1) Our own human frailties.
2) Internal enemies, such as the Hellenizing Jews, Sadducees, Essenes, followers of Shabbetai Zevi (a false messiah), etc.
3) Anti-Semitism in the form of hatred, ostracism and ridicule.
4) Anti-Semitism in the form of expulsions, pogroms, Crusades, Inquisition, and mass murders.
If you are referring to the Jewish Diaspora, then it was the Jews that experienced it.
adjective for Judaism is Jewish
Judaism is Jewish; Buddhism is not.
The romans carried on the Jewish diaspora, begun by the Assyrians and Chaldeans.
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The Jewish diaspora occured Babylonia, Eastern Europe, Israel, Poland, Spain, Greece, and Italy
The dispersal of the Jewish population is known as Diaspora
"Diaspora" is not capitalized when used in a general sense to refer to any dispersed population of people, such as the Jewish diaspora or the African diaspora. It is typically capitalized when used as part of a specific name or title, such as the Diaspora community or the Diaspora Studies department.
The Jewish diaspora (exile) began twice: when Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the First Temple and exiled the people to Babylon; and several centuries later, when Titus destroyed the Second Temple, and most of the population of Judea gradually went into exile because of the untenable conditions in Judea under the Romans. The Diaspora was difficult because it is not as easy to survive and to maintain one's Jewish identity when the Jews are spread thinly amongst other peoples.
Judaism is a noun; Jewish is an adjective.
Diaspora.
The diaspora refers to the scattering of Jewish communities when they were exiled from their land.