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Demographics of Lebanon

This is a demography of the population of Lebanon including population density, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

Demographics of Lebanon
Lebanon population pyramid in 2020
Population5,469,612 (July 2020 est.),[1] including 910,256 Syrians, 470,000 Palestinians, and 5,700 Iraqis (110th)
Growth rate-6.68% (2020 est.)
Birth rate13.6 births/1,000 population (2020 est.)
Death rate5.4 deaths/1,000 population (2020 est.)
Life expectancy78.3 years (2020 est.)
 • male76.9 years (2020 est.)
 • female79.8 years (2020 est.)
Fertility rate1.72 children born/woman (SRS 2015)
Infant mortality rate6.8 deaths/1,000 live births (2020 est.)
Age structure
0–14 years23.32% (male 728,025/female 694,453) (2018 est.)
15–64 years69.65% (male 2,139,885/female 2,108,917) (2018 est.)
65 and over7.03% (male 185,780/female 243,015) (2018 est.)
Sex ratio
At birth1.05 male(s)/female (2017 est.)
Under 151.05 male(s)/female (2017 est.)
15–64 years1.03 male(s)/female (2014 est.)
65 and over0.79 male(s)/female (2017 est.)
Nationality
Nationalitynoun: Lebanese people, adjective: Lebanese
Language
OfficialArabic, French (secondary)
SpokenLebanese Arabic, English, French
Minority languages include Armenian and Aramaic
Demographics of Lebanon
Indicator Rank Measure
Economy
GDP (PPP) per capita 66th $19,500
Unemployment rate ↓ 21st 20.89%*
CO2 emissions 78th 3.05t
Electricity consumption 77th 49.72GWh
Economic Freedom 95th 2.98
Politics
Human Development Index 80th 0.757
Political freedom Partly 4
Corruption (A higher score means less (perceived) corruption.) ↓ 134th 2.5
Press freedom 45th 74.00
Society
Literacy Rate 43rd 96.7%
Number of Internet users 59th 4,545,007 users
E-readiness 14th 7.16±
Ease of Doing Business 24th Unknown
Health
Life Expectancy 59th 77.0
Birth rate 113th 15.6
Fertility rate 157th 1.77††
Infant mortality 127th 14.39‡‡
Death rate 157th 7.5
HIV/AIDS rate 127th 0.10%
Notes
* including several non-sovereign entities
↓ indicates rank is in reverse order (e.g. 1st is lowest)
per capita
± score out of 10
per 1000 people
†† per woman
‡‡ per 1000 live births

About 95% of the population of Lebanon is either Muslim or Christian, split across various sects and denominations. Because the matter of religious balance is a sensitive political issue, a national census has not been conducted since 1932, before the founding of the modern Lebanese state. Consequently, there is an absence of accurate data on the relative percentages of the population of the major religions and groups.[2]

The absence of data and comprehensive statistics also concerns all other demographic studies unrelated to religious balance, due to the all but total inactivity of the concerned public agencies. The only recent (post-war) statistics available are estimates based on studies made by private organizations.[citation needed]

The biggest study made after the independence on the Lebanese Population was made by the Central Administration of Statistics (in French: "Administration Centrale de la Statistique") under the direction of Robert Kasparian and Grégoire Haddad's Social Movement: "L'enquête par sondage sur la population active au Liban en 1970" (in English: "The survey on the active population in Lebanon in 1970"). It was conducted on a sample of 130,000 individuals.[3]

There are over 4 million[4][5][6] Lebanese and descendants of Lebanese worldwide, mostly Christians, compared with the internal population of Lebanon of around 4.6 million citizens, in 2020.[7]

Ethnic groups

Lebanese

Ethnic background is an important factor in Lebanon. The country encompasses a great mix of Indigenous and non indigenous cultural, religious, and ethnic groups such as Arabs & Armenians, Kurds, Turks, amongst others. Muslims from the Arabian Peninsula invaded and occupied Lebanon in the 7th century AD. In the time since then, Arabic has become the lingua franca of the area and much of the population of Lebanon (especially Muslims) have come to identify as Arab. Ethnic identity has come to revolve increasingly around aspects of cultural self-identification more than descent. To an extent, religious affiliation has also become a substitute in some respects for ethnic affiliation.[8]

Generally, the cultural and linguistic heritage of the People of Lebanon is a blend of both indigenous elements and the foreign cultures that have come to rule the land and its people over the course of thousands of years. Moreover, in a 2013 interview, the lead investigator, Pierre Zalloua, pointed out that genetic variation preceded religious variation and divisions: "Lebanon already had well-differentiated communities with their own genetic peculiarities, but not significant differences, and religions came as layers of paint on top. There is no distinct pattern that shows that one community carries significantly more Phoenician than another".[9]

Religious groups

 
Three Lebanese women in 1873.

The Lebanese Christians are some of the oldest Christians in the world, preceded only by the oriental Orthodox of Armenia, Ethiopia, the Copts of Egypt, and the Saint Thomas Christians of India. The Maronite Christians belong to the West Syriac Rite. Their Liturgical language is the Syriac-Aramaic language.[10][11] The Melkite Greek Catholics and the Eastern Orthodox, tend to focus more on the Greco-Hellenistic heritage of the region from the days of the Byzantine Empire, and the fact that Greek was maintained as a liturgical language until very recently. Some Lebanese even claim partial descent from Crusader knights who ruled Lebanon for a couple of centuries during the Middle Ages, also backed by recent genetic studies which confirmed this among Lebanese people, especially in the north of the country that was under the Crusader County of Tripoli. This identification with non-Arab civilizations also exists in other religious communities, albeit not to the same extent.

The sectarian system

Lebanon's religious divisions are extremely complicated, and the country is made up by a multitude of religious groupings. The ecclesiastical and demographic patterns of the sects and denominations are complex. Divisions and rivalries between groups date back as far as 15 centuries, and still are a factor today. The pattern of settlement has changed little since the 7th century, but instances of civil strife and ethnic cleansing, most recently during the Lebanese Civil War, has brought some important changes to the religious map of the country. (See also History of Lebanon.)

Lebanon has by far the largest proportion of Christians of any Middle Eastern country, but both Christians and Muslims are sub-divided into many splinter sects and denominations. Population statistics are highly controversial. The various denominations and sects each have vested interests in inflating their own numbers. Shias, Sunnis, Maronites and Eastern Orthodox (the four largest denominations) all often claim that their particular religious affiliation holds a majority in the country, adding up to over 150% of the total population, even before counting the other denominations. One of the rare things that most Lebanese religious leaders will agree on is to avoid a new general census, for fear that it could trigger a new round of denominational conflict. The last official census was performed in 1932.

Religion has traditionally been of overriding importance in defining the Lebanese population. Dividing state power between the religious denominations and sects, and granting religious authorities judicial power, dates back to Ottoman times (the millet system). The practice was reinforced during French mandate, when Christian groups were granted privileges. This system of government, while partly intended as a compromise between sectarian demands, has caused tensions that still dominate Lebanese politics to this day.

The Christian population majority is believed to have ended in the early 1970s, but government leaders would agree to no change in the political power balance. This led to Muslim demands for increased representation, and the constant sectarian tension slid into violent conflict in 1958 (prompting U.S. intervention) and again in the grueling Lebanese Civil War, in 1975–90.

 
Natural Growth Rate in Lebanon throughout years

The balance of power has been slightly adjusted in the 1943 National Pact, an informal agreement struck at independence, in which positions of power were divided according to the 1932 census. The Sunni elite was then accorded more power, but Maronites continued to dominate the system. The sectarian balance was again adjusted towards the Muslim side but simultaneously further reinforced and legitimized. Shia Muslims (by now the second largest sect) then gained additional representation in the state apparatus, and the obligatory Christian-Muslim representation in Parliament was downgraded from a 6:5 to a 1:1 ratio. Christians of various denominations were then generally thought to constitute about 40% of the population, although often Muslim leaders would cite lower numbers, and some Christians would claim that they still held a majority of the population.

18 recognized religious groups

 
An estimate of the area distribution of Lebanon's main religious groups
 
Distribution of Lebanon's religious groups according to 2009 municipal election data

The present Lebanese Constitution officially acknowledges 18 religious groups (see below). These have the right to handle family law according to their courts and traditions, and they are the basic players in Lebanon's complex sectarian politics.

Religious population statistics

Note: stateless Palestinians and Syrians are not included in the statistics below since they do not hold Lebanese citizenship. The numbers only include the present population of Lebanon, and not the Lebanese diaspora.

The 1932 census stated that Christians made up 50% of the resident population. Maronites, the largest among the Christian denomination and then largely in control of the state apparatus, accounted for 29% of the total resident population.

