS. i ask please do this so that even today will be your *Day of Salvation*
ענו לו בסדר גמור.
כל המזרחים ענו לו שהם מבסוטים שהם יוצאים עם אשכנזיות או מחותנים להם ומבסוטים מזה שהילדים שלהם יהיו חצי אשכנזים חחחחחח איזו הערכה עצמית נמוכה פשוט מעוררות רחמים. זה רק מראה על כלכך הרבה בעיות חברתיות בארץ.
@@afroange להיות גזען זו הערכה עצמית גבוהה? תגיד אתה בסדר? אני אשכנזי ויצאתי עם ספרדיות ויש לי בני עדות המזרח במשפחה, אז יש לי הערכה עצמית נמוכה? גזענות בין יהודים.... גועל נפש
Obviously the differences are disappearing, and more similarities among the groups
I am non-Jewish and the kindest, friendliest people I have met are Sephardi and Mizrahi Jewish.
We are the same people. The differences are purely cultural. Like the difference between French in France and French in Québec.
Hasbara
No that's different
@Shani Isreal hasbara troll
@Shani Isreal you keep repeating that like you have some idea what you are talking about. Low intelligence hasbara troll.
@Shani Isreal go research Vital Hasson so you can learn about the Jews who worked with Hitler. Hasbara troll.
I love how in every video he is posting he is somehow trying to say they shouldn't be shy to answer with a full heart and starts to act defensively that just gives his viewers the wrong idea...
The 13th tribe. The Ashkenazim are Turkic people whom converted to Judaism in 8th century. They moved in to mostly eastern european countries in 12th century after the collapse of the Khazar empire. The evangelicals support the zionist because the evangelics thinks that every jew must return to israel and 3/4 of them will be killed so the messiah, jesus, will return. The people of the book, bible or torah are the children of Sham (Shem) The ashkenazim aka the Khazars (Turk) are the children of the other son of Noah, called Yapeth. They have no bloodline to Sham. The Gog and Magog tribe was also children of Yapeth, son of Noah.
Revelation 2:9
I know your afflictions and your poverty-yet you are rich! I know about the slander of those who say they are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan.
Revelation 3:9
Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, who say they are Jews and are not, but do lie - behold, I will make them to come and worship at thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee.
@Bartosz Wojciechowski you most likely one of those khazars
@Bartosz Wojciechowski you didn't read but formed a opinion ? You are very smart indeed
@@oghuzkhan5117 Khazars were a central Asian Turkic people. does Ashkenazi Jews look like Turks? no.
@@segevkrespi8609 We are talking about 8th-12th century. We are today in 21th century. Do you know how many generations 700 years is? Of course people change, they inter marry and or assimilate
Did you know that in the 1970s the Mizrahis established the Israeli version of the "Black Panthers" to protest against discrimination by the Ashkenazi regime?
Yes. And I'd say it was spectacularly successful in achieving its objectives.
Yes this is true, I remember reading about this. There was definitely a problem of discrimination against Mizrahim/Sephardim. But hopefully not so much of a problem now.
@@margaritakleinman5701Now it is mainly discrimination against Ethiopian Jews
@@amitkenan3878 That is too bad. I hope that situation improves in the future.
As a French Canadian from Montreal, the only ashkenazi-ish food I know is bagel and smoked meat and it's delicious and very iconic here.
I think the culture of Israel (at least the mostly secular culture) is based upon assimilating into the existing culture and over time slowly incorporating elements of diaspora culture into the dominant Ashkenazi Hebrew culture. There is mostly cordial coexistence today, but when Jewish communities were exiled from their historic Muslim homelands, they found themselves as refugees in an Israel that looked upon those new arrivals as backwards. The Maghreb, Levant, Persian Yemeni and to a lesser extent Sephardi Jews were subjected to what amounted to forced assimilation. They were stripped of their languages, traditions, dress and remade in the image of the Ashkenazi zionist idea. So, when you ask a Mizrahi "What do you think of Ashkenazim?" I suspect it's a difficult question to answer. If they are younger they will talk about superficial items like food. For older people it may be a more complicated question since they may still remember what they lost during their refugee and reeducation process.
