A heritage site is only as good as its honesty. This page lays out how texts are graded, the rules the writing holds itself to, and every source the project is built on. Check the work.
Shoresh is proudly pro-Israel, and it is built to be checkable. Nothing here asks for trust it has not earned: every scripture is quoted from a named edition, every hard text is graded, and the same standard is applied to both faiths. Where a claim is contested, it is flagged as contested. This is the opposite of propaganda, and the receipts are below.
Why a verse gets a label, and why the labels mean different things for each tradition.
A fair comparison has to measure the right thing. Hadith vary wildly in reliability, so Islamic texts are graded for authenticity: did Muhammad really say it? Jewish biblical law is canonical and undisputed as text, so its hard verses are graded for practice: is this still done? That single difference, what a tradition does with its hard texts, is the real story the Quran, Torah and Compare pages tell.
Five commitments, applied on every page.
Texts, datasets and primary documents the site is built on.
The open Sefaria library (JPS and other editions) for Tanakh and rabbinic texts, via its public API.
The Hebrew Bible has been transmitted almost unchanged for two thousand years, as the Dead Sea Scrolls attest. The Unbroken Text →
Arabic and the Sahih International translation via alquran.cloud.
Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim, drawn from an open hadith dataset and verified by text, then graded against classical scholarship.
Balfour, the Mandate, UN 181, Resolution 242, the founding documents and charters, via the Avalon Project at Yale Law School.
Modern coastline and borders from public-domain Natural Earth survey data. Ancient-era territories are illustrative, based on historical scholarship.
Aggregated from pro-Israel and Israeli outlets (Jerusalem Post, Algemeiner, Israel National News and others). Each item links back to its original publisher.
The IHRA working definition of antisemitism; the Genocide Convention; Additional Protocol I on the laws of war.
Terms defined for this site and cross-checked against standard references. Read the glossary →