Arab Canadians Explained

Group:Arab Canadians
Arabo-Canadiens
Native Name:كنديون عرب
Population:690,000

1.9% of the total Canadian population (2021)(2021 Census)[1]

Regions:Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Laval, Mississauga, Windsor, London, Edmonton

Arab Canadians (fr|Arabo-Canadiens) come from all of the countries of the Arab world. According to the 2021 Census, there were 690,000 Canadians, or 1.9%, who claimed Arab ancestry.[2] According to the 2011 census there were 380,620 Canadians who claimed full or partial ancestry from an Arabic-speaking country.[3] The large majority of the Canadians of Arab origin population live in either Ontario or Quebec.[4]

Demographics

The distribution of the Arab population of Canada according to the 2001, 2011, and 2016 Canadian censuses was as follows:

Arabs 2001% 2001Arabs 2011% 2011Arabs 2016% 2016Arabs 2021% 2021
73,3451.0%166,2602.2%213,740 2.7%280,0753.3%
88,5450.8%151,6451.2%210,435 1.6%284,2152.0%
19,3200.7%34,9201.0%56,700 1.4% 69,5051.6%
6,6050.2%14,0900.3%19,8400.4%28,0100.6%
3,6100.4%6,2850.7%8,1100.9%10,6101.1%
1,2300.1%3,2400.3%5,0300.4%7,8200.6%
9000.1%2,0950.2%4,3000.4%5,5750.5%
5800.1%1,3800.2%2,9600.4%5,0600.7%
2700.1%3700.1%1,3750.3%1,7400.3%
1750.0%2000.1%5850.4%1,1250.7%
800.2%1100.3%1000.2%2250.6%
100.0%150.0%400.1%350.1%
100.0%00.0%100.0%200.1
Canada194,6850.7%380,620[5] 1.2%523,2351.5%694,0151.9%

By Arabic-speaking country

Country[6] 2016
Lebanon219,555’´*
Algeria104,395´’
Morocco103,945’´*
Saudi Arabia86,810’´*
77,045’’
Egypt73,250’´*
50,245´*
Kuwait2,235´’
Tunisia25,645´’
Iraq68,490´’
25,530´’
Sudan19,960’´
Jordan25,250’´
Mauritania9,325’´
Libya7,740’´
Yemen6,645’´
Canada total756,455’´[7]

Religion

The 2011 Canadian census shows that 55% from Arab Canadians reported belonging to a Muslim faith and 34% reported belonging to a Christian faith. These number differ measurably from the numbers reported in the 2001 Canadian census, which showed an even split in the Arab Canadian community between those who practiced the Muslim faith with 44% and those who practiced the Christian faith 44%, (where 28% as Catholic, 11% as Eastern Orthodox Church and 5% as Other Christian). In 2011, about 3% of Arab Canadians are Jewish. The largest Arab Jewish communities in Canada are Moroccan and Iraqi. Other Arabs Jews are of Egyptian, Syrian, Algerian, and Lebanese descent.[8]

The percentage of Arab Canadians were not affiliated with any religions only marginally increased from 6% in 2001 to 8% in 2011.[8]

The greatest percentage of Arab Christians in Canada come from Lebanon, Syria, Egypt and Iraq, where the highest rates of Muslims come from Algeria and Morocco.[8]

History

Raja G. Khouri, who has served as President of the Canadian Arab Federation, in 2003 described the interconnected perceptions of a Canadian national identity and Arab identity.[9] In 2009, University of Alberta professor Wisam Kh. Abdul-Jabbar described the "double consciousness" of Arab Canadians, variously struggling with their Arab Canadian identity versus a sense of "being Canadian".[10] Abdul-Jabbar has proposed that citizens or residents of Arab descent have come to consider a cautious dual-identity approach as essential to social integration in the country.[11]

