English, asked by akchak1965, 11 months ago

parragraph diaspora​

Answers

Answered by harivairamoy854l
2

Answer:

A diaspora is a large group of people with a similar heritage or homeland who have since moved out to places all over the world. The term diaspora comes from an ancient Greek word meaning "to scatter about". But the word is now also used more generally to describe any large migration of refugees, language, or culture.

Answered by nikkisara123qwe
1

Answer:

Diaspora means the people who had left their original homelands and settled in other countries of the world. Either they were forced to leave the country and they willingly left.

Explanation:

First, Jews ancestor Abraham was forced to leave Iraq. So he took shelter in Egypt. After that, his offspring Jews were compelled to leave Egypt and they took shelter in Palestine. The Jews were the first diaspora in the history of mankind. Later in the Islamic era, many of them were again forced to leave Palestine. Then these Jews became diaspora in Europe and America.

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