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Muslim diaspora

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Diaspora from the Muslim world
A world map showing the percentage of Muslims in each country. The diaspora (in non-dark green regions) is most notably visible in the West.

TheMuslim diaspora is thediasporic group of Muslims whose ancestors emigrated from the long-standing regions of theMuslim world and the national homes of the Muslim peoples, including Asia, the Palestinian regions, and others, although mainly comprise theMiddle East and North Africa along with parts ofSouth andSoutheast Asia.[1][2]

History

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See also:Spread of Islam,Immigration to India § Medieval era, andIslam in the Americas § Immigrant Muslims in America

African Muslim slaves were brought to the Americas during theAtlantic slave trade. From the 19th century onwards, Muslims began voluntarily migrating to the United States, with theImmigration and Nationality Act of 1965 greatly opening up immigration to nonwhite communities in general.[3]

Since the 1960s, many Muslims have migrated to Western Europe. They have arrived as immigrants,guest workers, asylum seekers or as part offamily reunification. As a result, theMuslim population in Europe has steadily risen.

Current demographics

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APew Research study from 2020 estimates that approximately 80 million Muslims make up 29% of all international migrants, slightly above their 25% share of the global population. The majority of these migrants are concentrated in theMiddle East-North Africa region (40%), followed by theAsia-Pacific area (24%), Europe (20%), andsub-Saharan Africa (10%), with only 6% inNorth America. Nearly half of the Muslim migrant population originates from Asia and the Pacific, with one-third from the Middle East and North Africa and 13% from sub-Saharan Africa.Syria has the highest number of Muslim migrants at about 8.1 million, largely due to theSyrian civil war since 2011, with many relocating toTurkey andLebanon.India is the second-largest source ofMuslim migrants, contributing around 6 million, andAfghan migrants number approximately 5.5 million, primarily inIran andPakistan, fleeing decades of conflict and instability.[4]

Gulf Cooperation Council countries

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A 2020 Pew Research study highlights thatSaudi Arabia, is the leading destination for Muslim migrants, hosting around 10.8 million, which accounts for 13% of all Muslim migrants globally. The kingdom also ranks third for overall migration, with nearly 40% of its population being foreign-born, the vast majority of whom (80%) are Muslim. Following closely is theUnited Arab Emirates, which is home to over 6 million foreign-born Muslims, making it the second most popular destination. Like Saudi Arabia, the UAE is a wealthy Muslim nation with a significant demand for foreign labor, with international migrants comprising 94% of its population. Most Muslim migrants in both countries primarily come from India.[5]

In the West

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Canada

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As with immigrants in general, Muslim immigrants have come to Canada for a variety of reasons. These include higher education, security, employment, and family reunification. Others have come for religious and political freedom, and safety and security, leaving behind civil wars, persecution, and other forms of civil and ethnic strife. In the 1980s, Canada became an important place of refuge for those fleeing theLebanese Civil War. The 1990s saw Somali Muslims arrive in the wake of theSomali Civil War as well asBosniaks fleeing the breakup of the formerYugoslavia. However Canada has yet to receive any significant numbers of Iraqis fleeing theIraqi War. But in general almost every Muslim country in the world has sent immigrants to Canada – fromPakistan,Bosnia and Herzegovina andAlbania toYemen andBangladesh.[6]

Europe

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TheGreat Mosque of Paris, built after World War I.

Islam is thesecond-largest religion inEurope afterChristianity.[7] Although the majority of Muslim communities inWestern Europe formed as a result of immigration,[8] there are centuries-oldindigenous European Muslim communities in theBalkans,Caucasus,Crimea, andVolga region.[9][10]

From 1990 to 2020, the percentage of Muslims among all migrants residing in Europe rose from 16% to 18%, making them the third-largest religious migrant group in Europe. This increase is primarily attributed to higher migration rates fromAlgeria,Morocco,Syria,Turkey andPakistan. In contrast, the proportion of religiously unaffiliated migrants declined, while the share of Christians remained constant. This stability among Christians can be linked to the earlier waves of migration fromRussia, with many individuals relocating or dying.[11]

The exact number of Muslims in Europe is unknown but according to estimates by thePew Forum, the total number of Muslims in Europe (excludingTurkey) in 2010 was about 44 million (6% of the total population), including 19 million (3.8% of the population) in theEuropean Union. A 2010Pew Research Center study reported that 2.7% of the world's Muslim population live in Europe.[12]