The total population of Lebanon was reported to be 1,411,000 in 1956.[12] The largest communities were Maronites (424,000), Sunni Muslims (286,000), Shiite Muslims(250,000), Greek Orthodox (149,000), Greek Catholics (91,000), Druzes (88,000), Armenian Orthodox (64,000), Armenian Catholics (15,000), Protestants (14,000), Jews (7,000), Syriac Catholics (6,000), Syriac Orthodox (5,000), Latins (4,000) and Nestorian Chaldeans (1,000).[12]

A 2010 study conducted by Statistics Lebanon, a Beirut-based research firm, cited by the United States Department of State found that Lebanon's population of approximately 4.3 million was estimated to be:[13]

There is also a very small number of other religious minorities such as, Baháʼís, Buddhists, Hindus and Mormons.[13]

In 2022, the CIA World Factbook specified that of the citizen population (data do not include Lebanon's sizable Syrian and Palestinian refugee populations), 67.8% are Muslims (31.9% Sunni, 31.2% Shia, with smaller percentages of Alawites and Ismailis), 32.4% are Christians (mostly Maronites, Eastern Orthodox, Melkite Catholics, Protestant, Armenian Apostolic, Assyrian Church of the East, Syriac Orthodox, Chaldean Catholic, Syrian Catholic), 4.5% are Druze, and there are "very small numbers of Jews, Baha'is, Buddhists, and Hindus".[14]

Census of 1932

Residents Emigrants before 30/08/1924 Emigrants after 30/08/1924
paying taxes does not pay paying taxes does not pay
Sunni 178,100 2,653 9,840 1,089 3,623
Shi'i 155,035 2,977 4,543 1,770 2,220
Druze 53,334 2,067 3,205 1,183 2,295
Maronite 227,800 31,697 58,457 11,434 21,809
Greek Catholic 46,709 7,190 16,544 1,855 4,038
Greek Orthodox 77,312 12,547 31,521 3,922 9,041
Protestant 6,869 607 1,575 174 575
Armenian Orthodox 26,102 1 60 191 1,718
Armenian Catholic 5,890 9 50 20 375
Syriac Orthodox 2,723 6 34 3 54
Syriac Catholic 2,803 9 196 6 101
Jews 3,588 6 214 7 188
Chaldean Orthodox 190 0 0 0 0
Chaldean Catholic 548 0 6 0 19
Miscellaneous 6,393 212 758 59 234
Total 793,396 59,981 127,003 21,713 46,290
Foreigners 61.297
source[15]

Muslims

 
A map of religious and ethnic communities of Syria and Lebanon (1935)

According to the CIA World Factbook,[14] in 2021 the Muslim population was estimated at 60% within Lebanese territory and 20% of the over 4 million[4][5][6] Lebanese diaspora population. In 2012 a more detailed breakdown of the size of each Muslim sect in Lebanon was made:

  • The Shia Muslims are around 22.5%[16]–29%[17][18] of the total population. The Speaker of Parliament is always a Shia Muslim, as it is the only high post that Shias are eligible for.[19][20][21][22] The Shias are largely concentrated in northern and western Beqaa, Southern Lebanon and in the southern suburbs of Beirut.[23]
  • The Sunni Muslims constitute also about 25.5%[23]–29%[16] of the total population. Sunni notables traditionally held power in the Lebanese state together, and they are still the only sect eligible for the post of Prime Minister[24] Sunnis are mostly concentrated in the west Beirut, Tripoli, Sidon, Central and Western Beqaa, and Akkar in the north.[23]
  • Other Muslim sects have a small presence, with the Isma'ilis and Alawites combined comprising less than 1% of the population and are included among Lebanese Shia Muslims.

Christians

 
Religion map of Lebanon by municipality according to municipal elections data.
 
Former Lebanese president Michel Suleiman.

According to the CIA World Factbook,[14] in 2021, the Christian population in Lebanon was estimated at 35%. In 2012 a more detailed breakdown of the size of each Christian sect in Lebanon was made:

  • The Maronites are the largest of the Christian groups about 30%[16] of the population of Lebanon. They have had a long and continuous association with the Roman Catholic Church, but have their own patriarch, liturgy, and customs. Traditionally they had good relations with the Western world, especially France[25] and the Vatican.[26] They traditionally dominated the Lebanese government. Their influence in later years has diminished, because of their relative decrease in numbers but also due to the Syrian occupation of Lebanon, which generally benefited Shia communities, and was resisted by most of the others. Today the Maronites are believed to compose about 26% of the population, scattered around the Lebanese countryside but with heavy concentrations on Mount Lebanon and in Beirut (Greater Beirut).
  • The second largest Christian group is the Eastern Orthodox that constitute at least 9%[16] of the population. The church exists in many parts of the Arab world and Eastern Orthodox Christians have often been noted for pan-Arab or pan-Syrian leanings; it has had fewer dealings with Western countries than the Maronites. The Eastern Orthodox Lebanese Christians have a long and continuous association with Eastern Orthodox European countries like Greece, Cyprus, Russia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Serbia and Romania. The Deputy Speaker of Parliament and the deputy Prime Minister are reserved for Eastern Orthodox Christians.
  • The Melkite Catholics are thought to constitute about 6%[16] of the population.
  • The Protestants are thought to constitute about 1%[16] of the population.
  • The remaining Christian churches are thought to constitute another 5%[16] of the population (Roman Catholics, Armenian Apostolic, Armenian Catholic, Syriac Orthodox, Syriac Catholic, and Assyrians.)

Druze

The Druze constitute 5%[14] of the population and can be found primarily in the rural, mountainous areas of Mount Lebanon and the Chouf District. Traditionally, the Druze tended to prefer Syria over the West, but after the civil war and the emergence of Hezbollah, the Druze hold a powerful negativity towards Syria, Iran, and Hezbollah, and now the Druze strongly prefer to ally with the West. Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam, most Druze do not identify as Muslims,[27][28][29][30][31] and they do not accept the five pillars of Islam.[32]

Other religions

Other religions account for only an estimated 0.3% of the population mainly foreign temporary workers, according to the CIA World Factbook. There remains a very small Jewish population, traditionally centered in Beirut. It has been larger: most Jews left the country after the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990) as thousands of Lebanese did at that time.

Diaspora

Prominent Lebanese Figures
وجوه من لبنان
Prominent Lebanese people and people of Lebanese descent.

Apart from the four and a half million citizens of Lebanon proper, there is a sizeable Lebanese diaspora. There are more Lebanese people living outside of Lebanon (over 4 million[4][5][33]), than within (4.6 million citizens plus 1.5 million refugees). The majority of the diaspora population consists of Lebanese Christians; however, there are some who are Muslim. They trace their origin to several waves of Christian emigration, starting with the exodus that followed the 1860 Lebanon conflict in Ottoman Syria.

Under the current Lebanese nationality law, diaspora Lebanese do not have an automatic right of return to Lebanon. Due to varying degrees of assimilation and high degree of interethnic marriages, most diaspora Lebanese have not passed on the Arabic language to their children, while still maintaining a Lebanese ethnic identity.

Many Lebanese families are economically and politically prominent in several Latin American countries (in 2007 Mexican Carlos Slim Helú, son of Lebanese immigrants, was determined to be the wealthiest man in the World by Fortune Magazine), and make up a substantial portion of the Lebanese American community in the United States. The largest Lebanese diaspora is located in Brazil, where about 6–7 million people have Lebanese descent (see Lebanese Brazilian). In Argentina, there is also a large Lebanese diaspora of approximately 1.5 million people having Lebanese descent. (see Lebanese Argentine). In Canada, there is also a large Lebanese diaspora of approximately 250,000-500,000 people having Lebanese descent. (see Lebanese Canadians).

There are also sizable populations in West Africa, particularly Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone and Senegal.

The large size of Lebanon's diaspora may be partly explained by the historical and cultural tradition of seafaring and traveling, which stretches back to Lebanon's ancient Phoenician origins and its role as a "gateway" of relations between Europe and the Middle East. It has been commonplace for Lebanese citizens to emigrate in search of economic prosperity. Furthermore, on several occasions in the last two centuries the Lebanese population has endured periods of ethnic cleansing and displacement (for example, 1840–60 and 1975–90). These factors have contributed to the geographical mobility of the Lebanese people.

While under Syrian occupation, Beirut passed legislation which prevented second-generation Lebanese of the diaspora from automatically obtaining Lebanese citizenship. This has reinforced the émigré status of many diaspora Lebanese. There is currently a campaign by those Lebanese of the diaspora who already have Lebanese citizenship to attain the vote from abroad, which has been successfully passed in the Lebanese parliament and will be effective as of 2013 which is the next parliamentary elections. If suffrage was to be extended to these 1.2[citation needed] million Lebanese émigré citizens, it would have a significant political effect, since as many as 80% of them are believed to be Christian.[citation needed]

Lebanese Civil War refugees and displaced persons

With no official figures available, it is estimated that 600,000–900,000 persons fled the country during the Lebanese Civil War (1975–90). Although some have since returned, this permanently disturbed Lebanese population growth and greatly complicated demographic statistics.

Another result of the war was a large number of internally displaced persons. This especially affected the southern Shia community, as Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon in 1978, 1982, and 1996 prompted waves of mass emigration, in addition to the continual strain of occupation and fighting between Israel and Hezbollah (mainly 1982 to 2000).

Many Shias from Southern Lebanon resettled in the suburbs south of Beirut. After the war, the pace of Christian emigration accelerated, as many Christians felt discriminated against in a Lebanon under increasingly oppressive Syrian occupation.

According to a UNDP study, as much as 10% of the Lebanese had a disability in 1990.[34] Other studies have pointed to the fact that this portion of society is highly marginalized due to the lack of educational and governmental support of their advancement.[34]

Languages

Arabic is the official language of the country. Lebanese Arabic is mostly spoken in non-official contexts. French and English are taught in many schools from a young age. Among the Armenian ethnic minority in Lebanon, the Armenian language is taught and spoken within the Armenian community.

CIA World Factbook demographic statistics

 
US Census Statistics
 
Population, fertility rate and net reproduction rate, United Nations estimates

The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook, unless otherwise indicated.

  • Population:
Total population: 6,100,075 (July 2018 est.)
Lebanese nationals: 4,680,212 (July 2018 est.)
Syrian refugees: 944,613 (April 2019 est.) registered at the UNHCR (down from 1,077,000 in June 2014)
Palestinian refugees: 175,555 (2018 est.)
Iraqi refugees: 5,695 (2017 est.)

Age structure:

  • 0–14 years: 23.32% (male 728,025/female 694,453) 15–24 years: 16.04% (male 500,592/female 477,784) 25–54 years: 45.27% (male 1,398,087/female 1,363,386) 55–64 years: 8.34% (male 241,206/female 267,747) 65 years and over: 7.03% (male 185,780/female 243,015) (2018 est.)
  • Median age:
Total: 31.3 years
Male: 30.7 years
Female: 31.9 years (2018 est.)
  • Population growth rate:
1.04% (2005 est.)
0.96% (2011 est.)
−3.13% (2018 est.)
  • Net migration rate:
−4.43 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2011 est.)
−40.3 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2018 est.)
  • Sex ratio:
at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.04 male(s)/female
15–64 years: 0.92 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.83 male(s)/female
total population: 0.94 male(s)/female (2005 est.)
  • Life expectancy at birth:
total population: 77.9 years
male: 76.6 years
female: 79.3 years (2018 est.)


