The experience of religiosity in a diasporic context, characterized by a distinct spatial and cultural location, presents groups of believers with the challenge of grappling with evolving categories such as the provisional, dispersion and plurality, as highlighted by Marguerat. The result is a multifaceted renegotiation of ties, stories, values and memories. The diasporic Orthodox moves between variable glocalizations according to the Patriarchate of reference, the personal experience, the social fabric, provoked to a continuous reshaping of the concepts of identity, nation, community. The contribution proposes an investigation of the theme of diaspora in Orthodoxy, with a focus on the European context. This is a complex topic, as it encompasses the jurisdictions of different Patriarchates. The intention is to explore not only the intermediate condition suspended between the current place and the place of origin, but also the relationship with the spiritual elsewhere that transcends borders and is the bearer of a feeling other than that, which nevertheless acts in everyday life.