- Religion in Syria
Membership in a religious community is ordinarily determined by birth. Because statistics on the size of the various religious communities were unavailable in
1987 , only rough estimates may be made.Muslims were estimated as constituting 85 percent of the population, although their proportion was possibly greater and was certainly growing. TheMuslim birthrate reportedly was higher than that of the minorities, and proportionately fewer Muslims were emigrating abroad. Of the Muslims, 80 to 85 percent were members of theSunni sect, some 13 to 15 percent wereAlawis , and approximately 1 percent wereIsmailis ; otherShia groups constituted less than 1 percent of the population.A striking feature of religious life in Syria is the geographic distribution of the religious minorities. Most
Christians live inDamascus andAleppo , although significant numbers live inAl-Hasakah Province in northeasternSyria . Nearly 90 percent of theAlawis , also known asNusayris , live inAl-Ladhiqiyah Province in the rural areas of the Jabal an Nusayriyah; they constitute over 80 percent of therural population of the province. TheJabal al-Arab /Jabal al-Druze , a rugged and mountainous region in the southwest of the country, is more than 90 percentDruze inhabited; some 120 villages are exclusively so. TheImamis , a Shia sect, are concentrated betweenHoms and Aleppo; they constitute nearly 15 percent ofHamah Province. TheIsmailis are concentrated in theSalamiyah region of Hamah Province; approximately 10,000 more inhabit the mountains of Al Ladhiqiyah Province. Most of the remainingShia live in the region ofAleppo . TheJewish community is also centered in the Aleppo area, as are theYazidis , many of whom inhabit theJabal Siman and about half of whom live in the vicinity ofAmuda in theal-Jazirah .Religion permeates life in all but the most sophisticated social groups. The Syrian tends to view religion instrumentally, depending on the deity and subsidiary powers to aid in times of trouble, solve problems, and assure success. The expressions
bismallah (in the name ofAllah ) andinshallah (if Allah is willing) are commonly heard, expressing the individual's literal dependence on divine powers for his well-being.Islam
unnis
The largest religious group in Syria is the
Sunni Muslims, of whom about 80 percent are native SyrianArabs , with the remainder beingKurds ,Turkomans ,Circassians , andPalestinians . Sunni Islam sets the religious tone for Syria and provides the country's basic values. Sunnis follow nearly all occupations, belong to all social groups and nearly every political party, and live in all parts of the country. There are only two provinces in which they are not a majority:Al-Suwayda , whereDruzes predominate, and Al Ladhiqiyah, where Alawis are a majority. In Al Hasakah, Sunnis form a majority, but most of them areKurds rather thanArabs .Of the four major schools of Islamic law, represented in Syria are the
Shafii school and the more liberalHanafi school, which places greater emphasis on analogical deduction and bases decisions more on precedents set in previous cases than on literal interpretation of theQuran orSunna . Secularization is spreading among Sunnis, especially the younger ones in urban areas and in the military services. After the first coup d'état in 1949, the waqfs were taken out of private religious hands and put under government control. Civil codes have greatly modified the authority of Islamic laws, and the educational role of Muslim religious leaders is declining with the gradual disappearance of kuttabs, the traditional mosque-affiliated schools. Despite civil codes introduced in the past years, Syria maintains a dual system of sharia and civil courts.hi'a
Shia play only a minor role in Syrian politics. They are among the least educated religious groups, and their members are more resistant to change. In religious affairs, they look to Shia centers inIraq , especiallyKarbala andAl-Najaf , and toIran . However, Iran's 1979Islamic Revolution , and Syria's alliance withIran in its war withIraq , have elevated the prestige of Syria's Shia minority. As hundreds of Iranian tourists began to visit Damascus each week, the Shia shrine of the tomb of Sitt az Zaynab, daughter ofImam Ali ibn Abu Talib , located in Al Ghutah outside Damascus, became a major pilgrimage destination, replacing those areas no longer accessible in Iraq. However, the government of Syria has viewed with caution the resurgence of Shia Islamic fervor in Syria and has taken steps to dampen it.Ismailis
Ismailis are divided into two major groups, the Mustafians and theNizaris . The Ismailis of Syria, numbering about 200,000, are predominantlyNizaris . Originally clustered in Al Ladhiqiyah Province, most of the Syrian Ismailis have resettled south of Salamiyah on land granted to the Ismaili community byAbdul Hamid II , sultan of theOttoman Empire from 1876 to 1909. A few thousand Ismailis live in the mountains west of Hamah, and about 5,000 are in Al Ladhiqiyah (Latakia ). The western mountain group is poor and suffers from land hunger and overpopulation--resulting in a drift toward the wealthier eastern areas as well as seasonal migration to the Salamiyah area, where many of them find employment at harvest-time. The wealthier Ismailis of Salamiyah have fertile and well-watered land and are regarded as clannish, proud, and tough.Alawis
The
Alawis , andNusayris , who together number about 1,350,000, constitute Syria's largest religious minority. They live chiefly along the coast in Al Ladhiqiyah/Latakia Province, where they form over 60 percent of the rural population. For centuries, the Alawis constituted Syria's most repressed and exploited minority. Most were indentured servants and tenant farmers or sharecroppers working for Sunni landowners. However, after Alawi PresidentHafez Assad and his family clan came to power in 1970, the living condition of the Alawis improved considerably. Split by sectional rivalries as theAlawis lack a single, powerful ruling family, has lead, since independence, to the emergence of many individual Alawis who have attained power and prestige as military officers. Although they are settled cultivators, Alawis gather into kin groups much like those of pastoral nomads. The four Alawi confederations, each divided into tribes, areKalbiyah ,Khaiyatin ,Haddadin , andMatawirah . Alawis claim they are Muslims, but conservative Sunnis do not always recognize them as such.Druzes
In 1987 the
