Jewish
majority west of the Jordan River is secure, benefitting from a
tailwind in defiance of conventional “wisdom,” which once again is
detached from reality.
In 2012, Israel’s Jewish demography continues the robust surge of the last 17 years, while Muslim demography, west of the Jordan River and throughout the Middle East, increasingly embraces Western standards.
According to a June, 2012 study by the Washington-based Population Reference Bureau (PRB), 72% of 15-49 year old Palestinian married women prefer to avoid pregnancy, as are 78% in Morocco, 71% in Jordan, 69% in Egypt and Libya, 68% in Syria, 63% in Iraq and 61% in Yemen. The PRB study
states that “a growing number of women are using contraception, as
family planning services have expanded in the Arab region.”
The unprecedented fertility decline in the Muslim world was documented in June, 2012 by Dr. Nicholas Eberstadt, a leading demographer at the American Enterprise Institute, and Apoorva Shah of the Hoover Institute. According to Eberstadt and Shah, “Throughout the worldwide Muslim community, fertility levels are falling dramatically…. According to the UN Population Division estimates and projections, all 48 Muslim-majority countries and territories witnessed fertility decline over the last three decades.... The proportional decline in fertility for Muslim-majority areas was greater than for the world as a whole over that same period, or for the less-developed
regions as a whole…. Six of the ten largest absolute declines in
fertility for a two-decade period yet recorded in the postwar era (and
by extension, we may suppose, ever to take place under orderly
conditions in human history) have occurred in Muslim-majority
countries…. Four of the ten greatest fertility declines ever recorded in
a 20-year period took place in the Arab world…. No other region of the world — not highly dynamic Southeast Asia, or even rapidly modernizing East Asia — comes close to this showing....
The remarkable fertility declines now unfolding throughout the Muslim
world is one of the most important demographic developments in our era.”
The
key developments yielding a drastic decline in Arab fertility, in the
Middle East including west of the Jordan River, have been modernity and
its derivatives. For instance, urbanization (70% rural Arab population in Judea and Samaria in 1967 and 75% urban in 2012), expanded women’s education and employment, a record high divorce rate and wedding age, all time high family planning, rapidly declining teen-pregnancy, youthful male net-emigration, etc.
The Palestinian Authority (PA) has inflated the actual number of Arabs in Judea and Samaria (1.65 million) by one million, since
the arrival of one million Olim from the USSR. Thus, in contrast with
internationally accepted demographic standards, the PA counts some
400,000 overseas residents, who have been overseas for over a year, as
de-facto residents. Some 300,000
Israeli I.D. card-bearing Jerusalem Arabs are doubly-counted as
Israelis (by Israel) and as Palestinians (by the PA). The number of births is over-reported, the number of death is under-reported, emigration is ignored, etc.
In
2012, Israel’s Jewish fertility rate (three births per woman) is
trending upward, boding well for Israel’s economy and national security,
exceeding any Middle Eastern Muslim country, other than Yemen, Iraq and Jordan, which are trending downward. Iran’s
fertility rate is 1.8 births per woman, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
States – 2.5, Syria and Egypt – 2.9 and North Africa – 1.8. The average fertility rate of an Israeli-born Jewish mother has already surpassed three births. In 2012, the Israeli Arab-Jewish fertility gap is half a birth per woman, compared with a six birth gap in 1969. Moreover,
young Jewish and Arab Israeli women have converged at three births,
with Arab women trending below – and Jewish women trending above – three
births.
In 2012, Jewish births have expanded to 77% of total Israeli births,
compared with 69% in 1969. While the ultra-orthodox Jewish fertility
rate has declined, due to growing integration into the workforce and the
military, the secular Jewish fertility rate has risen significantly.
Since 2001, the number of Jewish emigrants has decreased and the number of returning Jewish expatriates has increased.
Aliya has been sustained annually since 1882, while Arab net-emigration
– especially from Judea and Samaria – has been a fixture, at least,
since 1950.
The current 66% Jewish majority in the combined area of the pre-1967 Israel, Judea and Samaria would catapult to an 80% majority in 2035, if Israel realizes the clear and present dramatic Aliyah (Jewish immigration) window of opportunity. At
least 500,000 Olim from the former USSR, France, Britain, Argentina and
the USA could reach Israel during the next five years, in light of
Israel’s economic indicators, the intensification of European
anti-Semitism, the Islamic penetration of Europe and the growth of
Jewish-Zionist education.
The
suggestion that Jews are doomed to become a minority between the Jordan
River and the Mediterranean is either dramatically-mistaken or
outrageously-misleading.
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