www.thejewishstar.com/stories/tragedy-triumph-of-mizrahi-jews-holds-real-key-to-mideast-peace,19793
_They were stripped of their languages, traditions, dress and remade in the image of the Ashkenazi zionist idea_
"Stripped of their languages." Such over-the-top, tendentious hyperbole! (1), it is the normal course and to be expected that a newcomer learns the language and adopts aspects of the culture of
his new coutnry (2) Hebrew is literally the ancestral and historical national language of the Mizrahi Jews, just as it is for Ashkenazi Jews. (3) If Mizrahi Jews were stripped of their language, then by the same token Ashkenazi Jews were stripped of their languages. Ashkenazi Zionists willingly abandoned Yiddish for the modern Hebrew. But many Mizrahi and Sephardic Jews in the Land of Israel were at the forefront of the modern Hebrew spoken and literary revival., I am related to one very famous Sephardic Hebrew revivalist, the pedagogue Joseph Meyouhas, who was no less a part of the modern Hebrew revival than Eliezer Ben-Yehuda.(4) The Mizrahi Jews from Arabic-speaking backgrounds had an easier time assimilating to the Hebrew language than secular Ashkenazi Jew with little or no Hebrew language exposure prior to their aliyah. While earlier generations of Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazim who came from a religious background and had studied in yeshivot knew Hebrew even if they had abandoned religion, people from backgrounds like my that of my mother, who came from a secular, assimilated Hungarian-speaking Jewish family after WW2 had to learn Hebrew from scratch, and she married my native Hebrew-speaking Mizrahi/Sephardic father, whose family had lived in the Holy Land for many generations. Was my Ashkenazi Hungarian mother stripped of her language and culture when she became Israeli and learned Hebrew? Such nonsense you spout!
@Starhopper Jews had been in Baghdad for over 2,600 years. They were 40% of the population, and as much part of that culture as any muslim or christian Iraqi. They weren't backwards. They just weren't Western.
@@guywhousesapseudonymonyout4272 I can't imagine that there were many Mizrachi Jews who were not familiar with the use of Hebrew for ritual purposes, and it is not a big step to move from that to Modern Hebrew as a daily language.
I have no idea how many Ashkenazi in Eastern Europe were monolingual Yiddish speakers. To the best of my knowledge, many were multi-lingual as they had to deal with officialdom and their neighbours on a daily basis.
The rise of monoglot Jewish communities is mainly something from the large English and Spanish speaking communities in the Americas. In UK today I think some proficiency in other languages is more usual amongst Jews than the general population. Otherwise, cross Europe knowledge of English is generally a marker of having a good education and is very widespread. Once you have learnt several languages acquisition of a new one isn't so daunting.
I think the only other exception is Russian speakers, and this was down to the promotion of the language as the _lingua franca_ across the former Soviet Union.
@@marksimons8861 That was basically my point. Most Mizrahi Jews were familiar with liturgical Hebrew and the few who weren't could learn it easier as it was close to Arabic (excluding perhaps Mizrahi groups like Persian or Georgian Jews who didn't know Arabic, but they often were more familiar with Hebrew until modern times).
Ashkenazi Jews like ex-Soviet Jews who came in the 1990s wio had no experience with Hebrew (except the ones who secretly learned it as Zionist refuseniks and passed around samizdat textbooks)were very unfamiliar with Hebrew and certainly found it a bigger culture shock. My mother's family, who were assimilated Hungarian-speaking bourgeois Central Europeans (pre-Holocaust, which tuned them into desperate refugees) certainly experienced a great cultural shock in 1950s Israel. They also were housed in a ma'abarah (transit camp/tent city). But there is no rhetoric of them being stripped of their language and culture and forced to assimilate like certain far Left anti-Zionist talking points. Naturally, Mizrahi immigrants underwent trauma and culture shock. Yes, there was patronizing attitudes towards them and discrimination from the elites of the society. But what do you expect in a society in transition? Doug Winfield talks as if "the Ashkenazim" did this to them out of pure hate and contempt for Mizrahi culture and ignores that the spirit of the time also forced Ashkenazim to adopt a new identity. And immigrants should adapt and become part of a new society anyway.. No, they shouldn't erase their past, but they have to become part of something new. That is to be expected and it is not a crime and not a tragedy.
@Starhopper When Modern Hebrew was devised, much of the vocabulary came from the Arabic spoken by Jewish communities in the Maghreb. That certainly gave Mizrahi and Arab Sephardi groups a leg up when learning the language.
ua-cam.com/video/4mrNVEJwrzI/v-deo.html
5:30 the thing that jiggles is petcha, not gefilte fish!
It's like every food this guy could think of is gefilte fish.