Latin America

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A survey conducted by thePew Research Center in 2010[update] found that Muslims make up 0.1% of all of Latin America's population.[13] Based on other estimates, there are 100,000 Muslims inLatin America, mainly concentrated inBrazil,Mexico, Jamaica andArgentina, with smaller concentrations inVenezuela, Haiti, Colombia andParaguay. Most of these Latin American Muslims are from eitherLebanese,Syrian origin.[14]

Suriname has the highest percentage ofMuslims in its population for the region, with 13.9% or 75,053 individuals, according to its 2012 census.[15]Islam came to Suriname with immigrants fromIndonesia (Java) andSouth Asia (todayIndia,Pakistan andBangladesh).

United States

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Islam is the third-largestreligion in theUnited States (1.1%), behindChristianity andJudaism.[16] TheAssociation of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies in its 2017 US Religion census estimated that 1.1% (or 3,450,000) of the population of the United States are Muslim.[17] In 2017, twenty states, mostly in the South and Midwest, reported Islam to be the largest non-Christian religion.[18]

Islamic Center of America, the largest mosque in North America

From the 1880s to 1914, several thousand Muslims immigrated to the United States from the former territories of theOttoman Empire andBritish India.[19] The Muslim population of the U.S. increased dramatically in the second half of the 20th century due to the passage of theImmigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which abolished previous immigration quotas.[20] About 72 percent of American Muslims are immigrants or "second generation".[21][22] By race, in 2014, 38% were non-Hispanic white (including Arabs and Iranians, up from 32% in 2007), 28% were Asian (mostlyIndians,Pakistanis, andBangladeshis, up from 20% in 2007), 28% were black (down from 32%), 4% Hispanic (down from 7%), and 3% of mixed or other race (down from 7%). Since 2007, the black proportion had shrunk, while the white and Asian proportions had grown, mainly due to immigration as most black Muslims were native U.S. blacks.[23]

Community relations

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Muslim diaspora and its countries of origin

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The intersection between the Muslim diaspora's relationship with its ancestral homelands and the Muslim diaspora's relationship with foreign Islamic communities as part of the globalUmmah has been called into question by some in the host countries of the diaspora, with scholars offering different ways of approaching the connections between the two relationships.[24]

Muslim diaspora and its host countries

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In the West

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See also:Multiculturalism and Islam andImmigration to the Western world § Muslim immigration

Muslims have become an integral part of almost every Western country. There is sometimes a journey to seek understanding between the diaspora's Islam-influenced values and theWestern values of their host countries;[25] Muslim migrants of minority denominations (such as theAhmadiyyas) have been found to be faster at assimilating into Western cultural norms than migrants of majority denominations (such asSunni Islam).[26]

