(Redirected from Lebanese people)
About 91% of the 'population of
Lebanon' is urban and comprises many different ethnic groups and religions, including numerous
Christian and
Muslim sects. 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 (source:
US State Dept).
Ethnic groups
The Lebanese

Three Lebanese women,
1873.
Though of lesser importance than religious belonging,
ethnic background is still a factor in Lebanon. The country encompasses a great mix of cultural, religious, and
ethnic groups which have been building up for more than 6,000 years. Although most of the population is today considered
Arab, in the sense that
Arabic is the national language, the ethnic
self-designations vary. The Arabs only reached Lebanon in the 7th century, and their culture was superimposed on an already diverse population. Lebanese are overall very genetically similar to other
Levantine populations, such as
Syrians and
Jordanians, with a minimal foreign influence, so religious and national affiliation does not necessarily indicate genetic distinctness, regardless of what is claimed by members of the different sects
[1], but the question of ethnic identity has come to revolve more around cultural self-identification than on provable genetic linkage. Religious and cultural affiliation has thus become a
substitute for ethnic affilitation.
[2]
Generally it can be said that all religious sects comprise many different ethnic backgrounds, and that clear ethnic boundaries are difficult to define. Still, religious and ethnic distinctions sometimes coincide, since religious sects have tended to marry within the group, thus preserving not only religious but ethnic characteristics. Also, one could claim that over time many of the religious sects have evolved into ethnic communities in their own right; the
Druze are a prime example of this.
Some Lebanese, especially among
Maronite Christians, see themselves as descendants of the
Phoenicians/
Canaanites/
Mardaites/
Syriacs (recently supported by genetic studies, though it applies to all Lebanese and neighbouring populations
[1]) and tend to de-emphasize or deny Lebanon's Arab heritage.
Melkite Greek Catholics, the
Greek Orthodox, and some Maronites tend to focus more on the Greek 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 Christians even claim partial descent from
Crusader knights who ruled Lebanon for a couple of centuries during the
Middle Ages. This identification with non-Arab civilizations also exists in other religious communities, albeit not to the same extent.
Muslims, as well as
Greek Orthodox and rural
Roman Catholic Christians, tend to simply consider themselves as Arabs.
[4]
Lebanese Armenians,
Assyrians,
Jews,
Kurds and
Persians form more distinct ethnic minorities, all of them in possession of a national home area outside of Lebanon. However, they total less than 4% of the population.
Palestinian refugees
402,582
Palestinian refugees were registered in Lebanon with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (
UNRWA) in March 2005, almost all refugees or descendants of refugees from the
1948 Arab-Israeli War. 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 more than 10% of the resident population of Lebanon.
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
Shi'a Muslims also look unfavorably upon the Palestinian presence, since the camps have tended to be concentrated in their home areas. As a result of this, Palestinians are not accorded the legal rights enjoyed by the rest of the population. They are denied
citizenship and confined to severely overcrowded
refugee camps, in which construction rights are severely constricted. Palestinians can't work in a large number of professions, such as lawyers, doctors, etc. However, after negotiations between Lebanese authorities and ministers from the
Palestinian National Authority some professions for Palestinians were allowed (taxi driver, construction worker, etc..). 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 refugees. Their primary sources of income are UNRWA aid and menial labor sought in competition with Syrian
guest workers.
The Palestinians are mostly Sunni Muslim, but there is also a Christian minority of over 10% (primarily Greek Orthodox). 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 Greek Orthodox or other Christian communities.
''See also
Demographics of Palestine.''
Syrian workers and the 1994 naturalization
Lebanon holds a large number of
Syrian workers, most of whom are employed on a seasonal basis and do not hold citizenship. They entered Lebanon mainly after Syria established its controversial
occupation there during the
Lebanese Civil War. They are employed in menial labor, working in areas such as construction. They are generally very poor and compete with the Palestinians over low-wage jobs. Some right-wing Lebanese argue that the presence of such a large number of Syrian workers should in fact be considered part of a Syrian
colonization attempt, interlocking the economies and making Lebanon excessively dependent on Syria. Others have argued that the Syrian laborers have been essential to post-war reconstruction.
