English to Gujarati Dictionary diaspora

diaspora

ડાયસ્પોરા
definition
noun
Even if, as Sharon postulates, there is a further incoming of 1 million Jews from the diaspora , there is an inevitability about population trends which would threaten the very existence of a Jewish state.
Jews living outside Israel.
example
However while diasporic imagining might be homogenizing the 'diaspora' has not been formed by a singular process, are not culturally very similar.
the 'diaspora' of boat people from Asia
It is these shared practices that enable the 'diaspora' to create and critique its idea of community and home.
Apart from members of the diaspora investing back home, the government should help Indian industry set up base in countries where there is a significant Indian 'diaspora' .
Little wonder that some young Tibetans in the 'diaspora' are deserting their closed communities, where no more than the fulfilment of basic material needs is considered acceptable.
Jewish people remember the 'diaspora' well; this is why they are Jewish people.
The concept of 'diaspora' originally referred to those Jews who lived outside Judaea.
During both the First and Second Temple periods, the Temple was the central focus of the Jewish world both in Israel and the 'diaspora' .
The messianic idea animated Jewish resistance to Roman occupation and sustained the Jews for centuries in the 'diaspora' .
There has always been a Somali elite, many in the 'diaspora' .
Enforced ethnic cleansing and poor economic prospects at home caused a 'diaspora' which tested national flexibility.
Their experiences contribute another chapter to a small literature on the 'diaspora' of Italian Jews to Australia as a result of Mussolini's racial decrees.
None of the sins of these people should be visited upon the members of the 'diaspora' at large.
His prayer asking forgiveness to God for the offenses of Catholics during the World War II touched many, including Israeli Jews and those of the 'diaspora' .
Even if, as Sharon postulates, there is a further incoming of 1 million Jews from the 'diaspora' , there is an inevitability about population trends which would threaten the very existence of a Jewish state.
Loaded had some interesting features, in particular the conflict between a young gay man's search for identity and the expectations of society, family and the Greek 'diaspora' in Melbourne's working class suburbs.
the 'diaspora' of boat people from Asia
French photographer and social anthropologist Frederic Brenner has been chronicling the Jewish 'diaspora' in more than 40 countries since 1978.
the Ukrainian 'diaspora' flocked back to Kiev
For subsequent generations of the 'diaspora' , the cultural climate they are reared in is far more compelling a force than a romanticised India their earlier generations may be nostalgic about.
As Israel's former minister for the 'diaspora' , he toured British universities and well understands the mortal moral sickness that now grips them.
The Jewish Austrian intellectual elite was, in fact, scattered around the globe in the 'diaspora' caused by the Second World War.
By the same token the hulls come to embody notions of flight, 'diaspora' , immigration and emigration.
Then, there are the strained relations between the home country and the 'diaspora' and the sometimes tense relations between the home country and the strong dominant neighbour.
Both are waning, and neither is likely to fuel this great 'diaspora' far beyond the year 2000.
The Sephardic tradition originated in the Babylonian community; with the 'diaspora' it took root in Spain and Africa, and moved on from there.
More telling than the commandment to study and the importuning of the rabbis is the description of how the of Torah was integrated into the life-style of the Jews in the cities and shtetls of the 'diaspora' .
Only he drew support from all sections of the Palestinian people - in the occupied territories, the 'diaspora' and Israel itself - and had the authority to make a comprehensive agreement stick.
These international alliances, Edwards argues, constitute 'diaspora' in practice, and that its inner workings can be most tangibly grasped in translation.
Beyond the 'diaspora' , it has also found fans among directors and impresarios like Baz Luhrmann and Andrew Lloyd Weber, who have plundered signature elements to revitalise their own work.
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