Presented at the 2009 annual American Sociological Association meeting, research from Madona Mokbel detailed the "Dichotomous Perceptions of the Arab Canadian Identity in Canada", particularly since the 2001 9/11 attacks.[12] [13] Shortly after the attacks, Canadian Museum of Civilization postponed an exhibit, The Lands within Me, displaying the diasporic-based works of thirty Arab-Canadian artists. Moral outrage at the short notice of the postponement, suspicion of its connection to the attacks and subsequent protest at the decision, has been described as an early centralizing medium for Arab Canadian identity.[14]

Dr Christina Civantos of Miami University, writing in Food for Our Grandmothers, has detailed the broad and sometimes conflicting elements that constitute the Arab world and which, therefore, do not always simply amalgamate into a coherent Arab Canadian identity.[15] The collection of writing by Arab-American and Arab-Canadian feminists, in analysis by Amaney Jamal, has been described as shifting the definition of Arab Canadian identity onwards from "essentializing categories" while still explicitly confronting the racial and cultural realities of Arabs in North America.[16]

In 2013, academic Paul Eid, a researcher at Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse, has remarked that Canadians of a Coptic Egyptian background are the most likely to explicitly embrace an Arab-Canadian self-identification, due to the fact Copts were some of the earliest Arabic immigrants to Canada since the 1960s.[17]

Identity

Arab Canadian identity is the objective or subjective state of perceiving oneself as an Arab Canadian and as relating to being Arab Canadian. The expression of the identity has been widely analyzed and observed by academics as a culturally challenging self-identification in the context of elements of Western culture in the 21st-century.

A survey conducted in Edmonton, Alberta in the pre-2000, showed females 3 in 10, and 1 in 10 males, "tried to hide their Arab-Canadian identity". The research also significantly contrasted along lines of faith, with 44 percent of Arab Christians and 13 percent Arab Muslims also suppressing the identity.[18]

Research by academics Caitlin McDonald and Barbara Sellers-Young has also suggested that anti-Arabism and prejudice in North America can create a hostile environment for the expression of Arab Canadian identity.[19]

