Jews are wealthier on average than Arabs are, but this is more a function of the fact that a much higher percentage of Jews live in first-world countries than do Arabs. There are also a number of Arab Oil Sheikhs who are extraordinarily wealthy, outstripping many Jews in their wealth.
Israeli Arabs have the same rights as Israeli Jews and therefore can choose to live wherever they want within Israel or Area C in the West Bank. Unlike Jews however they can also settle in Areas B and A where Jews are prohibited to enter by law. However few Arabs choose to live in settlements, except for Ariel where many Arabs study in the Shomron Academic Center, and few Jews in Judea and Samaria would like to have Arabs for neighbors.
Arabs are semitic people who live in most of the countries of the Middle East. Hebrews were the ancestors of today's Jews.
The Arabs occupied Egypt after the Romans.
Perhaps, but the rivalry seems to be one-sided. Judaism is not terribly concerned about the Arabs and is very internally focused. Arabs, however, often discuss Jews and blame many of their problems on the Jews.
The term "Arab" does not refer to an ethnically homogenous group of people. Arabs in Yemen, Arabs in Egypt, and Arabs in Morocco, for example, have very different genetic makeup. Jews have strong genetic similarity to Arabs of the Levant, especially Palestinians and Jordanians and a more distant similarity to Arabs of Mesopotamia.
Jews are wealthier on average than Arabs are, but this is more a function of the fact that a much higher percentage of Jews live in first-world countries than do Arabs. There are also a number of Arab Oil Sheikhs who are extraordinarily wealthy, outstripping many Jews in their wealth.
Israeli Arabs have the same rights as Israeli Jews and therefore can choose to live wherever they want within Israel or Area C in the West Bank. Unlike Jews however they can also settle in Areas B and A where Jews are prohibited to enter by law. However few Arabs choose to live in settlements, except for Ariel where many Arabs study in the Shomron Academic Center, and few Jews in Judea and Samaria would like to have Arabs for neighbors.
According to Jewish and Arab tradition, the Jews descend from Abraham following the line of his son Isaac and the Arabs descend from Abraham following the line of his son Ishmael. So it may be said that Jews and Arabs had a common beginning. In terms of what science can tell us, while Jews have a strong genetic relationship to Levantine Arabs (Arabs in Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria), they do not have a strong genetic relationship with Arabian Arabs (who were the original Arabs and live in the Arabian Peninsula).
It depends on which Jews, which Arabs, and which setting.
Arabs are semitic people who live in most of the countries of the Middle East. Hebrews were the ancestors of today's Jews.
Egypt is a Muslim nation. Very few Jews live there.
The Arabs occupied Egypt after the Romans.
arabs
Yes. It depends on the context and the person, though.Answer:I live in Israel, and I can testify to the fact that there are a lot of Jews/Israelis and Arabs who get along very well. However, it's not them whom you hear about on the daily news.
yes he hates arabs and jews
Perhaps, but the rivalry seems to be one-sided. Judaism is not terribly concerned about the Arabs and is very internally focused. Arabs, however, often discuss Jews and blame many of their problems on the Jews.