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2.1 | 1 | = Jewish Diaspora and Migration = |
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3 | == Overview == | ||
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3.1 | 5 | The **Jewish diaspora** refers to the dispersion of Jews from their ancestral homeland and their settlement across the globe. While some degree of migration existed before, large-scale exile began with the **Babylonian conquest of Judah** (587 BCE), continuing under Roman, Persian, Islamic, and Christian empires. For over two thousand years, Jews lived as a scattered but interconnected minority across Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, and later the Americas. |
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2.1 | 7 | == Ancient Dispersion == |
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3.1 | 8 | |
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2.1 | 9 | * The **Babylonian captivity** began the trend of organized Jewish communities outside the Land of Israel. |
10 | * After the **Roman destruction of the Second Temple** in 70 CE and the **Bar Kokhba revolt** (132–136 CE), Jews were expelled or migrated across the Roman Empire. | ||
11 | * Jewish communities flourished in **Babylonia**, **Egypt**, and **Persian territories**, forming important religious centers. | ||
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13 | == Medieval and Early Modern Periods == | ||
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3.1 | 14 | |
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2.1 | 15 | * Jews were expelled from numerous Christian kingdoms (England in 1290, France in 1306 and 1394, Spain in 1492, Portugal in 1496). |
16 | * Many resettled in the **Ottoman Empire**, **Poland-Lithuania**, and **North Africa**, forming new communities with distinct traditions (e.g., Sephardim and Mizrahim). | ||
17 | * In Islamic lands, Jews were tolerated but often second-class citizens (dhimmi status), subject to periodic violence and limitations. | ||
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19 | == Modern Migrations == | ||
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3.1 | 20 | |
21 | * In the 18th–19th centuries, Jews fled [[**pogroms and persecution**>>doc:Main Categories.Jews.109 and Counting.WebHome]] in Eastern Europe and Russia, with over 2 million emigrating to the **United States** between 1880 and 1924. | ||
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4.1 | 22 | * The [[**Holocaust** >>doc:Main Categories.Jews.The Holocaust.WebHome]]drastically reduced Jewish populations across Europe, and survivors migrated to **Palestine**, the **U.S.**, **South America**, and elsewhere. |
23 | * The creation of [[**Israel in 1948**>>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balfour_Declaration]] sparked large migrations, including: | ||
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3.1 | 24 | * Expulsion of Jews from Arab countries |
25 | * Migration from the Soviet Union, Ethiopia, Iran, and beyond | ||
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2.1 | 26 | |
27 | == Current Patterns == | ||
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3.1 | 28 | |
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2.1 | 29 | Today, over 85% of Jews live in **Israel or the United States**. Smaller communities exist throughout Europe, Latin America, Canada, South Africa, and Australia. Many historic Jewish populations (e.g., Yemenite, Iraqi, Moroccan) have dwindled or disappeared. |
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31 | == Commentary == | ||
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3.1 | 32 | |
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2.1 | 33 | The Jewish diaspora is not simply a story of exile, but of resilience. Despite centuries of displacement, Jews retained religious, ethnic, and cultural identity—often more tightly than surrounding populations. The **diasporic mindset**, rooted in collective memory of loss and longing for return, shaped the development of Zionism and modern Jewish nationalism. |
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35 | == See Also == | ||
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3.1 | 36 | |
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2.1 | 37 | * [[Demographics>>path:/bin/view/Main%20Categories/Jews/Demographics/]] |
38 | * [[Zionism>>path:/bin/view/Main%20Categories/Jews/Zionism/]] | ||
39 | * [[The Holocaust>>path:/bin/view/Main%20Categories/Jews/The%20Holocaust/]] | ||
40 | * [[Jewish population by country>>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_population_by_country]] |