ultra-Orthodox - traduzione in olandese
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ultra-Orthodox - traduzione in olandese

STRICT OR TRADITIONALIST ORTHODOX JUDAISM
Haredi; Ultra-Orthodox; Ultra-Orthodox Jews; Ultra Orthodox Judaism; Ultra-orthodox Judaism; Ultra Orthodox Jews; Ultra-Orthodox Judaism; Haredi Jews; Charedi; Haredi Jew; Haredim; Chareidi; Chareidi Judaism; Ultra Orthodox; Hareidi Judaism; Ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) Judaism; Charedi Judaism; Ultraorthodox judaism; Ultraorthodox; Ultra-orthodox; Charedim; Ultra-Orthodox Jew; Black hat (Judaism); Black-hat (Judaism); Black-Hat (Judaism); Chareidim; Hareidi; Hareidim; Charedi life; Haredi Orthodox Judaism; Haredi Jewish; Ultra-orthodox Jew; Ultra-Orthodox Jews (Social Group); Ultra-orthodox Jews (Social Group); Criticism of Haredi Judaism; Criticism of Haredim; Ultra-Orthodox Jewish; Criticism of Ultra-Orthodox Judaism; Ultra orthodox; Haredi Orthodox; Haredi-Orthodox; Ultra-orthodox Jews; Haredi Orthodox Jewish
  • The [[Bais Yaakov]] graduating class of 1934 in [[Łódź]], Poland
  • Typical Haredi dress for men and women
  • Young Haredi Jews in Jerusalem, 2005
  • Haredi demonstration against the conscription of yeshiva pupils
  • Hasidim walk to the synagogue, [[Rehovot]], [[Israel]].
  • Borough Park]], [[Brooklyn]]
  • Hasidic boys in [[Łódź]], 1910
  • Haredi Jewish men during a [[Torah reading]].
  • Members of [[Neturei Karta]] protest against Israel (Washington, 2005)
  • de}} in Vienna's second district, [[Leopoldstadt]], 1915
  • 2011b}}</ref>
  • Students of [[Telshe yeshiva]], 1936
  • [[Tziporah Heller]], a weekly columnist for ''[[Hamodia]]''
  • settlement]] of [[Beitar Illit]], [[Gush Etzion]])
  • Styles of Haredi dress

ultra-Orthodox         
extreem gelovige
Eastern Orthodox Church         
  • 273x273px
  • [[Cathedral of Evangelismos]], [[Alexandria]]
  • alt=
  • Emperor Constantine]] presents a representation of the city of [[Constantinople]] as tribute to an enthroned Mary and baby Jesus in this church mosaic ([[Hagia Sophia]], c. 1000).
  • 210x210px
  • Sebastian Dabovich]]) of the [[Russian Orthodox Church]] present
  • An Eastern Orthodox baptism
  • Greek Orthodox wedding
  • [[John of Damascus]]
  • An [[icon]] of Saint [[John the Baptist]], 14th century, North Macedonia
  • alt=
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  • Niceno–Constantinopolitan Creed of 381]]
  • An illustration of the traditional interior of an Orthodox church
  • ''David glorified by the women of Israel'' from the [[Paris Psalter]], example of the [[Macedonian art (Byzantine)]] (sometimes called the [[Macedonian Renaissance]])
  • Church of St. George]], [[Patriarchate of Constantinople]]
  • Patriarchate of Peć]] in [[Kosovo]], the seat of the [[Serbian Orthodox Church]] from the 14th century, when its status was upgraded into a patriarchate
  •  Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I]] in the [[Church of the Holy Sepulchre]], Jerusalem, 2014
  • Princess Olga]] in [[Constantinople]]'', a miniature from the ''[[Radzivill Chronicle]]''
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  • Greek Orthodox massacred during the [[Greek Genocide]] in Smyrna in 1922
  • Sinai]]; the oldest known [[icon]] of Christ, in one of the oldest monasteries in the world
  • A timeline showing the main autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Churches, from an Eastern Orthodox point of view, up to 2022
  • [[Our Lady of Tinos]] is the major [[Marian shrine]] in Greece.
  • sacking the city of Constantinople]], the capital of the Eastern Orthodox controlled [[Byzantine Empire]], in 1204
  • Byzantine]] mosaic from [[Torcello]] Cathedral
  • Virgin Mary]]
  • The wedding of Tsar [[Nicholas II of Russia]]
  • Percentage distribution of Eastern Orthodox Christians by country
SECOND-LARGEST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Eastern Orthodox Churches; Eastern Orthodox Communion; Eastern Orthodox church; Orthodox Eastern Church; Eastern Orthodox communion; Order of Saint Benedict (Eastern Orthodox); Eastern Othodox Church; Orthodox Catholic Church (Eastern); Eastern Orthodox Catholic Church; Eastern Orthodoxy in the West; Christian Orthodox Culture; Eastern Orthodox civilization; Orthodox Christian Culture; Orthodox Christian Civilization; Byzantine Orthodox Churches; Catholicity of the Eastern Orthodox Church; Catholicity in the Eastern Orthodox Church; Eastern Orthodox Culture; Eastern Orthodoxy in Asia; Eastern Orthodox churches; Orthodox civilization; Order of Saint Benedict (Orthodox); Eastern orthodox church
n. de Orthodoxe Kerk
Greek Church         
ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN DENOMINATIONS DESCENDED FROM A GREEK CULTURAL TRADITION
Greek Orthodox; Greek Orthodoxy; Greek Christianity; Greek Orthadox; Greek church; Greek orthodox church; Greek Orthodox church; Ἑλληνορθόδοξη Ἐκκλησία; Hellēnorthódoxē Ekklēsía; Greek-Orthodox; Greek orthodox churches; Greek Orthodox Churches; Hellenorthodoxe Ekklesia; Greek Orthodox Christians; Roman Orthodox; Greek Eastern Orthodox Church; Christian - Greek Orthodox; Hellenic Orthodox; Hellenic Orthodox Church; Greek Orthodox Christian; Greek Orthodox Christianity; Greek Christians
Griekse Kerk

