Jewish world populations
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Overview
- The worldwide Jewish population is 13.3 million. Jewish population growth worldwide is close to zero percent. From 2000 to 2001 it rose 0.3%, compared to worldwide population growth of 1.4%.
- In 2001, 8.3 million Jews lived in the Diaspora and 4.9 million lived in Israel. Just about half of the world’s Jews reside in the Americas, with about 46 percent in North America.
- Approximately 37% of worldwide Jewry lives in Israel. Israel's Jewish population rose by 1.6% the past year, while the Diaspora population dropped by 0.5%.
- Europe, including the Asian territories of the Russian Republic and Turkey, accounts for about 12 percent of the total. Fewer than 2 percent of the world’s Jews live in Africa and Oceania.
- Metropolitan Tel Aviv, with 2.5 million Jews, is the world's largest Jewish city. It is followed by New York, with 1.9 million, Haifa 655,000, Los Angeles 621,000, Jerusalem 570,000, and southeast Florida 514,000.
- In 2001, 8 countries had a Jewish population of 100,000 or more; another 5 countries had 50,000 or more. There is not a single Diaspora country where Jews amounted to 2.5 percent of the total population. Only 3 Diaspora countries had more than 1 percent. Gibraltar (24.0 per 1000), United States (20.1), Canada (11.9), France (8.8), Uruguay (6.7), Argentina (5.3), Hungary (5.2), and Australia (5.1) [1] had the highest ratios.
Estimated Jewish Populations
By continent and major geographical regionFigures rounded of to the nearest 100,000
Languages of total Jewish population
Population analysis by cityMetropolitan areas with the largest Jewish populations
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Top twelve Jewish populations in the worldThe placement ratings in parentheses reflect
Israeli populations abroadIsraelis are included in the figures for Israel and not the host country. However, this is misleading, since most Israelis are de facto permanent residents of the host country.
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Page Credit
[Upload logo to Judaism Online.png] This page imported content from Judaism Online on 1 February 2014.
Judaism Online is not affiliated with Wikispooks. Original page source here
Judaism Online is not affiliated with Wikispooks. Original page source here
References
- ↑ Information from Hebrew University demographer, Prof. Sergio De La Pergola as well as the American Jewish Year Book 2001