(Redirected from Expelled)
'Expulsion' may refer to:
★ Expulsion, in the
Book of Genesis, refers to the decree of expulsion from the
Garden of Eden issued by God against
Adam and Eve after they ate from the forbidden
Tree of Knowledge. They were expelled from the Garden of Eden for the reason that, as says the Bible text, "He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live for ever." (
Genesis 3:22). This is the first instance of
Banishment in the Bible.
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★
Deportation, the expulsion of someone from a country, usually an
illegal alien.
★ Forced
transfer of foreign or minority populations during or after (due to) a war, e.g.
Armenian population in Turkey during the
World War I; Polish, Lithuanian, Latvian, Moldavian etc. populations by the Germans or the Soviets from the areas occupied by them during the
World War II;
Chechen,
Tatars, etc. populations after the World War II in the
Soviet Union;
German populations from various countries in the Central-Eastern Europe after the
World War II;
Ukrainian population from eastern to western Poland in 1950; Croats, Muslims, Serbs etc. in the various areas of former
Yugoslavia in the 1990-ies; etc. The term ''expulsion'' indicates condemnation of the events; an alternative term with a more neutral or even apologetic stance is
population transfer; a stronger term is the modern
ethnic cleansing.
★
Genocide, which was a euphemistically called ''expulsion'' by the Germans during the World War II; The Nazis used this term to describe the forced deportation of Jews, Gypsys (Roma and Sinti), and other victims to death camps during
the Holocaust.
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★
Expulsion (academia), in terms of a
school or
university, is defined as removing a student from the institution for violating rules or
honor codes. See also
rustication.
★ Expulsion, in football (
soccer) is used as a reference to a player being sent off the playing field, i.e. when given the
red card.
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See also:
★
Edict of Expulsion
★
Alhambra decree
★
Expulsion of Germans after World War II