Notable individuals

Business

Politicians

Political activists

Filmmakers and writers

Singers

Athletes

Others

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . The Daily — The Canadian census: A rich portrait of the country's religious and ethnocultural diversity . www150.statcan.gc.ca . 26 October 2022.
  2. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2022-02-09 . Profile table, Census Profile, 2016 Census of Population - Canada [Country] ]. 2022-10-26 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  3. Web site: 2011 National Household Survey: Data tables . Statistics Canada . 8 May 2013 . Statistics Canada . 11 February 2014.
  4. Web site: Mandil. Ghada. August 2019. Insights into the Arab Population in Canada Based on the 2016 Census Data. live. 2021-05-24. Square Space. https://web.archive.org/web/20210524150424/https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5e09162ecf041b5662cf6fc4/t/5e5c740baf79a531e0f29b9a/1583117323950/Insights+into+the+Arab+Population+in+Canada+Based+on+the+2016+Census+Data.pdf . 2021-05-24 .
  5. Web site: 2016 Immigration and Ethnocultural Diversity Highlight Tables: Data tables . Statistics Canada . Statistics Canada . 11 February 2014.
  6. Including ethnic minorities.
  7. Web site: Canadian Arab Institute :: 750,925 Canadians Hail from Arab Lands. www.canadianarabinstitute.org. 19 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20170319032124/http://www.canadianarabinstitute.org/publications/reports/750925-canadians-hail-arab-lands/. 19 March 2017. dead.
  8. Web site: Dajjani . Ghina . Religion and Marital Status in the Canadian Arab Community .
  9. Book: Raja G. Khouri. Raja G. Khouri. Arabs in Canada: Post 9/11. 2003. G7 Books. 978-1894611367. 19. This dimension refers to the community's cultural affiliation and belonging; what its perceptions of the Canadian identity, the Arab identity and Arab Canadian identity are..
  10. News: Arab Muslim Canadian high school students call for globalized curriculum to change stereotypes. Wisam Kh. Abdul-Jabbar. The students’ responses demonstrated a sense of double consciousness: they felt perceived as being Canadian, and yet not quite. Both my interviews and surveys reveal a condition of the Arab-Canadian identity as one that must constantly defend or apologize for itself.. 8 May 2019. The Conversation.
  11. Book: Wisam Kh. Abdul-Jabbar. Negotiating Diasporic Identity in Arab-Canadian Students: Double Consciousness, Belonging, and Radicalization. 2019. Palgrave Macmillan. 978-3030162856. Implications and Conclusions. 137. For Ibrahim, existing contentedly with a rather balanced image or perception of an Arab-Canadian identity is key to social integration.
  12. News: Madona Mokbel. Either Arab or Canadian: Dichotomous Perceptions of the Arab Canadian Identity in Canada. 2009. American Sociological Association.
  13. Book: Vic Satzewich. Lloyd Wong. Transnational Identities and Practices in Canada. 2007. University of British Columbia Press. 978-0774812849. Who's Transnationalism?. 223. Recent research shows that even through children of Arab Canadians born in Canada were "Americanized ... their Arab identity has been raised as a result of [the] events" of 11 September 2001. .
  14. News: Elayne Oliphant. Paradoxes of Displaying Arab-Canadian Lands within the Canadian Museum of Civilization Following 9.11. 2005. Carleton University. Institute of Political Economy. 86–87. However, although The Lands within Me was intended to be an exhibit about migration, movement and belonging in its broadest sense, it was through the restrictive framework of the Arab-Canadian identity that the artists were forced to demand the exhibit be displayed as planned..
  15. Book: Joanna Kadi. Christina Civantos. Food for Our Grandmothers: Writings by Arab-American and Arab-Canadian Feminists. 2017. South End Press. 978-0896084902 . The Middle East in North America. Given the different ethnic and religious groups and colonial histories within the nineteen countries of the Arab world, the question arises, what constitutes an Arab-American or Arab-Canadian identity? What links exist between Arabs and other ethnic and national groups in the region designated the Middle or Near East and North Africa?.
  16. Book: Amaney Jamal. Amaney Jamal. Race and Arab Americans Before and After 9/11: From Invisible Citizens to Visible Subjects. 2008. Syracuse University Press. 978-0815631774. Grandmothers, Grape Leaves, and Kahlil Gibran. 201. The introduction places an emphasis on culture and specific cultural production and couples it with an explicit discussion of race positionality of Arabs in North America. This discussion moves the of Arab American / Arab Canadian identity away from essentializing categories..
  17. Book: Paul Eid. Being Arab: Ethnic and Religious Identity Building among Second Generation Youth in Montreal. 2007. McGill-Queen's University Press. 978-0773532229. 235. The preference of Egyptian-origin respondents for a hyphenated (Arab-Canadian) identity is probably attributable to the fact that this group comprises a majority of Copts.
  18. Book: Baha Abu-Laban. Sharon McIrvin Abu-Laban. Michael Suleiman. Arabs in America: Building a New Future. 1999. Temple University Press. 978-1566397278. Arab-Canadian Youth in Immigrant Family Life. 140–154. The extent to which Arab-Canadian ethnicity is perceived to be a liability is reflected by responses to the following question: "Are there times when you try to hide your Arab-Canadian origin?" The results show that more females (three of ten) than males (one of ten) tried to hide their ethnicity, and within the female group, more Christian (44 percent) than Muslim (13 percent) tried to hide their Arab-Canadian identity..
  19. Book: Caitlin McDonald. Barbara Sellers-Young. Barbara Sellers-Young. Belly Dance Around the World: New Communities, Performance and Identity. 2013. McFarland & Company. 978-0786473700. Arab-Canadian Youth in Immigrant Family Life. 49. Fluctuating levels of anti—Arab prejudice in North America, linked with national and international politics, mean that claiming an Arab Canadian identity can be socially compromised and compromising.
  20. Web site: À voir à la télévision le samedi 24 mars. Le Devoir. 24 March 2007. 29 March 2022.