Their exact numbers are disputed, with right-wing Lebanese nationalists tending to give high estimates (up to 1.5 million) while others go as low as 300,000. The
CIA Factbook suggest a figure of 1 million (2001)
[1]. Regardless of which estimate is closer to the truth, numbers would naturally fluctuate according to season and to the situation of the Lebanese and Syrian economies.
In 1994, Lebanese authorities - then under Syrian domination - authorized a controversial granting of citizenship to Syrians (and a small number of Palestinians and others) in Lebanon. The precise number is disputed, figures ranging from a 100,000 people to half a million. It seems clear, however, that the act shifted the religious balance in Lebanon in favor of Sunni Muslims, and had important effects on the sectarian makeup of Lebanese politics.
The Syrians in Lebanon are
Arab in the same linguistic sense as the Lebanese, but with a less ambiguous Arab self-identification. They are mainly Muslims of the Sunni sect, but due to Syria's diverse religious and ethnic population, many other groups are also included.
''See also
Demographics of Syria.''
Other immigrants
There are substantial numbers of immigrants from other
Arab countries. Also, recent years have seen an influx of people from
South East Asian countries such as
Indonesia, the
Philippines and
Malaysia, as well as smaller numbers of other immigrant minorities and Mexicans (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. Many of these are
Kurds from
Turkey and Syria, or other Syrians.
Religious groups of Lebanon
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 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
Arab country, but both Christians and
Muslims are sub-divided into many splinter sects. All population statistics are by necessity controversial, and all sects have a vested interest in inflating their own numbers. It is not uncommon to hear
Sunnis,
Shi'as and
Maronites (the three largest sects) 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 sects. One of the rare things that most Lebanese religious leaders will agree on is to avoid a new general
census, out of fear that it could trigger a new round of sectarian 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 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 1930s, but government leaders would agree to no change in the political power balance. This led to Muslim demands of 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.
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 . Shi'a Muslims (by now the 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 proportion. Christians of various sects 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.
The 18 recognized sects
The present
Lebanese Constitution officially acknowledges 18 religious groups (see below). These have the right to handle
family law according to their own courts and traditions, and they are the basic players in Lebanon's complex sectarian politics. Still, it is important to note that these groups are not internally homogeneous; for example, the Maronite, Shi'a and Druze communities have been wracked by internal fighting even in recent times.
★
Alawite
★
Armenian Catholic
★
Armenian Orthodox (Gregorian)
★
Assyrian Church of the East
★
Chaldean Catholic
★
Copts
★
Druze
★
Evangelical Christian (incl.
Protestant groups such as
Baptists and
Seventh-day Adventists)
★
Greek Catholic (Melkite)
★
Greek Orthodox
★
Isma'ili (Sevener Shi'a)
★
Jewish
★
Maronite (Maronite Catholic).
★
Roman Catholic (Latins)
★
Twelver Shi'a
★
Sunni
★
Syriac Catholic
★
Syriac Orthodox
Religious population statistics
''Note:
stateless Palestinians and
Syrians are not included in the below statistics, 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 55% of the population.
Maronites, largest among the Christian sects and then largely in control of the state appartus, accounted for 29% of the total population. But since the 19th century,
Muslim birth rates have been continually higher than Christian birth rates, with the fastest population increase among the
Twelver Shi'a. Also, far larger numbers of Christians emigrated from Lebanon than Muslims.
Today, there is general consensus that Muslims constitute a solid majority of the population; the CIA world factbook estimates their share to be 60%
[2]. Still, there is no single sect constituting a majority of the population by itself. The Shi'a is the largest community, thought in 1985 to be 41% of the population
[3]. Since then, their numbers have increased even more, while other communities have decreased due to emigration, and some sources indicate they may be close to 50% of the population. There is no consensus on this number, and the Shi'a proportion of Lebanon's population is among the most widely disputed figures of Lebanese demographics. The Shi'a has, as the traditionally poorest community, had a high birth rate, and they have had no natural emigration outlet, while most Christians had extensive contacts with
Europe,
Canada (especially in French speaking areas, like Montreal),
Australia, the
United States and
Latin America; and the Sunnis could easily relocate to any neighbouring Arab country, since they constitute a majority in most of the
Arab world.
