Total population | |
---|---|
United Kingdom approx. 249,911–500,000
[1] England: 320,215 – 0.6% (2021) [2] Scotland: 9,366 – 0.2% (2011) Wales: 11,641 – 0.4% (2021) [2] Northern Ireland: 1,817 – 0.1% (2021) [3] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
London, Birmingham, Manchester, Sheffield, Liverpool | |
Languages | |
Arabic, British English | |
Religion | |
Islam (
Sunni,
Shia) Christianity ( Orthodox, Catholic, Melkite, Protestant) | |
Related ethnic groups | |
other Arabs |
British Arabs ( Arabic: عرب بريطانيا) are British citizens of Arab descent. They share a common Arab ethnicity, culture, language and identity from different Arab countries. Arabs also come from non-Arab countries as ethnic minorities (e.g. Khuzestani Arabs).
The majority of British Arabs reside in the British capital of London, and have come largely from the Arab countries of Iraq, Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, Palestine, Yemen, Lebanon, and the Gulf States. [4]
"British Arabs" is used as an ethnic designation by the National Association of British Arabs. [5] It is also employed by academics, [6] and in the media. [7] Unlike Black British or Asian British, the term "British Arab" was not one of those employed in government ethnicity categorisations used in the 2001 UK Census and for national statistics. [8] As a result, community members are believed to have been under-counted in previous population estimates according to the National Association of British Arabs (NABA).
This absence of a separate "Arab" category in the UK census obliged many to select other ethnicity categories. [9] In the late 2000s, the British government announced that an "Arab" ethnicity category would be added to the 2011 UK Census for the first time. [10] The decision came following lobbying by the National Association of British Arabs and other Arab organizations, who argued for the inclusion of a separate "Arab" entry to accommodate under-reported groups from the Arab world. [11]
According to the 2021 United Kingdom census, Arabs in England & Wales enumerated 331,844. [12] Most British Arabs live in the Greater London area, and many are either businesspeople, recent immigrants or students. [9] There are also sizable and long-established Yemeni Arab communities living in both Cardiff and the South Shields area near Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
A diverse community, British Arabs are represented in the business and media fields, among other areas. Miladi's 2006 survey of 146 community members during the summer of 2001 reported Al-Jazeera as being the respondents' preferred news outlet. Reasons supplied for the selection included the quality of the station's programs and transmission, its discussion of current issues in the Arab world, and the possibility of giving voice to the community's concerns and positions on various matters. [13]
Additionally, 2010 was a breakthrough year in terms of political participation. Several British Arabs ran for and/or were appointed to office as community representatives. [14] [15]
Including both write-in and tick-box responses, 230,556 Arabs were recorded in the 2011 Census in England, 9,989 in Wales, [16] and 9,366 in Scotland. [17] In NABA's own report on the 2011 Census, it adds up answers from the write-in responses that it classifies as Arab, namely "Arab", "African Arab", "White and Arab", "Moroccan", "Algerian", “Egyptian”, "North African", "Other Middle East", or "White and North African", arguing that this gives a total of 366,769 Arabs in England and Wales but noting that there may be double-counting of individuals in this total, since it is uncertain how many of these individual write-in responses are also included in the general "Arab" category. [18]
Religion | England and Wales | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 [19] | 2021 [20] | |||
Number | % | Number | % | |
Islam | 178,195 | 77.27% | 277,737 | 83.70% |
No religion | 11,939 | 5.18% | 15,963 | 4.81% |
Christianity | 21,988 | 9.54% | 13,671 | 4.12% |
Judaism | 571 | 0.25% | 425 | 0.13% |
Buddhism | 402 | 0.17% | 129 | 0.04% |
Hinduism | 1,060 | 0.46% | 103 | 0.03% |
Sikhism | 509 | 0.22% | 82 | 0.02% |
Other religions | 859 | 0.37% | 1,419 | 0.43% |
Not Stated | 15,077 | 6.54% | 22,314 | 6.72% |
Total | 230,600 | 100% | 331,843 | 100% |
Great Britain and the Arab world have engaged in commercial activities with one another since the medieval times. [4] Yemenis began to migrate to Britain since the 1860s via Aden, the main refuelling stop in the area, and settled around the docks in the port cities of Cardiff, Liverpool, South Shields, Hull, and London.
At the end of the 19th century, Yemenis working as stokers on steamships began moving ashore and set up boarding schools in the dock area. There are now an estimated 70,000 to 80,000 Yemenis in Britain. [21] [4]
Iraqis began settling in London in the 1930s, and the UK has had a significant Iraqi population since the 1940s. [22] Liberal and radical dissidents in the Kingdom of Iraq sought refuge to the UK at the time. Supporters of the monarchy later sought refuge in the UK after it was overthrown in 1958. [22]
Arab migration to the United Kingdom significantly began in the 1940s and 1960s when Egyptians and Moroccans came in search of employment, and this generally increased as the Arab world wrestled for independence from European colonialism. [4]
The Palestinian exoduses of 1948 and 1967 saw an influx and through the 70s and 80s. More Arabs arrived from the Gulf in the 1970s during the oil-boom era to set up businesses. Arab refugees also arrived as a result of conflicts in parts of the Arab world, such as the Lebanese civil war from 1975 to 1990 or the instability which followed the invasion of Iraq in 2003. [4] The United Kingdom settled approximately 20,000 Syrian refugees amid the Syrian civil war. [23]
Total population | |
---|---|
United Kingdom approx. 249,911–500,000
[1] England: 320,215 – 0.6% (2021) [2] Scotland: 9,366 – 0.2% (2011) Wales: 11,641 – 0.4% (2021) [2] Northern Ireland: 1,817 – 0.1% (2021) [3] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
London, Birmingham, Manchester, Sheffield, Liverpool | |
Languages | |
Arabic, British English | |
Religion | |
Islam (
Sunni,
Shia) Christianity ( Orthodox, Catholic, Melkite, Protestant) | |
Related ethnic groups | |
other Arabs |
British Arabs ( Arabic: عرب بريطانيا) are British citizens of Arab descent. They share a common Arab ethnicity, culture, language and identity from different Arab countries. Arabs also come from non-Arab countries as ethnic minorities (e.g. Khuzestani Arabs).
