Some facts about Jerusalem
Jerusalem Day starts on Tuesday night and in honor of the occasion, Israel's Central Bureau of Statistics has released some information about Jerusalem. The key finding: The Jewish birthrate has caught up to the Arab birthrate and now stands at
four children per couple.
The total population of Jerusalem stood at 774,000 at the end of 2009.
Data showed a trend of one-way assimilation when it came to neighborhoods of the city that were regained in 1967, after falling under Jordanian control in 1948. While Jews and other non-Arabs have moved into the post-67 areas, few Arabs have moved in the opposite direction. 98 percent of Jerusalem's Arab residents live in neighborhoods that were temporarily under Jordanian control.
Thirty-nine percent of Jerusalem's Jews and other non-Arabs live in post-67 neighborhoods. In total, 42 percent of the residents of post-67 Jerusalem are Jewish or other non-Arab..
While fertility rates are identical for Arabs and Jews, Jews appeared to be more affected by negative migration, which stood at 7,100 for 2009, with 12,800 people moving to Jerusalem and 19,900 leaving the city.
Those who left went primarily to Jewish towns in the greater Jerusalem area.
Jerusalem is unusually religious, data showed. Hareidi-religious Jews live in Jerusalem at a rate 3.6 times higher than their percentage in Israel as a whole, while non-hareidi religious Jews are 1.4 times as common in the capital as elsewhere. The percent of non-religious Jews in Jerusalem is less than half of that in the country as a whole.
Jerusalem is not going to have a non-Jewish majority anytime soon. And Obama is not going to be able to expel 42% of the population of 'east' Jerusalem from their homes. Deal with it.
1 Comments:
Its the haredi who keep Jerusalem Jewish by virtue of having lots of children. The secular complain about it but that's the only thing ensuring Jerusalem has a Jewish majority for decades to come.
All that's needed now is to really to keep it Israel's united capital forever.
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