Muslims
★
Shi'a Muslims of the Twelver Sect are the single largest religious group in Lebanon today. They are generally believed to be between 45 and 55 percent of the total population, although estimates vary wildly. They have traditionally been the poorest community in Lebanon because of government neglect. They have had high birth rates, but low levels of political organization. During 1960s and '70s
Musa al-Sadr tried to improve their situation. In
1969 he was appointed as the first head of the
Supreme Islamic Shi'ite Council, an entity meant to give the Shi'ites more say in government. In
1974 he founded the
Movement of the Disinherited to press for better economic and social conditions for the Shi'ites. He established a number of schools and medical clinics throughout southern Lebanon, many of which are still in operation today. In the late 1970s, a gradual political awakening had been under way for some time, but the process was jolted forward by the shocks of Israeli incursion in 1979 and the rise of the
Islamic Republic of Iran the same year. Israeli
occupation of southern Lebanon from 1982-2000 led to an exodus of Shi'a towards the north, and the rise of powerful
Islamist parties such as
Amal and
Hizbullah. The presence of these militias forced the Shi'a community into central Lebanese decision-making, and their position strengthened during the latter half of the
Lebanese Civil War as well as during the
Syrian post-war occupation (1990-2005). The Shi'a are traditionally concentrated in the rural south of the country(
Jabal Amel) and the
Bekaa Valley in the east, but large numbers now also live south of
Beirut, in what has been dubbed "the belt of misery" - slum neighbourhoods essentially controlled by Hizbullah and Amal, and populated by
refugees from the South. The Speaker of the
Lebanese Parliament is always a member of the Shi'a sect.
★
Sunni Muslims comprise the second-largest Muslim group. Sunni notables traditionally held power in the Lebanese state together with (but overshadowed by) Maronite Christians, and they are still the only sect eligible for the post of
Prime Minister. Sunni Muslims are a majority everywhere else in the
Arab world, except
Bahrain and
Iraq, and so the Sunni community has had close ties to these countries, and ideologically tilted towards
pan-Arabism. Today in Lebanon they may constitute 25% of the total populations. Their numbers are further bolstered by the presence of the largely Sunni Palestinians, and lacking a powerful militia of their own, they became the prime allies of the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) during the events leading up to, and during, the Civil War.
★ The
Druze are a small, tightly knit splinter sect of Shi'a Islam. Many Muslims regard them suspiciously, arguing that they are not in fact Muslims, but rather a religion in their own right - or in extreme cases, labeling them
heretics. The Druze also traditionally fought with Christian Maronites over control of their home areas in the
Chouf Mountain. The situation of the Druze community in Lebanon has been complicated, since they have no natural allies, and though originally a powerful sect, their numbers have today declined to just over 5% of the population. A succession of Druze leaders (most famously of the
Jumblatt family) have attempted to outweigh this deficiency in numbers by a quick-footed diplomacy and alliances with stronger communities. During the Civil War, Druze leaders allied at one point or another with nearly every other party to the conflict. While there are also Druze communities in
Syria and
Israel, and among the populations expelled from the Israeli-occupied
Golan Heights, hard political boundaries prevent extensive interaction between them.
★ For information on the remaining Muslim communities, see the
Isma'ili and
Alawite articles. Both groups constitute less than 1% of Lebanon's population.
Christians
★ The
Maronites are the largest of the Christian groups. 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 and the
Vatican. They traditionally dominated the Lebanese government, and the
President of Lebanon is always Maronite. Their influence in later years has diminished, due to their relative decrease in numbers, but also due to the
Syrian occupation of Lebanon, which generally benefited Shi'a and other Muslim communities, and was resisted by most Maronites. Today the Maronites are believed to compose nearly 20% of the population, scattered around the Lebanese countryside but with heavy concentrations on
Mount Lebanon and in
Beirut.