Vital statistics

UN estimates

The website Our World in Data prepared the following estimates based on statistics from the Population Department of the United Nations.[35]

Mid-year population (thousands) Live births (thousands) Deaths (thousands) Natural change (thousands) Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total fertility rate (TFR) Infant mortality (per 1000 live births) Life expectancy (in years)
1950 1 350   55   17   38 40.8 12.6 28.2 5.81 75.0 61.04
1951   1 388   57   17   39 40.8 12.6 28.2 5.80 73.8 61.37
1952   1 428   58   18   41 40.7 12.3 28.4 5.80 71.4 61.73
1953   1 469   60   18   42 40.6 12.0 28.6 5.80 69.1 62.23
1954   1 512   61   18   44 40.5 11.7 28.8 5.81 67.1 62.65
1955   1 556   63   18   45 40.3 11.7 28.6 5.81 67.4 62.42
1956   1 602   64   18   46 40.1 11.0 29.0 5.81 63.2 63.38
1957   1 649   66   18   48 39.8 10.7 29.2 5.81 61.4 63.90
1958   1 697   67   19   48 39.5 11.3 28.2 5.81 59.8 62.08
1959   1 747   69   18   51 39.2 10.1 29.2 5.82 58.2 64.61
1960   1 798   70   18   52 38.8 9.8 29.0 5.82 56.7 64.84
1961   1 853   71   18   53 38.3 9.5 28.8 5.81 55.4 65.29
1962   1 912   72   18   55 37.9 9.3 28.5 5.80 54.3 65.40
1963   1 972   74   18   56 37.4 9.1 28.3 5.78 53.0 65.67
1964   2 030   74   18   57 36.7 8.8 27.8 5.72 51.9 65.95
1965   2 087   75   18   57 35.9 8.6 27.3 5.65 50.9 66.07
1966   2 146   76   18   57 35.2 8.5 26.8 5.57 50.0 66.16
1967   2 203   76   18   58 34.7 8.2 26.4 5.49 49.2 66.52
1968   2 262   77   18   59 34.1 8.1 26.0 5.38 48.6 66.61
1969   2 324   78   19   60 33.7 8.0 25.7 5.28 48.0 66.70
1970   2 382   79   19   61 33.3 7.9 25.5 5.17 47.5 66.76
1971   2 442   80   19   61 33.0 7.8 25.2 5.04 47.0 66.82
1972   2 506   82   19   63 32.8 7.7 25.1 4.93 46.5 66.91
1973   2 570   83   19   64 32.4 7.5 25.0 4.81 45.9 67.23
1974   2 633   85   20   65 32.2 7.4 24.8 4.69 45.3 67.29
1975   2 692   86   30   56 31.9 11.1 20.8 4.56 45.2 58.13
1976   3 070   87 85   2 31.8 31.2 0.6 4.42 102.9 33.74
1977   3 458   110   37   73 31.7 10.7 21.0 4.31 52.8 59.28
1978   3 183   111   37   74 31.5 10.6 20.9 4.20 51.7 59.38
1979   2 902   91   31   61 31.4 10.5 20.9 4.09 50.6 59.47
1980   2 964   93   31   62 31.4 10.4 21.0 4.03 49.4 59.67
1981   3 027   95   31   64 31.5 10.2 21.3 3.98 48.2 59.92
1982   3 070   96   60   36 31.2 19.4 11.8 3.89 70.1 45.13
1983   3 107   96   31   65 30.8 9.9 20.9 3.79 39.9 59.96
1984   3 164   96   31   65 30.4 9.8 20.7 3.70 38.6 60.30
1985   3 227   96   31   65 29.8 9.7 20.1 3.59 37.4 60.49
1986   3 308   96   31   65 29.3 9.4 19.8 3.50 35.8 60.97
1987   3 391   98   31   66 28.8 9.3 19.6 3.43 40.1 61.43
1988   3 457   99   32   68 28.7 9.1 19.5 3.40 38.7 61.72
1989   3 526   101   28   73 28.6 8.0 20.7 3.39 27.8 64.16
1990   3 594   100   28   72 27.8 7.8 20.0 3.30 26.7 64.48
1991   3 667   99   19   80 26.9 5.2 21.7 3.19 25.7 71.18
1992   3 745   97   20   78 25.9 5.2 20.7 3.08 24.8 71.19
1993   3 819   95   20   75 24.9 5.2 19.7 2.97 23.7 71.38
1994   3 888   93   20   73 23.9 5.1 18.9 2.87 22.5 71.68
1995   3 960   92   20   72 23.1 5.0 18.2 2.78 21.5 72.04
1996   4 034   91   20   72 22.7 4.9 17.7 2.74 20.6 72.29
1997   4 108   90   20   71 22.0 4.8 17.2 2.66 19.6 72.78
1998   4 179   90   20   70 21.4 4.8 16.6 2.60 18.7 72.94
1999   4 250   89   20   69 21.0 4.6 16.3 2.55 17.9 73.49
2000   4 321   89   20   69 20.5 4.6 15.9 2.50 17.0 73.93
2001   4 389   89   20   69 20.2 4.5 15.7 2.46 15.9 74.37
2002   4 447   88   19   69 19.7 4.3 15.4 2.41 14.9 75.06
2003   4 505   86   19   67 19.2 4.2 15.0 2.35 13.9 75.59
2004   4 575   85   19   66 18.6 4.2 14.4 2.27 13.0 75.98
2005   4 643   84   19   64 18.0 4.2 13.9 2.20 12.0 76.27
2006   4 720   83   20   63 17.7 4.3 13.4 2.16 11.2 76.08
2007   4 810   83   20   64 17.3 4.1 13.2 2.11 10.4 77.08
2008   4 888   84   20   64 17.1 4.0 13.1 2.08 9.7 77.58
2009   4 951   85   20   65 17.2 4.0 13.2 2.09 9.2 77.89
2010   4 996   88   20   68 17.6 4.1 13.5 2.13 8.7 78.16
2011   5 045   90   21   69 17.9 4.1 13.8 2.16 8.4 78.40
2012   5 178   92   21   70 17.9 4.1 13.8 2.17 8.0 78.63
2013   5 679   95   22   73 17.9 4.2 13.7 2.17 7.8 78.77
2014   6 274   110   26   84 17.9 4.2 13.7 2.18 7.5 78.97
2015 6 399 116   28   88 17.8 4.2 13.5 2.18 7.2 79.23
2016   6 259   111   28   83 17.4 4.3 13.1 2.18 6.8 79.51
2017   6 109   105   28   77 16.9 4.5 12.4 2.17 6.6 79.65
2018   5 951   99   29   70 16.3 4.7 11.6 2.15 6.4 79.73
2019   5 782   93   31   63 15.8 5.2 10.6 2.13 6.2 79.24
2020   5 663   88   36   52 15.3 6.3 9.1 2.10 6.0 77.80
2021   5 593   84   47   38 14.9 8.3 6.7 2.09 5.8 75.05

Registered births and deaths

[36][37] Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total fertility rate (TFR)
1990 70,903 13,263 57,640
1991 82,742 15,773 66,969
1992 94,607 18,042 76,565
1993 90,947 24,223 66,724
1994 90,712 18,421 72,291
1995 91,196 19,230 71,966
1996 86,997 19,962 67,035
1997 85,018 19,884 65,134
1998 84,250 20,097 64,153
1999 85,955 19,813 66,142
2000 87,795 19,435 68,360
2001 83,693 17,568 66,125
2002 76,405 17,294 59,111
2003 71,702 17,187 54,515
2004 73,900 17,774 56,126 1.75
2005 73,973 18,012 55,961
2006 72,790 18,787 54,003
2007 3,759,137 80,896 21,092 59,804 21.5 5.6 15.9
2008 84,823 21,048 63,775 22.3 5.5 16.8
2009 90,388 22,260 68,128 23.4 5.8 17.6
2010 91,795 21,441 70,354 23.2 5.4 17.8
2011 97,887 23,257 74,630 25.4 6.0 19.6 1.60
2012 90,167 22,792 67,375 23.3 5.8 17.5
2013 86,950 23,414 63,536 23.2 6.1 17.1
2014 88,704 25,117 63,587 23.0 6.5 16.5
2015 85,453 25,275 60,178 22.3 6.6 15.7
2016 88,996 24,617 64,379 23.1 6.4 16.7
2017 90,647 25,847 64,800 23.5 6.7 16.9 1.8
2018 3,864,000 89,772 25,096 64,676 23.2 6.5 16.7
2019 3,910,000 86,179 24,950 61,229 22.0 6.4 15.6
2020 3,944,000 74,594 26,832 47,762 18.9 6.8 12.1
2021 68,130 36,950

Immigrants and ethnic groups

There are substantial numbers of immigrants from other Arab countries (mainly Palestine, Syria, Iraq) and non-Arab-speaking Muslim countries. Also, recent years have seen an influx of people from Ethiopia[38] and South East Asian countries such as Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Sri Lanka,[39] as well as smaller numbers of other immigrant minorities, Colombians and Brazilians (of Lebanese descent themselves). Most of these are employed as guest workers in the same fashion as Syrians and Palestinians, and entered the country to search for employment in the post-war reconstruction of Lebanon. Apart from the Palestinians, there are approximately 180,000 stateless persons in Lebanon.

Summary including non-Lebanese.

  Lebanese (68.86%)
  Syrian (18.7%)
  Palestinian (6.96%)
  Armenian (2.2%)
  Other (4.6%)

Armenians, Jews and Iranians

Lebanese Armenians, Jews and Iranians form more distinct ethnic minorities, all of them in possession of a separate languages (Armenian, Hebrew, Persian) and a national home area (Armenia, Israel, Iran) outside of Lebanon. However, they combined total 5% of the population.

