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No, I think the Torah is from the Judaism tradition.
Yes Buddhism does have holy books, and they are very important to Buddhist. The Tipitaka, is the believed to be the direct words of the Buddha.
The holy books in Judaism are the books of the Hebrew Bible.Places of worship:Jews worship in synagogues.See also:What are the Jewish Holy Books called?More about Jewish worship
Judaism was in what is now called Israel. Its holy book is the Tanakh, which contains the Torah and the prophetic books.
The sacred texts of Buddhism were not written down all at once, but were compiled and passed down orally for centuries before being transcribed. The oldest texts, known as the Pali Canon, were written down in the 1st century BCE. Other texts and scriptures were composed over the centuries by various Buddhist traditions.
The holy books of Judaism are the first five books of the modern King James version of the Holy Bible. These are Genesis, Exodus, Deuteronomy, Leviticus, and Numbers.
Confucianism: The Analects Judaism: Tanakh/Torah
Judaism: Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) Christianity: Bible Islam: Holy Quran
There aren't 2 holy books in Judaism. All of the books of the Hebrew bible (called "the old testament" by Christians) are the holy books of Judaism. There are 24 books. The Torah comprises the first 5 books.
Judaism is Jewish; Buddhism is not.
That depends on your faith. Islam = the Koran Christianity = the Bible Judaism = the Torah Hinduism= the Vedas and the Bhagavad Gita Sikhism = the Guru Granth Sahib Buddhism = the Tipitaka (there are more, this list is not exhaustive of either religions or holy books within religions)
Judaism. Christianity also shares some of the same holy books.