My mom made fish covered in jelly. I couldn't handle it then but today would give it a go. Ate with mayonnaise and horseradish but too many bones to deal with.
@@mydraftable6526 I guess it could be jarred gefilte fish with jelly but I think he's referring to where the entire food was jelly, so I assume petcha.
I like gefilte but only if I add horseradish.
@@morehn I'm not sure either way. It could be purely a German dish. My parents were German Jews so I could be confused.
@@mydraftable6526 what do you think may be German? The fish with jelly broth?
That's definitely traditional, and the gel is called kotchen in Yiddish.
You can thicken the broth like that by adding the fish skin and bones to the pot.
They even sell thickening powder specifically for that where I live.
From what I've seen, he mentions gefilte fish a lot so that's why I think he would have said it if he meant it, and he wouldn't have forgotten the word. When he only described the unknown item as giggly, I thought it might be ptcha.
@@morehn Yes. I think that's it. My mom liked fish a lot. But gifilte fish was like for the holidays. She came from a secular upbringing whilst my dad was orthodox Jew. But he liked his German food no doubt.
We do love spicy ! 🔥🔥🔥
One question from Brazil for Israelis, do you consider Teimanim as Mizrahim?
Yes and no
Yes but they have their own category and prayer style.
Is there a common genetic link?
All Jewish communities can be traced back to the levant.
Through the Y chromosome paternal DNA, they can be traced back to the Levant. This is likely that Judean men after the destruction of the Jewish temple were exiled and settled in Europe, mixed in with Eastern and Southern European women who converted to Judaism, and over time created the modern day Ashkenazi Jew.
philosophically I believe that to be true since no other two religions Christianity and Islam have had more influence on the world and both are deeply rooted in Judaism. All these different Jewish subcultures like Ashkenazi, Sephardic, Yemeni, Ethiopian, Georgian, etc.... are living proof that the Jewish people maintained a nation in exile and as someone who lived in Israel for three months pieces of all these cultures are alive in contemporary Israeli culture. Toda Raba.
@Sylvie Olin I know this
@יהוה לא קיים because the Jewish civilization was formed and based in the Levant. Where a culture is born is incredibly important in discussing the indigeneity of that culture. A Jew has no connection to Persia, unless they’re Persian, or by some distant ancestor. All Jews, however have a connection to the Levant
Question-Proposal, whatever the group:
"Do you want to tell a joke about your living situation or the political situation?"
If they do: "Can you explain the joke or why you (dis)like it?"
If they don't: "Why?"
I‘m German and half my ancestors were Jewish! (Mother’s side) Which I am proud of! My first name is Israeli too.... I’m wondering what Israelis in general think of German Jews
I am from Israel. Germany today has a sizable Jewish community. I lived in France for many years and know Berlin in particular has many Israelis.
I encourage you to learn more about Judaism and your Jewish roots. There aren't many of us so we must perverse it best we can. 🇮🇱🇩🇪
@@ForeverRepublic I would love to I’m just unsure how to start! I live in the US now and after watching this video I actually searched for Jewish communities here in my area but I’m not sure if they would let me join since I am Christian and not Jewish and on top of that I am German
@@TheIritify Being German shouldn’t preclude your being involved in any Jewish community in the US. It’s not an issue at all.
@@TheIritify if youre mother is jew you too. You dont need anything, you will be welcome in every jewish community. Its your right.
Just care about liberal/reformist/ect ... Community, there are no judaism way just sects that claim to be a judaism part . orthodoxe/ultra orthodoxe/hassidi/ ect... Are real judaism way.
@@gabciel well my mom’s dad was Jewish! My mom is Christian too! So am I considered jewish? I don’t know ... thank you for letting me know about reformist etc ... I didn’t know
How person can be Moroccan /Iraqi and Jewish in the same time ?I’m not Jewish,so i rly can’t understand it.
@long hands
There are no Indian Jew, those are just Indians trying to get Israeli passport
About 15-20 years ago, I met a middle-aged Mizrahi Israeli guy who was living in New York at the time. I remember that he was extremely bitter toward the Ashkenazim, feeling that they were racist toward people of his background. So, I was pleasantly surprised by the interviewees in this video, how benign they were in their views of the Ashkenazim. Perhaps that guy was more typical of an earlier generation.
Let's leave the past in the past.
We have the privilege as Jews to live in our ancestral homeland Israel.
עם ישראל חי לנצח
If not for us Ashkenazi Jews, there would be no Israel. We made it happen. WE also saved our Mizrahi and Sephardic brethren.