French and Italians

During the French Mandate of Lebanon, there was a fairly large French minority and a tiny Italian minority. Most of the French and Italian settlers left after Lebanese independence in 1943 and only 22,000 French Lebanese and 4,300 Italian Lebanese continue to live in Lebanon. The most important legacy of the French Mandate is the frequent use and knowledge of the French language by most of the educated Lebanese people, and Beirut is still known as the "Paris of the Middle East".

Palestinians

Around 175,555 Palestinian refugees were registered in Lebanon with the UNRWA in 2014, who are refugees or descendants of refugees from the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Some 53% live in 12 Palestine refugee camps, who "suffer from serious problems" such as poverty and overcrowding.[40] Some of these may have emigrated during the civil war, but there are no reliable figures available. There are also a number of Palestinians who are not registered as UNRWA refugees, because they left earlier than 1948 or were not in need of material assistance. The exact number of Palestinians remain a subject of great dispute and the Lebanese government will not provide an estimate. A figure of 400,000 Palestinian refugees would mean that Palestinians constitute less than 7% of the resident population of Lebanon.

Palestinians living in Lebanon are considered foreigners and are under the same restrictions on employment applied to other foreigners. Prior to 2010, they were under even more restrictive employment rules which permitted, other than work for the U.N., only the most menial employment. They are not allowed to attend public schools, own property, or make an enforceable will.[41] Palestinian refugees, who constitute nearly 6.6% of the country's population, have long been denied basic rights in Lebanon. They are not allowed to attend public schools, own property or pass on inheritances, measures Lebanon says it has adopted to preserve their right to return to their property in what constitutes Israel now.

Their presence is controversial, and resisted by large segments of the Christian population, who argue that the primarily Sunni Muslim Palestinians dilute Christian numbers. Many Shia Muslims also look unfavorably upon the Palestinian presence since the refugee camps have tended to be concentrated in their home areas. The Lebanese Sunnis, however, would be happy to see these Palestinians given the Lebanese nationality, thus increasing the Lebanese Sunni population by well over 10% and tipping the fragile electoral balance much in favor of the Sunnis. Late prime minister Rafiq Hariri —himself a Sunni— had hinted on more than one occasion on the inevitability of granting these refugees Lebanese citizenship. Thus far the refugees lack Lebanese citizenship as well as many rights enjoyed by the rest of the population, and are confined to severely overcrowded refugee camps, in which construction rights are severely constricted.

Palestinians may not work in a large number of professions, such as lawyers and doctors. However, after negotiations between Lebanese authorities and ministers from the Palestinian National Authority some professions for Palestinians were allowed (such as taxi driver and construction worker). The material situation of the Palestinian refugees in Lebanon is difficult, and they are believed to constitute the poorest community in Lebanon, as well as the poorest Palestinian community with the possible exception of Gaza Strip refugees. Their primary sources of income are UNRWA aid and menial labor sought in competition with Syrian guest workers.

The Palestinians are almost totally Sunni Muslim, though at some point Christians counted as high as 40% with Muslims at 60%. The numbers of Palestinian Christians has diminished in later years, as many have managed to leave Lebanon. During the Lebanese Civil War, Palestinian Christians sided with the rest of the Palestinian community, instead of allying with Lebanese Eastern Orthodox or other Christian communities.

60,000 Palestinians have received Lebanese citizenship, including most Christian Palestinians.[42][43]

Syrians

In 1976, the then Syrian president Hafez al-Assad sent troops into Lebanon to fight PLO forces on behalf of Christian militias. This led to escalated fighting until a cease-fire agreement later that year that allowed for the stationing of Syrian troops within Lebanon. The Syrian presence in Lebanon quickly changed sides; soon after they entered Lebanon they had flip-flopped and began to fight the Christian nationalists in Lebanon they allegedly entered the country to protect. The Kateab Party and the Lebanese Forces under Bachir Gemayel strongly resisted the Syrians in Lebanon. In 1989, 40,000 Syrian troops remained in central and eastern Lebanon under the supervision of the Syrian government. Although, the Taif Accord, established in the same year, called for the removal of Syrian troops and transfer of arms to the Lebanese army, the Syrian Army remained in Lebanon until the Lebanese Cedar Revolution in 2005 ended the Syrian occupation of Lebanon.

In 1994, the Lebanese government under the pressure of the Syrian government, gave Lebanese passports to thousands of Syrians.[44]

There are nearly 1.08 million registered[45] Syrian refugees in Lebanon[46] but is estimated that Lebanon hosts 1.5 million.[47]

Assyrians

There are an estimated 40,000 to 80,000 Iraqi Assyrian refugees in Lebanon. The vast majority of them are undocumented, with a large number having been deported or put in prison.[48] They belong to various denominations, including the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church, and Syriac Catholic Church.

Iraqis

Due to the US-led invasion of Iraq, Lebanon received a mass influx of Iraqi refugees numbering at around 100,000. The vast majority of them are undocumented, with a large number having been deported or put in prison.[48]

Kurds

There are an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 Kurdish refugees from Turkey and Syria within Lebanese territory. Many of them are undocumented. As of 2012, around 40% of all Kurds in Lebanon do not have Lebanese citizenship.[49]

Turks

The Turkish people began to migrate to Lebanon once the Ottoman sultan Selim I conquered the region in 1516. Turks were encouraged to stay in Lebanon by being rewarded with land and money.[50] Today the Turkish minority numbers approximately 80,000.[51] Moreover, since the Syrian Civil War, approximately 125,000 to 150,000 Syrian Turkmen refugees arrived in Lebanon, and hence they now outnumber the long established Turkish minority who settled since the Ottoman era.[52][53]

Circassians

The Circassians migrated to the Ottoman Empire including Lebanon and neighboring countries in the 18th and 19th century. However, they are mostly located in Akkar Governorate, in which they have come to Berkail since 1754. Today the Circassian minority numbers approximately 100,000.[54][55]

