Arabs in the Netherlands

Arab Dutch (Arabische Nederlanders), also referred to as Dutch Arabs (Nederlandse Arabieren), are citizens or residents of the Netherlands whose ancestry traces back to the Arab World. Many of them might not actually be ethnically Arab due to the general confusion between the meaning of Arab and other ethnic groups coming from the same area (such as the case of Kurds, Berbers, Turkmen, Assyrians, Roma, etc.); therefore, the exact number of the actual Arab population in the Netherlands may be greatly biased and incorrect.

Arabs in the Netherlands
العرب في هولندا
Total population
Moroccans 380,755 (2015)

Iraqis 55,236 (2015)
Egyptians 22,700 (2015)
Syrians 22,568 (2015)
Tunisians 9,243 (2015)
Algerians 8,064 (2015)
Lebanese 5,592 (2015)
Saudis 2,198 (2015)
Kuwaitis 1,759 (2015)

Jordanians 1,627 (2015)[1]
Regions with significant populations
predominantly Randstad (Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague)
Languages
Arabic language
Dutch language
Religion
Mainly Islam and minority Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Arabs, Arab diaspora

Politics

In 2001, two Arab immigrants to the Netherlands, Egyptian-born Farouk Ibrahim (58) and Moroccan-born Mustafa Aboustib, set up the Arab Democratic Party (Arabische Democratische Partij), complaining that Arabs were not well represented in mainstream political parties except as "pretty Arab faces".[2] In 2007, a group of Arab Dutch have complained about the television network Al Jazeera's effective monopoly on Arabic broadcasting in the country.[3]

Notable people

See also

References

  1. "Bevolking; generatie, geslacht, leeftijd en herkomstgroepering, 1 januari". Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek. 27 September 2019. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  2. "We zijn de valse beloftes zat (We are fed up with false promises)", de Volkskrant, 2001-08-11, retrieved 2010-06-02
  3. "Arabische Nederlanders in actie tegen Al Jazeera (Arab Dutch defy Al Jazeera news coverage)", De Pers, 2007-11-22, archived from the original on 2011-09-30, retrieved 2010-06-02
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