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Palestinian Nicaraguan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ethnic group
Palestinian Nicaraguan
Palestino-nicaragüense
فلسطينيو نيكاراغوا
PalestineNicaragua
Total population
unknown
Regions with significant populations
Managua,Granada,Masaya
Languages
Spanish,Palestinian Arabic
Religion
Christianity,Sunni Islam,Shia Islam
Related ethnic groups
Arab Nicaraguan

Palestinian Nicaraguans (Spanish: palestino-nicaragüense) (Arabic:فلسطينيو نيكاراغوا) areNicaraguans ofPalestinian ancestry who were born in or have immigrated to Nicaragua. They are part of the ethnicArab diaspora.

History

[edit]

At different points during the 1890s to the 1940s Nicaragua, and many otherLatin American countries, established laws or issued ordinances that restricted the entry ofArabs, forbade the stay of Arabs already present in the country and curtailed the expansion of theircommercial activities.[1]

Although the exact number of Palestinians is not available, Guzmán writes"it is possible that from the end of the nineteenth century until 1917, when theOttoman Empire entered its final decline, duringWorld War I, 40 Palestinian families arrived in Nicaragua".[2] By 2000 it was estimated that there were 500 families of Palestine Arabs and Palestinian descendants in Nicaragua. The Palestinians that arrived in Nicaragua were mostly Christians and a small number of Muslims, the majority of which came from rural villages nearRamallah,Jerusalem,Beit Jala andBethlehem.

Culture and lifestyle

[edit]
Palestinians celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Nicaraguan revolution in Managua waving Palestine andSandinista flags.

When the Palestinians arrived in Nicaragua, many came fromrural areas and had experience withagricultural work which most continued doing, however, not many were able to buy land. The few Palestinians that managed to buy land for agriculture managed to do so mainly in the Sabana Grande area of the department ofNueva Segovia in northern Nicaragua. Despite the few people who managed to buy land many Palestinians immersed themselves incommerce. They received greatprofits after foundingstores in cities such asManagua,Granada andMasaya, where the majority of which decided to settle.[2] The stores founded by Palestinian immigrants varied from clothing to food stores, some of the more successful stores they founded wereTienda París Loundres,Almacén Dajer,La Media Luna among others.

The Palestinians in Nicaragua tried to attract non-Palestinian Arabs by founding the Club Árabe (Arab Club) in 1958, and although they managed to getSyrians andLebanese to join, 80% of the members were Palestinian.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Civantos, Christina (2005).Between Argentines and Arabs: Argentine orientalism, Arab immigrants, and the writing of identity. SUNY Press. p. 224.ISBN 0-7914-6601-9.
  2. ^abcMarín Guzmán, Roberto (2000).A Century of Palestinian Immigration Into Central America: A Study of Their Economic and Cultural Contributions. Editorial Universidad de C.R. pp. 49–59.ISBN 9977-67-587-2.
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