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ "CIA World Factbook - Lebanon". 23 November 2021.
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  31. ^ Yazbeck Haddad, Yvonne (2014). The Oxford Handbook of American Islam. Oxford University Press. p. 142. ISBN 9780199862634. While they appear parallel to those of normative Islam, in the Druze religion they are different in meaning and interpretation. The religion is consider distinct from the Ismaili as well as from other Muslims belief and practice... Most Druze consider themselves fully assimilated in American society and do not necessarily identify as Muslims..
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demographics, lebanon, this, demography, population, lebanon, including, population, density, education, level, health, populace, economic, status, religious, affiliations, other, aspects, population, lebanon, population, pyramid, 2020population5, july, 2020, . This is a demography of the population of Lebanon including population density education level health of the populace economic status religious affiliations and other aspects of the population Demographics of LebanonLebanon population pyramid in 2020Population5 469 612 July 2020 est 1 including 910 256 Syrians 470 000 Palestinians and 5 700 Iraqis 110th Growth rate 6 68 2020 est Birth rate13 6 births 1 000 population 2020 est Death rate5 4 deaths 1 000 population 2020 est Life expectancy78 3 years 2020 est male76 9 years 2020 est female79 8 years 2020 est Fertility rate1 72 children born woman SRS 2015 Infant mortality rate6 8 deaths 1 000 live births 2020 est Age structure0 14 years23 32 male 728 025 female 694 453 2018 est 15 64 years69 65 male 2 139 885 female 2 108 917 2018 est 65 and over7 03 male 185 780 female 243 015 2018 est Sex ratioAt birth1 05 male s female 2017 est Under 151 05 male s female 2017 est 15 64 years1 03 male s female 2014 est 65 and over0 79 male s female 2017 est NationalityNationalitynoun Lebanese people adjective LebaneseLanguageOfficialArabic French secondary SpokenLebanese Arabic English FrenchMinority languages include Armenian and AramaicDemographics of LebanonIndicator Rank MeasureEconomyGDP PPP per capita 66th 19 500Unemployment rate 21st 20 89 CO2 emissions 78th 3 05t Electricity consumption 77th 49 72GWhEconomic Freedom 95th 2 98PoliticsHuman Development Index 80th 0 757Political freedom Partly 4Corruption A higher score means less perceived corruption 134th 2 5Press freedom 45th 74 00SocietyLiteracy Rate 43rd 96 7 Number of Internet users 59th 4 545 007 usersE readiness 14th 7 16 Ease of Doing Business 24th UnknownHealthLife Expectancy 59th 77 0Birth rate 113th 15 6 Fertility rate 157th 1 77 Infant mortality 127th 14 39 Death rate 157th 7 5 HIV AIDS rate 127th 0 10 Notes including several non sovereign entities indicates rank is in reverse order e g 1st is lowest per capita score out of 10 per 1000 people per woman per 1000 live birthsAbout 95 of the population of Lebanon is either Muslim or Christian split across various sects and denominations Because the matter of religious balance is a sensitive political issue a national census has not been conducted since 1932 before the founding of the modern Lebanese state Consequently there is an absence of accurate data on the relative percentages of the population of the major religions and groups 2 The absence of data and comprehensive statistics also concerns all other demographic studies unrelated to religious balance due to the all but total inactivity of the concerned public agencies The only recent post war statistics available are estimates based on studies made by private organizations citation needed The biggest study made after the independence on the Lebanese Population was made by the Central Administration of Statistics in French Administration Centrale de la Statistique under the direction of Robert Kasparian and Gregoire Haddad s Social Movement L enquete par sondage sur la population active au Liban en 1970 in English The survey on the active population in Lebanon in 1970 It was conducted on a sample of 130 000 individuals 3 There are over 4 million 4 5 6 Lebanese and descendants of Lebanese worldwide mostly Christians compared with the internal population of Lebanon of around 4 6 million citizens in 2020 7 Contents 1 Ethnic groups 1 1 Lebanese 2 Religious groups 2 1 The sectarian system 2 1 1 18 recognized religious groups 2 2 Religious population statistics 2 2 1 Census of 1932 2 2 2 Muslims 2 2 3 Christians 2 2 4 Druze 2 2 5 Other religions 3 Diaspora 3 1 Lebanese Civil War refugees and displaced persons 4 Languages 5 CIA World Factbook demographic statistics 6 Vital statistics 6 1 UN estimates 6 2 Registered births and deaths 7 Immigrants and ethnic groups 7 1 Armenians Jews and Iranians 7 2 French and Italians 7 3 Palestinians 7 4 Syrians 7 5 Assyrians 7 6 Iraqis 7 7 Kurds 7 8 Turks 7 9 Circassians 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesEthnic groups EditLebanese Edit Main article Lebanese people Ethnic background is an important factor in Lebanon The country encompasses a great mix of Indigenous and non indigenous cultural religious and ethnic groups such as Arabs amp Armenians Kurds Turks amongst others Muslims from the Arabian Peninsula invaded and occupied Lebanon in the 7th century AD In the time since then Arabic has become the lingua franca of the area and much of the population of Lebanon especially Muslims have come to identify as Arab Ethnic identity has come to revolve increasingly around aspects of cultural self identification more than descent To an extent religious affiliation has also become a substitute in some respects for ethnic affiliation 8 Generally the cultural and linguistic heritage of the People of Lebanon is a blend of both indigenous elements and the foreign cultures that have come to rule the land and its people over the course of thousands of years Moreover in a 2013 interview the lead investigator Pierre Zalloua pointed out that genetic variation preceded religious variation and divisions Lebanon already had well differentiated communities with their own genetic peculiarities but not significant differences and religions came as layers of paint on top There is no distinct pattern that shows that one community carries significantly more Phoenician than another 9 Religious groups EditMain article Religion in Lebanon See also Freedom of religion in Lebanon Three Lebanese women in 1873 The Lebanese Christians are some of the oldest Christians in the world preceded only by the oriental Orthodox of Armenia Ethiopia the Copts of Egypt and the Saint Thomas Christians of India The Maronite Christians belong to the West Syriac Rite Their Liturgical language is the Syriac Aramaic language 10 11 The Melkite Greek Catholics and the Eastern Orthodox tend to focus more on the Greco Hellenistic heritage of the region from the days of the Byzantine Empire and the fact that Greek was maintained as a liturgical language until very recently Some Lebanese even claim partial descent from Crusader knights who ruled Lebanon for a couple of centuries during the Middle Ages also backed by recent genetic studies which confirmed this among Lebanese people especially in the north of the country that was under the Crusader County of Tripoli This identification with non Arab civilizations also exists in other religious communities albeit not to the same extent The sectarian system Edit Lebanon s religious divisions are extremely complicated and the country is made up by a multitude of religious groupings The ecclesiastical and demographic patterns of the sects and denominations are complex Divisions and rivalries between groups date back as far as 15 centuries and still are a factor today The pattern of settlement has changed little since the 7th century but instances of civil strife and ethnic cleansing most recently during the Lebanese Civil War has brought some important changes to the religious map of the country See also History of Lebanon Lebanon has by far the largest proportion of Christians of any Middle Eastern country but both Christians and Muslims are sub divided into many splinter sects and denominations Population statistics are highly controversial The various denominations and sects each have vested interests in inflating their own numbers Shias Sunnis Maronites and Eastern Orthodox the four largest denominations all often claim that their particular religious affiliation holds a majority in the country adding up to over 150 of the total population even before counting the other denominations One of the rare things that most Lebanese religious leaders will agree on is to avoid a new general census for fear that it could trigger a new round of denominational conflict The last official census was performed in 1932 Religion has traditionally been of overriding importance in defining the Lebanese population Dividing state power between the religious denominations and sects and granting religious authorities judicial power dates back to Ottoman times the millet system The practice was reinforced during French mandate when Christian groups were granted privileges This system of government while partly intended as a compromise between sectarian demands has caused tensions that still dominate Lebanese politics to this day The Christian population majority is believed to have ended in the early 1970s but government leaders would agree to no change in the political power balance This led to Muslim demands for increased representation and the constant sectarian tension slid into violent conflict in 1958 prompting U S intervention and again in the grueling Lebanese Civil War in 1975 90 Natural Growth Rate in Lebanon throughout years The balance of power has been slightly adjusted in the 1943 National Pact an informal agreement struck at independence in which positions of power were divided according to the 1932 census The Sunni elite was then accorded more power but Maronites continued to dominate the system The sectarian balance was again adjusted towards the Muslim side but simultaneously further reinforced and legitimized Shia Muslims by now the second largest sect then gained additional representation in the state apparatus and the obligatory Christian Muslim representation in Parliament was downgraded from a 6 5 to a 1 1 ratio Christians of various denominations were then generally thought to constitute about 40 of the population although often Muslim leaders would cite lower numbers and some Christians would claim that they still held a majority of the population 18 recognized religious groups Edit An estimate of the area distribution of Lebanon s main religious groups Distribution of Lebanon s religious groups according to 2009 municipal election data The present Lebanese Constitution officially acknowledges 18 religious groups see below These have the right to handle family law according to their courts and traditions and they are the basic players in Lebanon s complex sectarian politics Alawite Armenian Catholic Armenian Orthodox Assyrian Church of the East Chaldean Catholic Copts Druze Greek Orthodox Isma ili Jewish Latin Catholic Maronite Catholic Melkite Greek Catholic Protestant Sunni Shia Syriac Catholic Church Syriac Orthodox ChurchReligious population statistics Edit Note stateless Palestinians and Syrians are not included in the statistics below since