★ The second largest Christian group is the
Greek Orthodox. The church exists in many parts of the Arab world and Greek Orthodox Christians have often been noted for
pan-Arab leanings; it has had less dealings with Western countries than the Maronites. They are believed to constitute about 5% of the total population, not counting the Palestinian Greek Orthodox community.
★ The remaining Christian churches are thought to constitute another 10% (350,000) of the population (Greek Catholics i.e. Melkites about 200,000, Armenian Apostolic, Armenian Catholic, Syriac Orthodox, Syriac Catholic, Assyrians, Protestants) with no single group over 5% of the total population. Please refer to their articles in the list above, for more information.
★ For the Roman Catholics see
Roman Catholicism in Lebanon.
Other religions
Other religions account for only an estimated 1.3% of the population, according to the
CIA Factbook. There remains a very small
Jewish population, traditionally centered in
Beirut. It has been larger - most Jews left the country after the Six Day War in 1967. Add to this some negligible numbers of native
Bahá'ís,
Buddhists, and
Hindus, of long since-naturalized immigrant families. New immigrants from
South East Asia have recently brought in larger numbers of Buddhists and Hindus, and small populations of other immigrant religions are also present.
The Lebanese diaspora
Apart from the three and a half million citizens of Lebanon proper, there is a sizeable Lebanese
diaspora. No accurate numbers are available, so estimates on the total size of the diaspora vary wildly, from conservative estimates of 4-5 million to a maximum, and probably inflated, figure of 15 million. Most Lebanese emigrants and their descendants are Christian. Lebanese Christian 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
Arab American community in the
United States. The largest Lebanese diaspora is located in
Brazil, where about 10 million people have Lebanese descent (see
Arab Brazilian).
The large size of Lebanon's diaspora may be partly explained by the historical and cultural tradition of sea-faring and travelling, 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 emigré 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. If suffrage was to be extended to these 1.2 million Lebanese emigré citizens, it would have a significant political effect, since as many as 80% of them are believed to be Christians.
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
civil war (1975-90). Although some have since returned, this permanently disturbed Lebanese population growth, and has greatly complicated demographic statistics.
Another result of the war was a large number of
internally displaced persons. This especially affected the southern
Shi'a 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
Hizbullah (mainly 1982 to 2000). Many Shi'a resettled in hastily constructed slum suburbs south of Beirut, the so-called "belt of misery". After the war, the pace of Christian emigration accelerated, as many Christians felt discriminated against in a Lebanon under increasingly oppressive
Syrian occupation.
Languages in Lebanon
Arabic (official),
French,
Armenian,
English.
Population statistics

Demographics of Lebanon, Data of
FAO, year 2005 ; Number of inhabitants in thousands.
★ 'Population:'
:'Total population:' 3,826,018 (July 2005 est.)
★ 'Age structure: '
:'0-14 years:' 26.7% (male 520,270; female 499,609)
:'15-64 years:' 66.4% (male 1,216,738; female 1,324,031)
:'65 years and over:' 6.9% (male 120,176; female 145,194) (2005 est.)
★ 'Median age:'
:'Total:' 27.34 years
:'Male:' 26.28 years
:'Female:' 28.43 years (2005 est.)
★ 'Population growth rate:'
:1.26% (2005 est.)
★ 'Birth rate: '
:18.88 births/1,000 population (2005 est.)
★ 'Death rate: '
:6.24 deaths/1,000 population (2005 est.)
★ 'Net migration rate:'
:0 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2005 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.)
★ 'Infant mortality rate: '
:'total:' 24.52 deaths/1,000 live births
:'male:' 27.18 deaths/1,000 live births
:'female:' 21.71 deaths/1,000 live births (2005 est.)
★ 'Life expectancy at birth:'
:'total population:' 72.63 years
:'male:' 70.17 years
:'female:' 75.21 years (2005 est.)
★ 'Total fertility rate:'
:1.92 children born/woman (2005 est.)
References
1. http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0410/feature2/online_extra.html
2. http://countrystudies.us/lebanon/40.htm
3. http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0410/feature2/online_extra.html
4. http://countrystudies.us/lebanon/39.htm