Yes, thatās true, yet a connection with the āhomelandā always remains.

Personally, I think it has to, else our origins and the traditions and spirituality which derive from them, will be lost. Some other posts (and posters) make it seem that the very word ādiasporaā is some kind of pejorative, and those lead me to toss in another :twocents: on the matter.
From my point of view, I see nothing, and I repeat
nothing, inherently wrong with the term ādiasporaā itself. Itās historical fact, whether one likes it or not. And were it not for the origins of our Churches āin the Eastā (and some people make even that sound like a negative, but I digress) our Churches would not exist. We are, again whether one likes it or not, inextricably tied to our origins. It is from those very origins that we derive our spirituality. Sure, we can dispense with the ties and become āAmericanā or āAustralianā or whatever. The problem is that in doing so, we dispense with our very raison dāĆŖtre. Without the ties, i.e, the traditions and spirituality, we have no legitimacy whatsoever. We might as well just formally adopt the Novus Ordo and be done with it.