Almost all, with the exceptions of Turkey and Cyprus and a few others. It is curious to note, however, that unlike Europeans in the past who were virulently Anti-Semitic and honest about this horrible belief, many Arabs who promote Anti-Semitic policies or slander Jews do not believe that they are Anti-Semitic because in their minds there is no possibility of a Moslem being Anti-Semitic.
The overwhelming majority of Jews in the Middle East live in ISRAEL, roughly 6 million Jews. The rest of the countries of the Middle East have less than 30,000 total Jews combined.
If you are asking how many Jews are there in the Middle East, the answer is approximately 6 million, though the Jewish population of Arab countries is often difficult to determine.
At this point in time, the overwhelming majority of the population of Jews in the Middle East are located in Israel, with a very small population remaining in Iran and Turkey. Originally, Jews could be found all throughout the Middle East and there were large Jewish communities in Baghdad, Teheran, Istanbul, Beirut, Damascus, Cairo, and Alexandria. However, it has been made untenable for Jews to remain in many Middle Eastern Muslim countries.
Arabs are semitic people who live in most of the countries of the Middle East. Hebrews were the ancestors of today's Jews.
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No. There are substantial (but declining) populations of Christians and Jews in the middle east. Not entirely, but close. The overwhelming majority (>90%) of Middle Easterners are Muslims. Jews, Christians, Druze, and Baha'i make up around 7-8% of the Middle East cumulatively.
In the Middle Ages, Jews settled in a large number of countries, but because of the more open policies of Poland, Andalucia (Islamic Spain), and the Ottoman Empire, Jews tended to congregate in these countries.
NO. There are very few Buddhists in the Middle East. The Middle East is predominantly made up of Muslims (>90%). There are significant minorities of Christians and Jews in the Middle East and small minorities of other religions.
Arabs, Armenians, Kurds, Persians, Jews, and Turks are the ethnic groups that live in the Middle East.
No major group in the Middle East uses locs as a prevailing form of hair styling. The closest that you get is that the Hasidic Jews and Yemenite Jews in Israel have sidecurls called payyot. Locs are far more common in Africa than in the Middle East.