Palestinian diaspora
The Palestinian diaspora, part of the wider Arab diaspora, refers to Palestinians living outside the region of Palestine and Israel. There are about 6.1 million members of the Palestinian diaspora, most of whom live in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Chile.
History
Palestinian individuals have a long history of migration. Silk workers from Tiberias are mentioned in 13th-century Parisian tax records. However, the first large emigration wave of Arab Christians out of Palestine began in the mid-19th century; factors driving the emigration included economic opportunities, avoiding forced military service, and localized conflicts such as the 1860 civil conflict in Mount Lebanon and Damascus.The 1922 census of Palestine's returns for Palestinians living abroad listed 4,054 Muslims, 6,264 Jews, 10,107 Christians, and 181 Druze.
Since the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Palestinians have experienced several waves of exile and have spread into different host countries around the world. In addition to the more than Palestinian refugees of 1948, hundreds of thousands were also displaced in the 1967 Six-Day War. In fact, after 1967, a number of young Palestinian men were encouraged to migrate to South America. Together, these 1948 and 1967 refugees make up the majority of the Palestinian diaspora. Besides those displaced by war, others have emigrated overseas for various reasons such as work opportunity, education and religious persecution. In the decade following the 1967 war, for example, an average of Palestinians per year were forced out of Israeli-controlled areas. The pattern of Palestinian flight continued during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.
Population
In the absence of a comprehensive census including all Palestinian diaspora populations and those that remained within the area once known as the Mandatory Palestine, exact population figures are difficult to determine. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the number of Palestinians worldwide at the end of 2003 was 9.6 million, an increase of since 2001.The issue of the Palestinian right of return has been of central importance to Palestinians and more broadly the Arab world since 1948. It is the dream of many in the Palestinian diaspora, and is present most strongly in Palestinian refugee camps. In the largest such camp in Lebanon, Ain al-Hilweh, neighborhoods are named for the Galilee towns and villages from which the original refugees came, such as Az-Zeeb, Safsaf and Hittin. Even though 97% of the camp's inhabitants have never seen the towns and villages their parents and grandparents left behind, most insist that the right of return is an inalienable right and one that they will never renounce.
Population figures
In 2012 it was estimated that more than 6 million Palestinians live in a global diaspora.The countries outside the Palestinian territories with significant Palestinian populations are:
- Jordan
- Syria
- Chile .
- Lebanon
- Saudi Arabia
- Egypt
- United States .
- Honduras
- Guatemala est.
- Mexico
- Qatar
- Germany
- Kuwait
- El Salvador
- Brazil
- Iraq
- Yemen
- Canada
- Australia
- Libya
- Puerto Rico est.
- Greece est.
- United Kingdom est. –
- Peru
- Denmark
- Colombia
- Japan est.
- Paraguay
- Netherlands 9000
- Sweden 7000
- Algeria 4030
- Austria 4010
- Norway 3825
- The rest of Latin America, India, Russia, Sub-Saharan Africa and East Asia has fairly small Palestinian populations.
In the United States, this includes a Palestinian community of 800-1000 in Gallup, New Mexico, highly involved in the area's Southwest jewelry industry.
Notable Palestinians in the diaspora
- Ricardo Abumohor, Chilean businessman, owner of Primera División club O'Higgins
- Sami Al-Arian, activist and professor
- Sama Alshaibi, Iraqi designer and conceptual artist
- Raed Arafat, Romanian physician and politician, founder of SMURD
- Alex Atala, Brazilian chef
- Belly, Canadian rapper
- Nayib Bukele, President of El Salvador, former mayor of San Salvador
- Nagwa Fouad, Egyptian belly dancer
- Nathalie Handal, Haitian poet and playwright
- Sam Husseini, American writer and activist
- Antoine Izméry, Haitian businessman and activist
- Raed Jarrar, American architect
- DJ Khaled, American DJ and music producer
- Miguel Littín, Chilean film director
- Lina Meruane, Chilean novelist
- Belal Muhammad, American mixed martial artist and former UFC Welterweight Champion
- Ruba Nadda, Canadian film director
- Salvador Nasralla, Vice President of Honduras, former sports journalist
- Nasri, Canadian pop singer
- Mouin Rabbani, Dutch-Palestinian Middle East analyst
- Edward Said, Palestinian-American intellectual
- Rakad Salem, Iraqi politician
- Linda Sarsour, American political activist
- Rashida Tlaib, American politician, lawyer
- Jorge Yarur Banna, Chilean banker
- Gabriel Zaid, Mexican novelist and poet
- José Zalaquett, Chilean lawyer and human rights activist