At least most Ashkenazi don't vote likud, like the mizrahi
They exist today too. You'll see them mostly in the comment sections of israeli websites.
@@yellowfish555 It's odd that Corey didn't run into any of them. He says that he doesn't edit out anything from his videos, so I guess he didn't meet such people. Then again, it could be mainly an older cohort, and perhaps it's they who are participating in the Israeli websites. I don't know. I'm just guessing.
What's the difference between Mizrahi and Ashkenazi? Is it simply where they're from?
The jews spread and mixed with the locals.
MIZRAHI ARE ARAB JEWS LIVING IN IRAN IRAQ YEMEN AND THE SURROUNDING ARAB COUNTRIES. ASHKENAZI ARE DISPLACED EUROPEAN JEWS
@Mizrahi With Attitude middle eastern are Arabs lol
@Mizrahi With Attitude yala yala
@Mizrahi With Attitude all the same stock. You all look the same
People are people. We all come from Adam. We all bleed red. We are all related. In heaven everyone is family. Love is the Law. Those who accept Jesus Christ have the hope of eternal life. I've seen Him. If you seek Him you will find Him.
Jeremiah 29:13
You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.
@Shalom Shalom lol
@Shalom Shalom
The Quran tells Muslims to ask the Jews and Christians for truth. The Torah says Elijah is the final prophet. The New Testament says God's Two Witnesses are His final prophets. Muhammed is not mentioned in the lineage of the prophets. The Quran is a book of lies. Muslims also say Jesus Christ is not the Son of God.
John 10:34-36
34Jesus answered them, “Is it not written in your Law, ‘I have said you are “gods” ’ d ? 35If he called them ‘gods,’ to whom the word of God came-and Scripture cannot be set aside- 36what about the one whom the Father set apart as his very own and sent into the world? Why then do you accuse me of blasphemy because I said, ‘I am God’s Son’?
Jesus Christ calls Himself the Son of God. Everything written in the Quran is based off lies. If you seek Jesus Christ with all your heart, you will find Him. I've seen Him. He looks nothing like the famous pictures.
Elijah is one of the Two Witnesses in the book of revelation. Elijah is the final prophet for the Jews and Christians.
@Shalom Shalom lol
Daniel 7:13-14
13“In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, a coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. 14He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all nations and peoples of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.
Everyone who believes in Jesus Christ are family. We all came from Adam. Jesus Christ is the most important person in human history.
Point of constructive criticism: I would strongly recommend asking the interviewees whether they are religious prior to asking them any other questions. Even when engaging with people in hyper religious societies, it’s wrong to assume.
You are obviously not picking up the signals which sector of Israeli society people belong to.
@@marksimons8861 How do you mean?
The jiggle food she was talking about is Picha. I had a kosher store in Hollywood Fl and we had to make that for our Ashkenazi customers.
I LOVE Ashkenazi food and of course was raised in it but picha (not sure of the spelling) is one thing I could not ever get down. Gross. I'm not crazy about schmaltz herring either. Love kishka though.
P'tcha is delicious, especially the spicy kind😜👍
@wownouser yes that’s the Hebrew for Picha in Yiddish.
@@chineseviruszombie773 It is one fo the most disgusting things, like head cheese and jellied pig's feet.
I'd transliterate it better as "P'tcha"
Its' gross. Jellied calf leg.
Are moroccan jews mostly considered sephardi or mizrahi? I think the latter
Mizrahi
Both
Sephardi. Mizrahi technically means Eastern and Morocco is the West geographically.
I feel bad for askhenazi who can't have legumes during passover 😂 and I think sephardic charosset tastes better 😁
Google ‘Haavara Agreement’
@@zionismisjewishnazism8487 what that has to do with askhenazi charosset? Are you a bot? 🤔
@@carolinesa91 No, just look it up.
@@zionismisjewishnazism8487 I did, still can't find the connection.
Why are their divisons like Ashkenazi, Sephardi and Mizrahi among Israelis? Who are the direct descendants of Prophet Jacob among them?
We are all descendants of Yaakov Avenu
@@Linda43 I mean who among them didn't really mixed with others and had been already living in Levant after the Roman's destruction of Second Temple
@@Hi5Ripon If you look externally at Jews around the world you will see that most "swaped" DNA with the local non-jewish at some point in time.
Kurdistan ❤️🔆💚🇮🇱🥰
We Kurds need a Kurdistan flag emoji.