The majority of British Arabs reside in the British capital of London, and have come largely from the Arab countries of Iraq, Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, Palestine, Yemen, Lebanon, and the Gulf States. [4]
"British Arabs" is used as an ethnic designation by the National Association of British Arabs. [5] It is also employed by academics, [6] and in the media. [7] Unlike Black British or Asian British, the term "British Arab" was not one of those employed in government ethnicity categorisations used in the 2001 UK Census and for national statistics. [8] As a result, community members are believed to have been under-counted in previous population estimates according to the National Association of British Arabs (NABA).
This absence of a separate "Arab" category in the UK census obliged many to select other ethnicity categories. [9] In the late 2000s, the British government announced that an "Arab" ethnicity category would be added to the 2011 UK Census for the first time. [10] The decision came following lobbying by the National Association of British Arabs and other Arab organizations, who argued for the inclusion of a separate "Arab" entry to accommodate under-reported groups from the Arab world. [11]
According to the 2021 United Kingdom census, Arabs in England & Wales enumerated 331,844. [12] Most British Arabs live in the Greater London area, and many are either businesspeople, recent immigrants or students. [9] There are also sizable and long-established Yemeni Arab communities living in both Cardiff and the South Shields area near Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
A diverse community, British Arabs are represented in the business and media fields, among other areas. Miladi's 2006 survey of 146 community members during the summer of 2001 reported Al-Jazeera as being the respondents' preferred news outlet. Reasons supplied for the selection included the quality of the station's programs and transmission, its discussion of current issues in the Arab world, and the possibility of giving voice to the community's concerns and positions on various matters. [13]
Additionally, 2010 was a breakthrough year in terms of political participation. Several British Arabs ran for and/or were appointed to office as community representatives. [14] [15]
Including both write-in and tick-box responses, 230,556 Arabs were recorded in the 2011 Census in England, 9,989 in Wales, [16] and 9,366 in Scotland. [17] In NABA's own report on the 2011 Census, it adds up answers from the write-in responses that it classifies as Arab, namely "Arab", "African Arab", "White and Arab", "Moroccan", "Algerian", “Egyptian”, "North African", "Other Middle East", or "White and North African", arguing that this gives a total of 366,769 Arabs in England and Wales but noting that there may be double-counting of individuals in this total, since it is uncertain how many of these individual write-in responses are also included in the general "Arab" category. [18]
Religion | England and Wales | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 [19] | 2021 [20] | |||
Number | % | Number | % | |
Islam | 178,195 | 77.27% | 277,737 | 83.70% |
No religion | 11,939 | 5.18% | 15,963 | 4.81% |
Christianity | 21,988 | 9.54% | 13,671 | 4.12% |
Judaism | 571 | 0.25% | 425 | 0.13% |
Buddhism | 402 | 0.17% | 129 | 0.04% |
Hinduism | 1,060 | 0.46% | 103 | 0.03% |
Sikhism | 509 | 0.22% | 82 | 0.02% |
Other religions | 859 | 0.37% | 1,419 | 0.43% |
Not Stated | 15,077 | 6.54% | 22,314 | 6.72% |
Total | 230,600 | 100% | 331,843 | 100% |
Great Britain and the Arab world have engaged in commercial activities with one another since the medieval times. [4] Yemenis began to migrate to Britain since the 1860s via Aden, the main refuelling stop in the area, and settled around the docks in the port cities of Cardiff, Liverpool, South Shields, Hull, and London.
At the end of the 19th century, Yemenis working as stokers on steamships began moving ashore and set up boarding schools in the dock area. There are now an estimated 70,000 to 80,000 Yemenis in Britain. [21] [4]
Iraqis began settling in London in the 1930s, and the UK has had a significant Iraqi population since the 1940s. [22] Liberal and radical dissidents in the Kingdom of Iraq sought refuge to the UK at the time. Supporters of the monarchy later sought refuge in the UK after it was overthrown in 1958. [22]
Arab migration to the United Kingdom significantly began in the 1940s and 1960s when Egyptians and Moroccans came in search of employment, and this generally increased as the Arab world wrestled for independence from European colonialism. [4]
The Palestinian exoduses of 1948 and 1967 saw an influx and through the 70s and 80s. More Arabs arrived from the Gulf in the 1970s during the oil-boom era to set up businesses. Arab refugees also arrived as a result of conflicts in parts of the Arab world, such as the Lebanese civil war from 1975 to 1990 or the instability which followed the invasion of Iraq in 2003. [4] The United Kingdom settled approximately 20,000 Syrian refugees amid the Syrian civil war. [23]