they do not hold Lebanese citizenship The numbers only include the present population of Lebanon and not the Lebanese diaspora The 1932 census stated that Christians made up 50 of the resident population Maronites the largest among the Christian denomination and then largely in control of the state apparatus accounted for 29 of the total resident population The total population of Lebanon was reported to be 1 411 000 in 1956 12 The largest communities were Maronites 424 000 Sunni Muslims 286 000 Shiite Muslims 250 000 Greek Orthodox 149 000 Greek Catholics 91 000 Druzes 88 000 Armenian Orthodox 64 000 Armenian Catholics 15 000 Protestants 14 000 Jews 7 000 Syriac Catholics 6 000 Syriac Orthodox 5 000 Latins 4 000 and Nestorian Chaldeans 1 000 12 A 2010 study conducted by Statistics Lebanon a Beirut based research firm cited by the United States Department of State found that Lebanon s population of approximately 4 3 million was estimated to be 13 45 Christian Maronite Eastern Orthodox Melkite Catholic Protestant other Christian denominations non native to Lebanon like Armenian Orthodox Armenian Catholic Syriac Orthodox Syriac Catholic Roman Catholic Chaldean Assyrian and Copt 48 Islam Shia and Sunni 5 2 Druze included within the Muslim group in the Lebanese Constitution There is also a very small number of other religious minorities such as Bahaʼis Buddhists Hindus and Mormons 13 In 2022 the CIA World Factbook specified that of the citizen population data do not include Lebanon s sizable Syrian and Palestinian refugee populations 67 8 are Muslims 31 9 Sunni 31 2 Shia with smaller percentages of Alawites and Ismailis 32 4 are Christians mostly Maronites Eastern Orthodox Melkite Catholics Protestant Armenian Apostolic Assyrian Church of the East Syriac Orthodox Chaldean Catholic Syrian Catholic 4 5 are Druze and there are very small numbers of Jews Baha is Buddhists and Hindus 14 Census of 1932 Edit Residents Emigrants before 30 08 1924 Emigrants after 30 08 1924paying taxes does not pay paying taxes does not paySunni 178 100 2 653 9 840 1 089 3 623Shi i 155 035 2 977 4 543 1 770 2 220Druze 53 334 2 067 3 205 1 183 2 295Maronite 227 800 31 697 58 457 11 434 21 809Greek Catholic 46 709 7 190 16 544 1 855 4 038Greek Orthodox 77 312 12 547 31 521 3 922 9 041Protestant 6 869 607 1 575 174 575Armenian Orthodox 26 102 1 60 191 1 718Armenian Catholic 5 890 9 50 20 375Syriac Orthodox 2 723 6 34 3 54Syriac Catholic 2 803 9 196 6 101Jews 3 588 6 214 7 188Chaldean Orthodox 190 0 0 0 0Chaldean Catholic 548 0 6 0 19Miscellaneous 6 393 212 758 59 234Total 793 396 59 981 127 003 21 713 46 290Foreigners 61 297source 15 Muslims Edit A map of religious and ethnic communities of Syria and Lebanon 1935 According to the CIA World Factbook 14 in 2021 the Muslim population was estimated at 60 within Lebanese territory and 20 of the over 4 million 4 5 6 Lebanese diaspora population In 2012 a more detailed breakdown of the size of each Muslim sect in Lebanon was made The Shia Muslims are around 22 5 16 29 17 18 of the total population The Speaker of Parliament is always a Shia Muslim as it is the only high post that Shias are eligible for 19 20 21 22 The Shias are largely concentrated in northern and western Beqaa Southern Lebanon and in the southern suburbs of Beirut 23 The Sunni Muslims constitute also about 25 5 23 29 16 of the total population Sunni notables traditionally held power in the Lebanese state together and they are still the only sect eligible for the post of Prime Minister 24 Sunnis are mostly concentrated in the west Beirut Tripoli Sidon Central and Western Beqaa and Akkar in the north 23 Other Muslim sects have a small presence with the Isma ilis and Alawites combined comprising less than 1 of the population and are included among Lebanese Shia Muslims Christians Edit Religion map of Lebanon by municipality according to municipal elections data Former Lebanese president Michel Suleiman According to the CIA World Factbook 14 in 2021 the Christian population in Lebanon was estimated at 35 In 2012 a more detailed breakdown of the size of each Christian sect in Lebanon was made The Maronites are the largest of the Christian groups about 30 16 of the population of Lebanon They have had a long and continuous association with the Roman Catholic Church but have their own patriarch liturgy and customs Traditionally they had good relations with the Western world especially France 25 and the Vatican 26 They traditionally dominated the Lebanese government Their influence in later years has diminished because of their relative decrease in numbers but also due to the Syrian occupation of Lebanon which generally benefited Shia communities and was resisted by most of the others Today the Maronites are believed to compose about 26 of the population scattered around the Lebanese countryside but with heavy concentrations on Mount Lebanon and in Beirut Greater Beirut The second largest Christian group is the Eastern Orthodox that constitute at least 9 16 of the population The church exists in many parts of the Arab world and Eastern Orthodox Christians have often been noted for pan Arab or pan Syrian leanings it has had fewer dealings with Western countries than the Maronites The Eastern Orthodox Lebanese Christians have a long and continuous association with Eastern Orthodox European countries like Greece Cyprus Russia Ukraine Bulgaria Serbia and Romania The Deputy Speaker of Parliament and the deputy Prime Minister are reserved for Eastern Orthodox Christians The Melkite Catholics are thought to constitute about 6 16 of the population The Protestants are thought to constitute about 1 16 of the population The remaining Christian churches are thought to constitute another 5 16 of the population Roman Catholics Armenian Apostolic Armenian Catholic Syriac Orthodox Syriac Catholic and Assyrians Druze Edit The Druze constitute 5 14 of the population and can be found primarily in the rural mountainous areas of Mount Lebanon and the Chouf District Traditionally the Druze tended to prefer Syria over the West but after the civil war and the emergence of Hezbollah the Druze hold a powerful negativity towards Syria Iran and Hezbollah and now the Druze strongly prefer to ally with the West Even though the faith originally developed out of Ismaili Islam most Druze do not identify as Muslims 27 28 29 30 31 and they do not accept the five pillars of Islam 32 Other religions Edit Other religions account for only an estimated 0 3 of the population mainly foreign temporary workers according to the CIA World Factbook There remains a very small Jewish population traditionally centered in Beirut It has been larger most Jews left the country after the Lebanese Civil War 1975 1990 as thousands of Lebanese did at that time Diaspora EditProminent Lebanese Figuresوجوه من لبنان Prominent Lebanese people and people of Lebanese descent Main article Lebanese diaspora Apart from the four and a half million citizens of Lebanon proper there is a sizeable Lebanese diaspora There are more Lebanese people living outside of Lebanon over 4 million 4 5 33 than within 4 6 million citizens plus 1 5 million refugees The majority of the diaspora population consists of Lebanese Christians however there are some who are Muslim They trace their origin to several waves of Christian emigration starting with the exodus that followed the 1860 Lebanon conflict in Ottoman Syria Under the current Lebanese nationality law diaspora Lebanese do not have an automatic right of return to Lebanon Due to varying degrees of assimilation and high degree of interethnic marriages most diaspora Lebanese have not passed on the Arabic language to their children while still maintaining a Lebanese ethnic identity Many Lebanese families are economically and politically prominent in several Latin American countries in 2007 Mexican Carlos Slim Helu son of Lebanese immigrants was determined to be the wealthiest man in the World by Fortune Magazine and make up a substantial portion of the Lebanese American community in the United States The largest Lebanese diaspora is located in Brazil where about 6 7 million people have Lebanese descent see Lebanese Brazilian In Argentina there is also a large Lebanese diaspora of approximately 1 5 million people having Lebanese descent see Lebanese Argentine In Canada there is also a large Lebanese diaspora of approximately 250 000 500 000 people having Lebanese descent see Lebanese Canadians There are also sizable populations in West Africa particularly Ivory Coast Sierra Leone and Senegal The large size of Lebanon s diaspora may be partly explained by the historical and cultural tradition of seafaring and traveling which stretches back to Lebanon s ancient Phoenician origins and its role as a gateway of relations between Europe and the Middle East It has been commonplace for Lebanese citizens to emigrate in search of economic prosperity Furthermore on several occasions in the last two centuries the Lebanese population has endured periods of ethnic cleansing and displacement for example 1840 60 and 1975 90 These factors have contributed to the geographical mobility of the Lebanese people While under Syrian occupation Beirut passed legislation which prevented second generation Lebanese of the diaspora from automatically obtaining Lebanese citizenship This has reinforced the emigre status of many diaspora Lebanese There is currently a campaign by those Lebanese of the diaspora who already have Lebanese citizenship to attain the vote from abroad which has been successfully passed in the Lebanese parliament and will be effective as of 2013 which is the next parliamentary elections If suffrage was to be extended to these 1 2 citation needed million Lebanese emigre citizens it would have a significant political effect since as many as 80 of them are believed to be Christian citation needed Lebanese Civil War refugees and displaced persons Edit See also Lebanese Civil War With no official figures available it is estimated that 600 000 900 000 persons fled the country during the Lebanese Civil War 1975 90 Although some have since returned this permanently disturbed Lebanese population growth and greatly complicated demographic statistics Another result of the war was a large number of internally displaced persons This especially affected the southern Shia community as Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon in 1978 1982 and 1996 prompted waves of mass emigration in addition to the continual strain of occupation and fighting between Israel and Hezbollah mainly 1982 to 2000 Many Shias from Southern Lebanon resettled in the suburbs south of Beirut After the war the pace of Christian emigration accelerated as many Christians felt discriminated against in a Lebanon under increasingly oppressive Syrian occupation According to a UNDP study as much as 10 of the Lebanese had a disability in 1990 34 Other studies have pointed to the fact that this portion of society is highly marginalized due to the lack of educational and governmental support of their advancement 34 Languages EditSee also Lebanese Arabic Modern Standard Arabic and French language in Lebanon Arabic is the official language of the country Lebanese Arabic is mostly spoken in non official contexts French and English are taught in many schools from a young age Among the Armenian ethnic minority in Lebanon the Armenian