كلي خرا زهراء
The Yemeni suddenly scratches his hair 🤣😂
Make sure you’re wearing sunscreen you’re looking so tan!! Happy spring
And fat and soft. Can you imagine that in the IDF and protecting the Jewish state?!
He looks better with a tan
@@FirstnameLastname-pt5sstanning with sunscreen is healthier and tanning causes skin cancer. I’m from miami lol
Not sure if he's tan or if that's just his natural skin color. Some Ashkenazi Jews are olive-skinned.
@@warpedcomedy I’ve watched like an embarrassing amount of videos to know that he looks very tan for him.
why do jews say that mizarahim are hot headed and achkenazi the intellectual ones? i am curious. eastern europe was pretty poor until EU money poured in Poland and the likes...middle east and even south asia have been richer for majority of worlds history. western european jews however created the modern jewish intellectual movement.
Eastern Europe was more poor cause it had no slaves and colonies ,they are extremely smart people btw
Dumb question, leaning towards mischievous, what answers did you expect besides the obvious answers that were given.
I expected the answer from 7:03 !! 📉📈📊 But of course, was obvious. Hhhh
People send him questions through his email and he responds. He does what the views say.
Could you do the other way around ? What do Ashkenazis think of Mizrahis?
I like these movies more than those with Palestinians
Agreed
Curious.. why is that?
?
@Starhopper I disagree. You don't see Israelis living in occupation. If they did they would be different. Its arabs not ar@bz :) I (a Palestinian) like the Israeli videos to see what they have to say from a different perspective . Don't try to minimize Palestinian occupation
@Shani Isreal girl what?
This video is misleading because the question is not asked correctly. It’s not about ethnicity but about cultural and sociological differences.
Eastern jews are more religious and more hateful towards Arabs, prefer the European/western ones
*Fun Fact=* If you ever travel through Toronto City CANADA road construction signs have the M box logo *MIZRAHI* everywhere ! Named after owner Sam Mizrahi major real estate developer including high end luxury condominiums.
Born in Tehran Iran he left as a child with his Abba Dad Shamoil and his Ima Mom Ziba two years before the 1979 Islaaamic Religious Revolution.
He is set goal next year 2022 to build the tallest skyscraper 'The One' haECHAD in CahNahDah EH !
Satan rules this world and its powers and riches.
Prove me wrong !?
There is a hot place for sin and all is welcome who defies the most high Creator.
@@AnthonyJones-bx5ij dude prove your self right🤣 why we need to do all the work for you? And his name is הלל בן שחר not satan
Woah 🤯
That's deep, brother.
This news is gonna shock and shake up the inhabitants of the earth 💥💯🌬️🌀🌪️🌁
2:16 "They don't like spicy food" right..... what?
Damn you look so healthy!!! You look 10 years younger :O
Thanks to Corey for a beautiful excursus.
The main finding of the study: ITS MOSTLY ABOUT GEFILTE FISH for how we are different (which i am crazy about, even though not spicy at all)...
Now are the tastes of two brothers or sisters identical?? Very rarely, if only they are not identical twins which is rare.
So it is MUCH MORE important that we Jews have always that family attitude towards each other, like true brothers and sisters, all the more cuisine precerences are such a tiny part of our life. But the history, traditions, religion, and genes that we share - this is so much more important.
Ve-ahavta le-reacha KEMOCHA. This is a magnificent Torah rule. One family, one nation. Different views. ( N+1 ) opinions. But respect, no hate and LOVE TO YOUR FELLOW JEW. That is what we made our existence through.
By the way it is so natural and SIMPLE that our brothers and sisters with Mizrachi rootso e spicy food and dont understand Ashkenazi cuizine: where could you find all this paradise of spices in the winter poland or ukraine?? Kuskus, tahina, hummus, shumshum, pilpel..... where??? For 90% of families in shtettl, the only meat they could afford was for a Shabbes (Shabbat) cholent, once a week - mixed with potatos in proportion 1:5 in order to make all your big family enjoy the festive meals. Fish was all the way much cheaper and easily (relatively) got even in winter.
Lechaim Yidden ha-yakarim!!