Some European countries have growingfar-right populist movements against Muslims, such as withGeert Wilders in the Netherlands.[27] A February 2017 poll of 10,000 people in 10 European countries byChatham House found on average a majority (55%) were opposed to further Muslim immigration, with opposition especially pronounced in a number of countries: Poland (71%), Austria (65%), Hungary (64%), Belgium (64%), and France (61%). Except for Poland, all of those had recently sufferedjihadist terror attacks or been at the centre of a refugee crisis. Of those opposed to further Muslim immigration, 3/4 classify themselves as on the right of the political spectrum. Of those self-classifying as on the left of the political spectrum, 1/3 supported a halt.[28]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Moghissi, Haideh (2007-01-24).Muslim Diaspora: Gender, Culture and Identity. Routledge.ISBN 978-1-135-98541-7.
  2. ^Silvestri, Sara (2016)."Misperceptions of the 'Muslim Diaspora'".Current History.115 (784):319–321.ISSN 0011-3530.
  3. ^Flodin-Ali, Yasmine (2023-04-19),"History of Muslims in the United States",Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion,doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.013.900,ISBN 978-0-19-934037-8, retrieved2024-10-09{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  4. ^Kramer, Stephanie (19 August 2024)."The Religious Composition of the World's Migrants"(PDF). Pew Research Center.
  5. ^Kramer, Stephanie (19 August 2024)."The Religious Composition of the World's Migrants"(PDF). Pew Research Center.
  6. ^Statistics Canada."2001 Census of Canada". Government of Canada. Archived fromthe original on 2021-02-27.
  7. ^"Global religious futures Europe". Archived fromthe original on 2022-12-12. Retrieved2019-08-07.
  8. ^Cesari, Jocelyne (January–June 2002)."Introduction - "L'Islam en Europe: L'Incorporation d'Une Religion"".Cahiers d'Études sur la Méditerranée Orientale et le monde Turco-Iranien (in French).33.Paris: Éditions de Boccard:7–20.doi:10.3406/CEMOT.2002.1623.S2CID 165345374. Retrieved21 January 2021 – viaPersée.fr.
  9. ^Cesari, Jocelyne, ed. (2014)."Part III: The Old European Land of Islam".The Oxford Handbook of European Islam.Oxford:Oxford University Press. pp. 427–616.doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199607976.001.0001.ISBN 978-0-19-960797-6.LCCN 2014936672.S2CID 153038977.
  10. ^Clayer, Nathalie (2004)."Les musulmans des Balkans Ou l'islam de "l'autre Europe"/The Balkans Muslims Or the Islam of the "Other Europe"".Religions, pouvoir et société: Europe centrale, Balkans, CEI. Le Courrier de Pays de l'Est (in French).5 (1045).Paris: La Documentation française:16–27.doi:10.3917/cpe.045.0016.ISSN 0590-0239 – viaCairn.info.
  11. ^Kramer, Stephanie (19 August 2024)."The Religious Composition of the World's Migrants"(PDF). Pew Research Center.
  12. ^"Chapter 1: Religious Affiliation".The World's Muslims: Unity and Diversity. Religion & Public Life Project.Washington, D.C.:Pew Research Center. 9 August 2012.Archived from the original on 30 January 2023. Retrieved18 February 2023.
  13. ^Analysis (19 December 2011)."Global religious landscape: Muslims"(PDF). Pewforum.org.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2018-03-23. Retrieved17 August 2012.
  14. ^Klich, Ignacio; Lesser, Jeffrey (1996)."Introduction: "Turco" Immigrants in Latin America".The Americas.53 (1):1–14.doi:10.2307/1007471.ISSN 0003-1615.JSTOR 1007471.
  15. ^2012 Suriname Census Definitive ResultsArchived 2015-09-24 at theWayback Machine. Algemeen Bureau voor de Statistiek - Suriname.
  16. ^"Religious Landscape Study".Pew Research. April 2015.Archived from the original on March 29, 2016. RetrievedApril 2, 2019.
  17. ^"New estimates show U.S. Muslim population continues to grow".Pew Research Center. January 3, 2018. RetrievedAugust 16, 2018.
  18. ^"U.S. Religion Census".U.S. Religion Census. Retrieved12 November 2022.
  19. ^Edward E. Curtis,Muslims in America: A Short History (2009) ch 1
  20. ^"Muslim Immigration After 1965". Carleton College. RetrievedMarch 12, 2021.
  21. ^"The Future of the Global Muslim Population". The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. January 27, 2011.Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. RetrievedOctober 30, 2011.
  22. ^Wilgoren, Jodi (2001-10-22)."A Nation Challenged: American Muslims – Islam Attracts Converts By the Thousand, Drawn Before and After Attacks".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2021-03-25.
  23. ^"America's Changing Religious Landscape". Pew Research. May 12, 2015.Archived from the original on June 23, 2016. RetrievedMay 15, 2015.
  24. ^Shams, Tahseen (2021-03-01)."Homeland and Heartland: Conceptualizing the "Muslim" "Diaspora"".Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies.21 (1):47–63.doi:10.3138/diaspora.21.1.2020-11-03.ISSN 1044-2057.
  25. ^"Muslim Diaspora in the West: Negotiating Gender, Home and Belonging".Routledge & CRC Press. Retrieved2023-11-17.
  26. ^Glas, Saskia (2021-12-31)."How Muslims' denomination shapes their integration: the effects of religious marginalization in origin countries on Muslim migrants' national identifications and support for gender equality".Ethnic and Racial Studies.44 (16):83–105.doi:10.1080/01419870.2021.1883082.hdl:2066/230644.ISSN 0141-9870.
  27. ^"The One Percent Problem: Muslims in the West and the Rise of the New Populists".Brookings. Retrieved2024-05-16.
  28. ^"What Do Europeans Think About Muslim Immigration?".Chatham House.Archived from the original on 2018-03-10. Retrieved2018-09-28.
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