language is taught and spoken within the Armenian community CIA World Factbook demographic statistics Edit US Census Statistics Population fertility rate and net reproduction rate United Nations estimates The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook unless otherwise indicated Population Total population 6 100 075 July 2018 est Lebanese nationals 4 680 212 July 2018 est Syrian refugees 944 613 April 2019 est registered at the UNHCR down from 1 077 000 in June 2014 Palestinian refugees 175 555 2018 est Iraqi refugees 5 695 2017 est Age structure 0 14 years 23 32 male 728 025 female 694 453 15 24 years 16 04 male 500 592 female 477 784 25 54 years 45 27 male 1 398 087 female 1 363 386 55 64 years 8 34 male 241 206 female 267 747 65 years and over 7 03 male 185 780 female 243 015 2018 est Median age Total 31 3 years Male 30 7 years Female 31 9 years 2018 est Population growth rate 1 04 2005 est 0 96 2011 est 3 13 2018 est Net migration rate 4 43 migrant s 1 000 population 2011 est 40 3 migrant s 1 000 population 2018 est Sex ratio at birth 1 05 male s female under 15 years 1 04 male s female 15 64 years 0 92 male s female 65 years and over 0 83 male s female total population 0 94 male s female 2005 est Life expectancy at birth total population 77 9 years male 76 6 years female 79 3 years 2018 est Vital statistics EditUN estimates Edit The website Our World in Data prepared the following estimates based on statistics from the Population Department of the United Nations 35 Mid year population thousands Live births thousands Deaths thousands Natural change thousands Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 Total fertility rate TFR Infant mortality per 1000 live births Life expectancy in years 1950 1 350 55 17 38 40 8 12 6 28 2 5 81 75 0 61 041951 1 388 57 17 39 40 8 12 6 28 2 5 80 73 8 61 371952 1 428 58 18 41 40 7 12 3 28 4 5 80 71 4 61 731953 1 469 60 18 42 40 6 12 0 28 6 5 80 69 1 62 231954 1 512 61 18 44 40 5 11 7 28 8 5 81 67 1 62 651955 1 556 63 18 45 40 3 11 7 28 6 5 81 67 4 62 421956 1 602 64 18 46 40 1 11 0 29 0 5 81 63 2 63 381957 1 649 66 18 48 39 8 10 7 29 2 5 81 61 4 63 901958 1 697 67 19 48 39 5 11 3 28 2 5 81 59 8 62 081959 1 747 69 18 51 39 2 10 1 29 2 5 82 58 2 64 611960 1 798 70 18 52 38 8 9 8 29 0 5 82 56 7 64 841961 1 853 71 18 53 38 3 9 5 28 8 5 81 55 4 65 291962 1 912 72 18 55 37 9 9 3 28 5 5 80 54 3 65 401963 1 972 74 18 56 37 4 9 1 28 3 5 78 53 0 65 671964 2 030 74 18 57 36 7 8 8 27 8 5 72 51 9 65 951965 2 087 75 18 57 35 9 8 6 27 3 5 65 50 9 66 071966 2 146 76 18 57 35 2 8 5 26 8 5 57 50 0 66 161967 2 203 76 18 58 34 7 8 2 26 4 5 49 49 2 66 521968 2 262 77 18 59 34 1 8 1 26 0 5 38 48 6 66 611969 2 324 78 19 60 33 7 8 0 25 7 5 28 48 0 66 701970 2 382 79 19 61 33 3 7 9 25 5 5 17 47 5 66 761971 2 442 80 19 61 33 0 7 8 25 2 5 04 47 0 66 821972 2 506 82 19 63 32 8 7 7 25 1 4 93 46 5 66 911973 2 570 83 19 64 32 4 7 5 25 0 4 81 45 9 67 231974 2 633 85 20 65 32 2 7 4 24 8 4 69 45 3 67 291975 2 692 86 30 56 31 9 11 1 20 8 4 56 45 2 58 131976 3 070 87 85 2 31 8 31 2 0 6 4 42 102 9 33 741977 3 458 110 37 73 31 7 10 7 21 0 4 31 52 8 59 281978 3 183 111 37 74 31 5 10 6 20 9 4 20 51 7 59 381979 2 902 91 31 61 31 4 10 5 20 9 4 09 50 6 59 471980 2 964 93 31 62 31 4 10 4 21 0 4 03 49 4 59 671981 3 027 95 31 64 31 5 10 2 21 3 3 98 48 2 59 921982 3 070 96 60 36 31 2 19 4 11 8 3 89 70 1 45 131983 3 107 96 31 65 30 8 9 9 20 9 3 79 39 9 59 961984 3 164 96 31 65 30 4 9 8 20 7 3 70 38 6 60 301985 3 227 96 31 65 29 8 9 7 20 1 3 59 37 4 60 491986 3 308 96 31 65 29 3 9 4 19 8 3 50 35 8 60 971987 3 391 98 31 66 28 8 9 3 19 6 3 43 40 1 61 431988 3 457 99 32 68 28 7 9 1 19 5 3 40 38 7 61 721989 3 526 101 28 73 28 6 8 0 20 7 3 39 27 8 64 161990 3 594 100 28 72 27 8 7 8 20 0 3 30 26 7 64 481991 3 667 99 19 80 26 9 5 2 21 7 3 19 25 7 71 181992 3 745 97 20 78 25 9 5 2 20 7 3 08 24 8 71 191993 3 819 95 20 75 24 9 5 2 19 7 2 97 23 7 71 381994 3 888 93 20 73 23 9 5 1 18 9 2 87 22 5 71 681995 3 960 92 20 72 23 1 5 0 18 2 2 78 21 5 72 041996 4 034 91 20 72 22 7 4 9 17 7 2 74 20 6 72 291997 4 108 90 20 71 22 0 4 8 17 2 2 66 19 6 72 781998 4 179 90 20 70 21 4 4 8 16 6 2 60 18 7 72 941999 4 250 89 20 69 21 0 4 6 16 3 2 55 17 9 73 492000 4 321 89 20 69 20 5 4 6 15 9 2 50 17 0 73 932001 4 389 89 20 69 20 2 4 5 15 7 2 46 15 9 74 372002 4 447 88 19 69 19 7 4 3 15 4 2 41 14 9 75 062003 4 505 86 19 67 19 2 4 2 15 0 2 35 13 9 75 592004 4 575 85 19 66 18 6 4 2 14 4 2 27 13 0 75 982005 4 643 84 19 64 18 0 4 2 13 9 2 20 12 0 76 272006 4 720 83 20 63 17 7 4 3 13 4 2 16 11 2 76 082007 4 810 83 20 64 17 3 4 1 13 2 2 11 10 4 77 082008 4 888 84 20 64 17 1 4 0 13 1 2 08 9 7 77 582009 4 951 85 20 65 17 2 4 0 13 2 2 09 9 2 77 892010 4 996 88 20 68 17 6 4 1 13 5 2 13 8 7 78 162011 5 045 90 21 69 17 9 4 1 13 8 2 16 8 4 78 402012 5 178 92 21 70 17 9 4 1 13 8 2 17 8 0 78 632013 5 679 95 22 73 17 9 4 2 13 7 2 17 7 8 78 772014 6 274 110 26 84 17 9 4 2 13 7 2 18 7 5 78 972015 6 399 116 28 88 17 8 4 2 13 5 2 18 7 2 79 232016 6 259 111 28 83 17 4 4 3 13 1 2 18 6 8 79 512017 6 109 105 28 77 16 9 4 5 12 4 2 17 6 6 79 652018 5 951 99 29 70 16 3 4 7 11 6 2 15 6 4 79 732019 5 782 93 31 63 15 8 5 2 10 6 2 13 6 2 79 242020 5 663 88 36 52 15 3 6 3 9 1 2 10 6 0 77 802021 5 593 84 47 38 14 9 8 3 6 7 2 09 5 8 75 05Registered births and deaths Edit 36 37 Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 Total fertility rate TFR 1990 70 903 13 263 57 6401991 82 742 15 773 66 9691992 94 607 18 042 76 5651993 90 947 24 223 66 7241994 90 712 18 421 72 2911995 91 196 19 230 71 9661996 86 997 19 962 67 0351997 85 018 19 884 65 1341998 84 250 20 097 64 1531999 85 955 19 813 66 1422000 87 795 19 435 68 3602001 83 693 17 568 66 1252002 76 405 17 294 59 1112003 71 702 17 187 54 5152004 73 900 17 774 56 126 1 752005 73 973 18 012 55 9612006 72 790 18 787 54 0032007 3 759 137 80 896 21 092 59 804 21 5 5 6 15 92008 84 823 21 048 63 775 22 3 5 5 16 82009 90 388 22 260 68 128 23 4 5 8 17 62010 91 795 21 441 70 354 23 2 5 4 17 82011 97 887 23 257 74 630 25 4 6 0 19 6 1 602012 90 167 22 792 67 375 23 3 5 8 17 52013 86 950 23 414 63 536 23 2 6 1 17 12014 88 704 25 117 63 587 23 0 6 5 16 52015 85 453 25 275 60 178 22 3 6 6 15 72016 88 996 24 617 64 379 23 1 6 4 16 72017 90 647 25 847 64 800 23 5 6 7 16 9 1 82018 3 864 000 89 772 25 096 64 676 23 2 6 5 16 72019 3 910 000 86 179 24 950 61 229 22 0 6 4 15 62020 3 944 000 74 594 26 832 47 762 18 9 6 8 12 12021 68 130 36 950Immigrants and ethnic groups EditThere are substantial numbers of immigrants from other Arab countries mainly Palestine Syria Iraq and non Arab speaking Muslim countries Also recent years have seen an influx of people from Ethiopia 38 and South East Asian countries such as Indonesia the Philippines Malaysia Sri Lanka 39 as well as smaller numbers of other immigrant minorities Colombians and Brazilians of Lebanese descent themselves Most of these are employed as guest workers in the same fashion as Syrians and Palestinians and entered the country to search for employment in the post war reconstruction of Lebanon Apart from the Palestinians there are approximately 180 000 stateless persons in Lebanon Summary including non Lebanese Lebanese 68 86 Syrian 18 7 Palestinian 6 96 Armenian 2 2 Other 4 6 Armenians Jews and Iranians Edit Main articles Armenians in Lebanon History of the Jews in Lebanon and Iranians in Lebanon Armenian Church in north Beirut Lebanese Armenians Jews and Iranians form more distinct ethnic minorities all of them in possession of a separate languages Armenian Hebrew Persian and a national home area Armenia Israel Iran outside of Lebanon However they combined total 5 of the population French and Italians Edit Main articles French people in Lebanon and Italians in Lebanon See also France Lebanon relations During the French Mandate of Lebanon there was a fairly large French minority and a tiny Italian minority Most of the French and Italian settlers left after Lebanese independence in 1943 and only 22 000 French Lebanese and 4 300 Italian Lebanese continue to live in Lebanon The most important legacy of the French Mandate is the frequent use and knowledge of the French language by most of the educated Lebanese people and Beirut is still known as the Paris of the Middle East Palestinians Edit Main article Palestinians in Lebanon Around 175 555 Palestinian refugees were registered in Lebanon with the UNRWA in 2014 who are refugees or descendants of refugees from the 1948 Arab Israeli War Some 53 live in 12 Palestine refugee camps who suffer from serious problems such as poverty and overcrowding 40 Some of these may have emigrated during the civil war but there are no reliable figures available There are also a number of Palestinians who are not registered as UNRWA refugees because they left earlier than 1948 or were not in need of material assistance The exact number of Palestinians remain a subject of great dispute and the Lebanese government will not provide an estimate A figure of 400 000 Palestinian refugees would mean that Palestinians constitute less than 7 of the resident population of Lebanon Palestinians living in Lebanon are considered foreigners and are under the same restrictions on employment applied to other foreigners Prior to 2010 they were under even more restrictive employment rules which permitted other than work for the U N only the most menial employment They are not allowed to attend public schools own property or make an enforceable will 41 Palestinian refugees who constitute nearly 6 6 of the country s population have long been denied basic rights in Lebanon They are not allowed to attend public schools own property or pass on inheritances measures Lebanon says it has adopted to preserve their right to return to their property in what constitutes Israel now Their presence is controversial and resisted by large segments of the Christian population who argue that the primarily Sunni Muslim Palestinians dilute Christian numbers Many Shia Muslims also look unfavorably upon the Palestinian presence since the refugee camps have tended to be concentrated in their home areas The Lebanese Sunnis however would be happy to see these Palestinians given the Lebanese nationality thus increasing the Lebanese Sunni population by well over 10 and tipping the fragile electoral balance much in favor of the Sunnis Late prime minister Rafiq Hariri himself a Sunni had hinted on more than one occasion on the inevitability of granting these refugees Lebanese citizenship Thus far the refugees lack Lebanese citizenship as well as many rights enjoyed by the rest of the population and are confined to severely overcrowded refugee camps in which construction rights are severely constricted Palestinians may not work in a large number of professions such as lawyers and doctors However after negotiations between Lebanese authorities and ministers from the Palestinian National Authority some professions for Palestinians were allowed such as taxi driver and construction worker The material situation of the Palestinian refugees in Lebanon is difficult and they are believed to constitute the poorest community in Lebanon as well as the poorest Palestinian community with the possible exception of Gaza Strip refugees Their primary sources of income are UNRWA aid and menial labor sought in competition with Syrian guest workers The Palestinians are almost totally Sunni Muslim though at some point Christians counted