Yo you lost so much weight congrats
Are most Mizrahim Jews nicer than the European Jews, guys?
no we are the short fuse jews the european jew would sue u and the mizrahi would punch u thats the diffrence
@@mizrahiwithattitude2733oh I hate those that threaten to sue lol
VIVA ISRAEL, VIVA BIBI. VIVA THE ABRAHAM ACCORDS
The existence of Ashkenazi, Sephardi and Mizrachi Jews (amongst others) is very well known nowadays, but I doubt it was always so. Until the 19th century the world beyond one's immediate locality was not so well known. I wonder what outsiders make of these different groups of Jews.
Do they project the sort of doctrinal differences that exist in Islam between Sunni and Shi'a (amongst others) and in Christianity between Catholicism, Protestantism and Orthodox (amongst others)?
Could you share your thoughts?
not really, more like north and south of Italy
There are some religious differences between Ashkenazis and Mizrahis but they are negligible, and these are usually halakhic customs differences and less philosophical (Within the Ashkenazim there is a dispute between 2 different doctrines - Hasidim and Mitnagdim, but even that is already less than it was in the past)
The Ashkenazim and the Mizrahim in the Diaspora knew each other and there was broad cooperation between them, in trade, religion, and mutual immigration.
The main differences are cultural differences, as you can see in the video they are talking about food etc.
The melting pot in Israel, together with the intermarriage of Ashkenazis and Mizrahis, ultimately makes these terms almost meaningless ,of course there are still those who try to cling to these terms for political reasons.
@@cabg1266 Exactly! Variations in halachic custom is quite different from doctrinal differences.
To the best of my knowledge local customs (minhagim) override the general halachic position.
A nation that exiled to different places and returned back...
🇷🇺❤🇮🇱
What is the majority ethnicity in Israel?
Russian jews and morrocan jews I think
@Mr. DoingWell you got the question. They are all jewish, but jewish people came from all over the world...
@Mr. DoingWell Jewish isn’t an ethnicity genius
@Mr. DoingWell incorrect. But keep convincing yourself you know what you are talking about. It is quite amusing.
@@2ruehenderson jewish people is considered one single ethnicity, but I understand your statement because jewish people are actually so diverse
💙🤍💙A Blessed Shavuah Tov to all my Jewish sisters and brothers and friends of Zion 💙🤍💙
@Jacob Rodriguez
It's a blessing. No praying is necessary.
@Jacob Rodriguez
She is young and bound to make mistakes 😁
@Jacob Rodriguez
Is that mixed or fixed? 😁
@Jacob Rodriguez What would anybody care who your girlfriend is?
@Jacob Rodriguez Naw, just black.
Corey can ask both sides on what's happening, it would be interesting to see their repsonse now that more people are seeing what's happening live via social media
Why would Mizrachi have an issue with Ashkenazi? We are all Jewish with some different traditions due to where we went during our exile. We're now all returning home.🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱❤️💙❤️
What about the Sephardi?
Those four guys at 3:14 are handsome
Only the left one 😍
@@danielnaorr it is ok to communicate with your feminine side, rainbow in the air 🧍🏻🌈🧍🏻
@@lamyamohammed3829 I was hoping you would say the one on the right.. he's my cousin Omer. I'm from Australia though
@@jettawayadventures1081 i said all of them! He was included in ALL
@@lamyamohammed3829 i'll tell him. BTW where are you from? "are you israeli?
He are some points some may not be enthusiastic to admit: 1. The Ashkenazim are the founding population of modern Israel in every sense of the word, 2. They are heading the country on economic and scientific developments, 3- They connect Israel with Europe and the developed world. So to put it mildly, Israel would not be as developed as it is today without the Ashkenazim.
Jews built Israel, Ashkenasim and Mizrachim, alike.
@@Linda43 Jews were flocking into Israel from 1880s onward to add to the mix of Jews already living in the Old Yishuv.
I'd suggest that it was mainly Americans who were not adding to the mix, primarily because many Ashkenazim and Mizrachim of the USA (but not all) were new immigrants there at exactly the same time point in time.
American immigration to Israel didn't kick off until the time of Israeli independence, and onwards.
@@marksimons8861
What does your post have to do with mine actually?
@@Linda43 I'm just highlighting that Ashkenazim and Mizrachim were there together from the very outset of modern Zionism, contrary to what Willie claimed. I merely felt you didn't highlight sufficiently that the building process is ongoing.
I'm afraid I clicked oh you inadvertently as you were the bottom of the list at the time and it was a very short post.
The Arab world has been boycotting Israel, more or less, for 70+ years, and done a lot to discourage the developing world from engaging with Israel, advantageous as that might be. It's hardly surprising therefore you'll find greater contact with the developed world, is it?