Definizione

Haredi
[ha'r?di]
¦ noun (plural Haredim -d?m) a member of any of various Orthodox Jewish sects characterized by strict adherence to traditional Jewish law.
Origin
Heb., lit. 'one who trembles (in awe at the word of God)'.

Wikipedia

Haredi Judaism

Haredi Judaism (Hebrew: יהדות חֲרֵדִית Yahadut Ḥaredit, IPA: [ħaʁeˈdi]; also spelled Charedi in English; plural Haredim or Charedim) consists of groups within Orthodox Judaism that are characterized by their strict adherence to halakha (Jewish law) and traditions, in opposition to modern values and practices. Its members are usually referred to as ultra-Orthodox in English; however, the term "ultra-Orthodox" is considered pejorative by many of its adherents, who prefer terms like strictly Orthodox or Haredi. Haredi Jews regard themselves as the most religiously authentic group of Jews, although other movements of Judaism disagree.

Some scholars have suggested that Haredi Judaism is a reaction to societal changes, including political emancipation, the Haskalah movement derived from the Enlightenment, acculturation, secularization, religious reform in all its forms from mild to extreme, the rise of the Jewish national movements, etc. In contrast to Modern Orthodox Judaism, followers of Haredi Judaism segregate themselves from other parts of society to an extent. However, many Haredi communities encourage their young people to get a professional degree or establish a business. Furthermore, some Haredi groups, like Chabad-Lubavitch, encourage outreach to less observant and unaffiliated Jews and hilonim (secular Israeli Jews). Thus, professional and social relationships often form between Haredi and non-Haredi Jews, as well as between Haredi Jews and non-Jews.

Haredi communities are found primarily in Israel (12.9% of Israel's population), North America, and Western Europe (most notably Antwerp and Stamford Hill in London). Their estimated global population numbers over 1.8 million, and, due to a virtual absence of interfaith marriage and a high birth rate, the Haredi population is growing rapidly. Their numbers have been further boosted since the 1970s by secular Jews adopting a Haredi lifestyle as part of the baal teshuva movement; however, this has been offset by those leaving.

According to data from a January 2023 report by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, Haredim, with their current population growth rate being 4% per year, will by the end of the decade form 16% of the entire Israeli population, including Arabs. A previous report from May 2017 forecasted that Haredim will form 20% of the total population in 2040, and 32% in 2065; by then, 1 in 2 Israeli children would be Haredi.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per ultra-Orthodox
1. He also hears talk in ultra–Orthodox circles that after four years of ultra–Orthodox rule, a non–ultra–Orthodox mayor may be better.
2. That same southern neighborhood, now called, the "Veteran ultra–Orthodox kirya," is surrounded by other ultra–Orthodox neighborhoods.
3. To my sorrow, an ultra–Orthodox majority was forced on Beit Shemesh." Abutbul says: "It‘s not an ultra–Orthodox matter.
4. However, the official ultra–Orthodox line views the tragedies of last week as an ultra–Orthodox problem.
5. There are currently four Jewish school system: Secular, national religious, Ashkenazi ultra–Orthodox and Sephardi ultra–Orthodox.