Their keeping of the Torah enabled them to stay Jewish. Those who ignored the Torah, such as the Hellenizing Jews and Sadducees, went lost.
In 68 CE, the Romans destroyed the Second Temple. The Romans did not force the Jews out of Judea in a single expulsion. Rather, the Romans expelled them from Jerusalem only; and the rest of Judea lost its Jews slowly, over a period of centuries, as living there became too harsh. Even then, we have records of Jewish communities who lived in Judea (Palestine) during the entire period of the last two millenia.
Those Jews who left Judea went to southern Europe, North Africa, Arabia, the Near East, and (slowly) further afield (especially throughout Europe).
This is obviously a homework assignment, and you didn't include the map so we can't possibly help you.
chicken
It was an extermination camp for Jews.
Haman was the 'Jews enemy'
to play their positions and be aggresive and to spread out and COMMUNICATE...
Judaism is the religion of the Jews, it is not a government.
What role do the following play in educating the public against the spread of the HIV Virus the government the church the home?
Jews don't hate the gods of other religions, they simply play no role in our beliefs and lives.
yes
The plague was spread by fleas that lived on the rats.
It helped spread antislavery opinions.
yes