Die ethnoreligiöse Vielfalt des Libanon

Von immanuellalala

17 Kommentare

  1. MasterNinjaFury on

    Many of the Greek Orthodox of Syria and Lebanon but espically the ones in Syria want to be recongised as greek ethnic group distinct from arabs. Many say that they are Greeks/Byzantines and want to be recongised and have represenation. Many pages on the interney about this

  2. Some of the sunnis are not from Lebanon but refugees from Palestine. They came, they stayed and changed the fiber of the fragile country.

  3. nationalistic_martyr on

    isn’t there a law in Lebanon that the leader HAS to be a certain Christian?

  4. DasWarEinerZuviel on

    Where is the real map that makes everything just be „Kibbeh“ in different colors?

  5. PM_me_your_wrinkle on

    The map can be misleading if you don’t know the actual demographics. +70% of the population is Muslim, less than 30% Christian. In the 1800s it used to be +80% Christian and only around 8% Muslim. Islam’s conquest of the country led to civil war, and many sectarian conflicts over the century.

  6. I’m Lebanese and this mostly checks out.

    Lots of misinformation here.

    The Sunnis on this pic are all Lebanese. Syrians and Palestinians aren’t accounted for.

    We all mostly share the same culture and interact with each other daily on really good terms. We all look the same and speak the same. Slight accents differ based on location not sect (except for the Druze kaf lol).

    I’m Shia Muslim. My ex was Maronite and I’m currently engaged to a Sunni Muslim.

    I love this country from the bottom of my heart. It’s a shame we quite literally have the worst 2 neighbors in the entire world.

  7. Prestigious-Back-981 on

    Many Lebanese Christians are in the diaspora. Here in Brazil there are many; they have integrated, and a large part of the community has become wealthy through commerce. Syrians also came in large numbers. So much so that today esfihas and kibbeh are part of Brazilian cuisine. They say there are a number of people who speak Portuguese in Lebanon.

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