User:Aneluzu/sandbox

Templates
Important note

This is part of an educational exercise that attempts to show university students the utility of infoboxes (and other templates) so they can understand and learn advanced ways of contributing to Wikipedia. We are particularly interested in the understanding of the Wikidata and DBpedia projects (including DBpedia mappings, as Basque DBpedia is hosted in our university  ).


 * /References
 * /Templates
 * /Infobox

My Wikipedia contribution candidate papers

 * 1) Wikipedia contributors. (2019, May 16). Haredi Judaism. Retrieved May 19, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haredi_Judaism
 * 2) Wikipedia contributors. (2018, November 3). Orthodox Jewish philosophy. Retrieved May 2, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthodox_Jewish_philosophy
 * 3) Wikipedia contributors. (2018, October 10). Relationships between Jewish religious movements. Retrieved May 13, 2019, from  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relationships_between_Jewish_religious_movements
 * 4) Wikipedia contributors. (2019, March 31). Modern Orthodox Judaism. Retrieved May 18, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Orthodox_Judaism

Citations and editing
For centuries, before Jewish emancipation, European Jews were forced to live in ghettos where Jewish culture and religious observance were preserved. Change began in the wake of the Age of Enlightenment when some European liberals sought to include the Jewish population in the emerging empires and nation states. The influence of the Haskalah movement[36] (Jewish Enlightenment) was also evidence. Supporters of the Haskalah held that Judaism must change in keeping with the social changes around them. Other Jews insisted on strict adherence to halakha (Jewish law and custom).

36. Tal Kogman, Science and the Rabbis: Haskamot, Haskalah, and the Boundaries of Jewish Knowledge in Scientific Hebrew Literature and Textbooks, The Leo Baeck Institute Year Book, Volume 62, 2017, Pages 135–149, https://doi.org/10.1093/leobaeck/ybw021