A biblical answer is that the Egyptians became increasingly harsh in their treatment of the Israelites, increasing the workload and reducing their food allowances. When the Egyptians feared because the Israelites were beginning to outnumber the Egyptians, the Pharoah ordered the slaughter of the Hebrew babies. In this story, life was hard and cruel.
Looking outside The Bible, the Egyptian records for the period the Israelites were said to have been in Egypt, contain no mention of large numbers of slaves, nor of a sudden exodus of slaves. For the Egyptians, life went on as normal throughout the late Bronze Age, both in Egypt itself and in its Palestinian colonies. In fact, Israel Finkelstein says that more than ninety per cent of scholars agree that there was no Exodus from Egypt. Thus the Israelite nation was never enslaved in Egypt.
Moses lead the Hebrew people out of Egypt.
Because of famine (Genesis ch.42).
there's no such designation as a "back Hebrew Israelites"
women in ancient Egypt were treated very good because they could own land and a business.
They werent treated as well as they should be treated and they werent respected as much either.
Passover is not something that is sung. It is a holiday celebrated to commemorate the exodus of the ancient Israelites from Egypt.
they beat them with sticks
Egypt in the Ancient Period controlled far less land than Egypt in the modern period. Although the Sinai is now part of Egypt, it was not at that point and God did lead the Israelites through the Sinai, but did not direct them in Nile Basin (Ancient Egypt), which the Israelites would have been familiar with and thus would have needed no direction. It is important to note that while maps of Ancient Egypt show it "controlling" the Sinai Peninsula at various points, this "control" was through indirect vassals and tributes, not through a standing infrastructural connection.
Egypt is called "the iron smelting-pot" (Deuteronomy 4:20) because it tested the Israelites.
Moses or Abraham led the israelites out of Egypt i believe
Matzah originated during the Israelites' exodus from Egypt, so yes, they did eat it.
No. Cats were considered sacred as The Ancient Egytpians believed they were messengers of the cat goddess Bastet.AnswerNo, cats were treated like gods in ancient Egypt the worshipped them.