Diaspora, (Greek: “Dispersion”) Hebrew Galut (Exile), the dispersion of Jews among the Gentiles after the Babylonian Exile or the aggregate of Jews or Jewish communities scattered “in exile” outside Palestine or present-day Israel. Although the term refers to the physical dispersal of Jews throughout the world, it also carries religious, philosophical, political, and eschatological connotations, inasmuch as the Jews perceive a special relationship between the land of Israel and themselves. Interpretations of this relationship range from the messianic hope of traditional Judaism for the eventual “ingathering of the exiles” to the view of Reform Judaism that the dispersal of the Jews was providentially arranged by God to foster pure monotheism throughout the world.
Because it all depends on supply and demand and money if they know they won't make a good profit off if it why do it it all depends on perspective
B. <span>More Americans opposed Germany due to their use of unrestricted submarine warfare.
The Lusitania was a British ship that was sunk by German troops. Among 1200 passengers who died in the attack, 128 were Americans.This angered the Americans, who condemned the attack on an unarmed passenger ship without prior warning.
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<span>No, it wasn't. For the most part of the nineteenth century, more and more people commuted on rails as opposed to steamboat i.e water. The effect of the locomotive cannot be over emphasized. Try to envision the nineteenth century without the smoke-belching engines along endless expanses of iron track. The locomotive was the driving force behind America’s western expansion, and it played a major role in the Civil. It would be impossible to visualize the nineteenth century without the locomotive.</span>