as high as 40 with Muslims at 60 The numbers of Palestinian Christians has diminished in later years as many have managed to leave Lebanon During the Lebanese Civil War Palestinian Christians sided with the rest of the Palestinian community instead of allying with Lebanese Eastern Orthodox or other Christian communities 60 000 Palestinians have received Lebanese citizenship including most Christian Palestinians 42 43 Syrians Edit Main article Syrians in Lebanon See also Lebanon Syria relations In 1976 the then Syrian president Hafez al Assad sent troops into Lebanon to fight PLO forces on behalf of Christian militias This led to escalated fighting until a cease fire agreement later that year that allowed for the stationing of Syrian troops within Lebanon The Syrian presence in Lebanon quickly changed sides soon after they entered Lebanon they had flip flopped and began to fight the Christian nationalists in Lebanon they allegedly entered the country to protect The Kateab Party and the Lebanese Forces under Bachir Gemayel strongly resisted the Syrians in Lebanon In 1989 40 000 Syrian troops remained in central and eastern Lebanon under the supervision of the Syrian government Although the Taif Accord established in the same year called for the removal of Syrian troops and transfer of arms to the Lebanese army the Syrian Army remained in Lebanon until the Lebanese Cedar Revolution in 2005 ended the Syrian occupation of Lebanon In 1994 the Lebanese government under the pressure of the Syrian government gave Lebanese passports to thousands of Syrians 44 There are nearly 1 08 million registered 45 Syrian refugees in Lebanon 46 but is estimated that Lebanon hosts 1 5 million 47 Assyrians Edit Main article Assyrians in Lebanon There are an estimated 40 000 to 80 000 Iraqi Assyrian refugees in Lebanon The vast majority of them are undocumented with a large number having been deported or put in prison 48 They belong to various denominations including the Assyrian Church of the East Chaldean Catholic Church and Syriac Catholic Church Iraqis Edit Main article Iraqis in Lebanon Due to the US led invasion of Iraq Lebanon received a mass influx of Iraqi refugees numbering at around 100 000 The vast majority of them are undocumented with a large number having been deported or put in prison 48 Kurds Edit Main article Kurds in Lebanon There are an estimated 60 000 to 100 000 Kurdish refugees from Turkey and Syria within Lebanese territory Many of them are undocumented As of 2012 around 40 of all Kurds in Lebanon do not have Lebanese citizenship 49 Turks Edit Main article Turks in Lebanon The Turkish people began to migrate to Lebanon once the Ottoman sultan Selim I conquered the region in 1516 Turks were encouraged to stay in Lebanon by being rewarded with land and money 50 Today the Turkish minority numbers approximately 80 000 51 Moreover since the Syrian Civil War approximately 125 000 to 150 000 Syrian Turkmen refugees arrived in Lebanon and hence they now outnumber the long established Turkish minority who settled since the Ottoman era 52 53 Circassians Edit The Circassians migrated to the Ottoman Empire including Lebanon and neighboring countries in the 18th and 19th century However they are mostly located in Akkar Governorate in which they have come to Berkail since 1754 Today the Circassian minority numbers approximately 100 000 54 55 See also EditDemographics of the Middle East Migrant domestic workers in LebanonNotes EditReferences Edit CIA World Factbook Lebanon 23 November 2021 International Religious Freedom Report Lebanon 2001 Report on International Religious Freedom US Department of State 26 October 2001 Retrieved 8 January 2009 Gregoire Haddad et la demographie libanaise L Orient Le Jour 31 December 2015 Retrieved 2016 04 12 a b c International Migration and the Lebanese Diaspora IFPO Publications de l Institut francais du Proche Orient Co editions Presses de l Ifpo 3 October 2019 pp 42 43 ISBN 9782351595497 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link a b c Methods of Finding Population Statistics of Lebanese Migration Throughout the World Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies News at North Carolina State University 2015 Archived from the original on 2016 10 24 a b Annuario Pontificio The Eastern Catholic Churches 2017 PDF Annuario Pontificio Archived PDF from the original on 2018 10 24 Lebanese Living in UAE Fear Deportation Archived 2014 10 16 at the Wayback Machine Al Monitor accessed December 2 2013 Sectarian and Clan Consciousness Lebanon U S Library of Congress Country Studies Retrieved 2009 01 08 Maroon Habib 31 March 2013 A geneticist with a unifying message Nature doi 10 1038 nmiddleeast 2013 46 Identity of the Maronite Church Introduction Bkerkelb org Archived from the original on 2011 10 07 Identity of the Maronite Church A Syriac Antiochene Church with a Special Lit Heritage Bkerkelb org Archived from the original on 2011 10 07 a b Jacob M Landau March 1961 Elections in Lebanon PDF The Western Political Quarterly 14 1 121 JSTOR 443935 a b 2012 Report on International Religious Freedom Lebanon United States Department of State 20 May 2013 Retrieved 9 January 2013 a b c d CIA World Factbook 2021 Lebanon www cia gov Centra Intelligence Agency Retrieved 25 May 2021 Rania Maktabi The Lebanese Census of 1932 Revisited Who Are the Lebanese British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Vol 26 No 2 Nov 1999 pp 219 241 also at 1 at 2 at 3 and at 4 a b c d e f g Statistics Lebanon Beirut based research firm International Religious Freedom Report 2008 Lebanon 2008 Report on International Religious Freedom US Department of State September 19 2008 Retrieved 2009 01 08 Countries with more than 100 000 Shia Muslims PDF Pew Research Center October 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 9 May 2010 Retrieved 21 September 2010 Lebanon Religious Sects GlobalSecurity org Retrieved 11 August 2010 Hanin Ghaddar 25 April 2010 March for secularism religious laws are archaic NOW Lebanon Retrieved 11 August 2010 Fadlallah Charges Every Sect in Lebanon Except his Own Wants to Dominate the Country Naharnet Retrieved 11 August 2010 George J Hajjar Aspects of Christian Muslim Relations in Contemporary Lebanon hartsem edu Hartford CT USA Hartford Seminary Archived from the original on 2012 08 27 Retrieved 4 August 2012 a b c Minority Rights Group International Lebanon Lebanon Overview Minorityrights org Lebanon state gov Washington DC USA United States Department of State Retrieved 4 August 2012 French Mandate Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 6 December 2015 Fr Samir Benedict XVI s courage carries the Churches of the Middle East and the Arab Spring Pintak Lawrence 2019 America amp Islam Soundbites Suicide Bombs and the Road to Donald Trump Bloomsbury Publishing p 86 ISBN 9781788315593 Jonas Margaret 2011 The Templar Spirit The Esoteric Inspiration Rituals and Beliefs of the Knights Templar Temple Lodge Publishing p 83 ISBN 9781906999254 Druze often they are not regarded as being Muslim at all nor do all the Druze consider themselves as Muslim Are the Druze People Arabs or Muslims Deciphering Who They Are Arab America Arab America 8 August 2018 Retrieved 13 April 2020 J Stewart Dona 2008 The Middle East Today Political Geographical and Cultural Perspectives Routledge p 33 ISBN 9781135980795 Most Druze do not consider themselves Muslim Historically they faced much persecution and keep their religious beliefs secrets Yazbeck Haddad Yvonne 2014 The Oxford Handbook of American Islam Oxford University Press p 142 ISBN 9780199862634 While they appear parallel to those of normative Islam in the Druze religion they are different in meaning and interpretation The religion is consider distinct from the Ismaili as well as from other Muslims belief and practice Most Druze consider themselves fully assimilated in American society and do not necessarily identify as Muslims De McLaurin Ronald 1979 The Political Role of Minority Groups in the Middle East Michigan University Press p 114 ISBN 9780030525964 Theologically one would have to conclude that the Druze are not Muslims They do not accept the five pillars of Islam In place of these principles the Druze have instituted the seven precepts noted above Annuario Pontificio The Eastern Catholic Churches 2017 PDF Annuario Pontificio Archived PDF from the original on 2018 10 24 a b LEBANON Disabled remain marginalized study finds IRIN Accessed August 6 2009 Population amp Demography Data Explorer Our World in Data Retrieved 2022 07 22 Vital Data Observatory Statistics www moph gov lb The Lebanese Demographic Reality PDF Lebanese Information Center Lebanon Retrieved 18 June 2021 IOM Steps Up Evacuation of Stranded Migrants from Lebanon International Organization for Migration July 26 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 11 01 Retrieved 2009 01 08 CBC News In Depth Middle East in Crisis Canada and Lebanon a special tie CBC News 1 August 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 07 21 Retrieved 8 January 2009 Where We Work Lebanon UNRWA 1 July 2014 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Nada Bakri 17 August 2010 Lebanon Gives Palestinians New Work Rights The New York Times Retrieved 17 August 2010 Julie Peteet 1996 From Refugees to Minority Palestinians in Post War Lebanon prrn mcgill ca Retrieved 6 December 2015 Lebanon Information on the treatment of Palestinian Christians by the government Unhcr org 1 August 1996 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Citizenship requirements and procedures for an individual who was born in Lebanon to parents with Syrian citizenship has a permanent residency permit and whose spouse was granted Lebanese citizenship by Decree 2012 November 2013 Refworld United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR Lebanon unhcr org United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR 31 October 2015 Syria Regional Refugee Response Lebanon UNHCR Syria Regional Refugee Response Archived from the original on 26 June 2013 Retrieved 6 December 2015 The Plight of Syrian Refugees PRIO Blogs blogs prio org Retrieved 2022 01 11 a b Murphy Maureen Clare 2007 04 09 Invisible lives Iraqis in Lebanon The Electronic Intifada Retrieved 2021 10 30 Brooke Anderson 9 February 2012 Kurds in Lebanon endure poverty grapple with assimilation Ekurd Daily Retrieved 13 November 2014 Orhan Oytun 2010 The Forgotten Turks Turkmens of Lebanon PDF ORSAM p 7 archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 Al Akhbar Lebanese Turks Seek Political and Social Recognition Archived from the original on 2018 06 20 Retrieved 2012 03 02 Ahmed Yusra 2015 Syrian Turkmen refugees face double suffering in Lebanon Zaman Al Wasl retrieved 11 October 2016 Syrian Observer 2015 Syria s Turkmen Refugees Face Cruel Reality in Lebanon Retrieved 10 October 2016 الشركس في لبنان تمس ك بالأصول رغم صعوبة اللغة والتواصل nidaalwatan com in Arabic 3 August 2019 Circassians from Lebanon visited Abkhazia for the first time apsnypress info 10 May 2017 Archived from the original on 8 December 2019 Retrieved 8 December 2019 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Demographics of Lebanon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of Lebanon amp oldid 1134690566, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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