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Full Version: Study of Muslim population reveals startling facts
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Tuesday, October 20, 2009
The global Muslim population stands at 1.57 billion, meaning that nearly one in four people in the world practice Islam, according to a report last week that was billed as the most comprehensive of its kind.

The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life report provides a precise number for a population whose size has long has been subject to guesswork, with estimates ranging from 1 billion to 1.8 billion.

The project, three years in the making, also presents a portrait of the Muslim world that might surprise some people. For instance, Germany has more Muslims than Lebanon, China has more Muslims than Syria, Russia has more Muslims than Jordan and Libya combined, and Ethiopia has nearly as many Muslims as Afghanistan.

Highlights from the report

- Two-thirds of all Muslims live in 10 countries. Six of those countries are in Asia (Indonesia, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Iran and Turkey), three are in North Africa (Egypt, Algeria and Morocco) and one is in sub-Saharan Africa (Nigeria).

- Indonesia, which has a tradition of a more tolerant Islam, has the world’s largest Muslim population (203 million, or 13 percent of the world’s total).

- In China, the highest concentrations of Muslims were in western provinces. The country experienced its worst outbreak of ethnic violence in decades when rioting broke out this summer between minority Muslim Uighurs and majority Han Chinese.

- Europe is home to about 38 million Muslims, or about five per cent of its population. Germany appears to have more than four million Muslims ó almost as many as North America and South America combined. In France, where tensions have run high over an influx of Muslim immigrant labourers, the overall numbers were lower, but a larger percentage of the population is Muslim.

- Of roughly 4.6 million Muslims in the Americas, more than half live in the United States, although they make up only 0.8 per cent of the population there. About 700,000 people in Canada are Muslim. That’s about two per cent of the total population.

“This whole idea that Muslims are Arabs and Arabs are Muslims is really just obliterated by this report,” said Amaney Jamal, an assistant professor of politics at Princeton University who reviewed an advance copy.

Pew officials call the report the most thorough on the size and distribution of adherents of the world’s second-largest religion behind Christianity, which has an estimated 2.1 billion to 2.2 billion followers.

Christianity is still the dominant faith in the United States. According to Pew’s 2008 US Religious Landscape Survey, 79.5 per cent of US citizens claim some form of Christian faith, from mainline Protestant to Jehovah’s Witnesses.Evangelical Protestants account for 26 per cent of that group.

Only one per cent of the United States population is Muslim, according to the 2008 survey, and in Kentucky, only 0.5 per cent of the state’s 4.3 million residents are Muslim. The arduous task of determining the Muslim populations in 232 countries and territories involved analysing census reports, demographic studies and general population surveys, the report says. In cases in which the data was a few years old, researchers projected 2009 numbers.

The report also sought to pinpoint the world’s Sunni-Shiite breakdown, but difficulties arose because so few countries track sectarian affiliation, said Brian Grim, the project’s senior researcher.

As a result, the Shiite numbers are not as precise; the report estimates that Shiites represent between 10 and 13 per cent of the Muslim population, in line with or slightly lower than other studies.

As much as 80 per cent of the world’s Shiite population lives in four countries: Iran, Pakistan, India and Iraq. The report provides further evidence that although the heart of Islam might beat in the Middle East, its greatest numbers lie in Asia: More than 60 per cent of the world’s Muslims live in Asia.

About 20 per cent live in the Middle East and North Africa, 15 per cent live in Sub-Saharan Africa, 2.4 per cent are in Europe and 0.3 per cent are in the Americas. The Middle East and North Africa have fewer Muslims overall than Asia, but the region easily claims the most Muslim-majority countries.

Those population trends are well established, but the large numbers of Muslims who live as minorities in countries aren’t scrutinised as closely. The report identified about 317 million Muslims ó one-fifth of the world’s Muslim population ó living in countries where Islam is not the majority religion.

About three-quarters of Muslims living as minorities are concentrated in five countries: India (161 million), Ethiopia (28 million), China (22 million), Russia (16 million) and Tanzania (13 million).

In several of these countries, including India, Nigeria, China and France ó divisions featuring a volatile mix of religion, class and politics have contributed to tension and bloodshed among groups.


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