Druze community, at 3 percent of the population the country's third largest religious minority, continued to be the overwhelming majority in the Jabal al Arab, a rugged and mountainous region in southwestern Syria. The Druze religion is a tenth-century offshoot of Islam, but Muslims view Druzes as heretical for accepting the divinity ofal-Hakim , the thirdFatimid caliph ofEgypt .Christianity
The Christian communities of Syria, which comprise about 8-10 percent of the population, spring from two great traditions. Because both
Roman Catholicism andProtestantism were introduced by missionaries, a small number of Syrians are members of Western denominations. The vast majority, however, belong to the Eastern communions, which have existed in Syria since the earliest days of Christianity. The main Eastern groups are the autonomousOrthodox churches; theUniate churches, which are in communion with Rome; and the independentNestorian church. Even though each group forms a separate community, Christians nevertheless cooperate increasingly, largely because of their fear of the Muslim majority. The largest Christian denomination in Syria is theGreek Orthodox church. The Armenian Orthodox, orJacobite , church is the second largest Syrian Christian group. Among the Uniate churches, the largest is theSyrian Catholic church, a Uniate offshoot of theSyrian Orthodox church, which uses the same liturgy as theMaronites and has a similar background. TheGreek Catholic church, also known as theMelkite church, is a Uniate offshoot of the Greek Orthodox and, like it, uses Greek andArabic .With the exception of the
Armenians , most Christians are Arab, sharing the pride of Muslims in the Islamic-Arabic tradition and in Syria's special role in that tradition. Many Christians, particularly the Eastern Orthodox, have joined in the Arab nationalist movement and some are changing their Westernized names to Arabic ones. More Syrian Arab Christians participate in proportion to their number in political and administrative affairs than do Muslims. Especially among the young, relations between Christians and Muslims are improving.There are several social differences between Christians and Muslims. For example, Syrian Christians are more highly urbanized than Muslims;many live either in or around Damascus, Aleppo,
Hamah , orLatakia , and there are relatively fewer of them in the lower income groups. Proportionately more Christians than Muslims are educated beyond the primary level, and there are relatively more of them in white-collar and professional occupations. The education that Christians receive has differed in kind from that of Muslims in the sense that many more Christian children have attended Western-oriented foreign and private schools.The presence of the Christian communities is expressed also by the presence of many monasteries in several parts of the country.
Judaism
Most
Jews now living in the Arab world belong to communities dating back toOld Testament times or originating as colonies of refugees fleeing theSpanish Inquisition . In Syria, Jews of both origins, numbering altogether fewer than 3,000 in1987 , are found. After a mass-emmigration in 1992, today fewer than 200 Jews live in Syria, mostly in the capital. ASyrian Jew is Arabic-speaking and is barely distinguishable from the Arabs around him. In Syria, as elsewhere, the degree to which Jews submit to the disciplines of their religion varies.The government treats the
Jews as a religious community and not as a racial group. Official documents refer to them as musawiyin (followers ofMoses ) and not yahudin (Jews). The government's translation into English of musawiyin is "Judists."Although the Jewish community continues to exercise a certain authority over the personal status of its members, as a whole it is under considerable restriction, more because of political factors than religious ones. The economic freedom of Jews is limited, and they are under continual surveillance by the police. Their situation, although not good before the June 1967 War, has reportedly deteriorated considerably since then.
The synagogues of the Jewish community have a protected status by the Syrian government.
Yazidis
During the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the
Yazidis , whose religion dates back to the time of theUmayyad caliphate (A.D. 661-750), migrated from southern Iraq and settled in their present mountainous stronghold--Jabal Sinjar in northern Iraq. Although some are scattered in Iran,Turkey , and theCaucasus , Iraq is the center of their religious life, the home of their amir, and the site (north ofMosul ) of the tomb of their most revered saint, Shaykh Adi.In 1964, there were about 10,000 Yazidis in Syria, primarily in the Jazirah and at Aleppo; population data were not available in 1987. Once seminomadic, most Yazidis now are settled; they have no great chiefs and, although generally Kurdish-speaking, gradually are being assimilated into the surrounding Arab population.
Yazidis generally refuse to discuss their faith which, in any case, is known fully to only a few among them. The Yazidi religion has elements of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, as well as of paganism. Yazidis consider theBible and theQuran as sacred. Sometimes inaccurately called "devil worshipers" by other Syrians, Yazidis go to considerable lengths to placate a fallen angel symbolized as a sacred peacock called Malik Taus.Folk spiritual beliefs
In addition to the beliefs taught by the organized religions, many people believe strongly in powers of good and evil and in the efficacy of local saints. The former beliefs are especially marked among the
beduin , who use amulets, charms, and incantations as protective devices against the evil power ofjinns (spirits) and theevil eye . Belief insaint s is widespread among nonbeduin populations. Most villages contain a saint's shrine, often the grave of a local person considered to have led a particularly exemplary life. Believers, especially women, visit these shrines to pray for help, good fortune, and protection. Although the identification of the individual with his religious community is strong, belief in saints is not limited to one religious group. Persons routinely revere saints who were members of other religious communities and, in many cases, members of various faiths pray at the same shrine.Unorthodox religious beliefs of this kind are probably more common among women than men. Because they are excluded by the social separation of the sexes from much of the formal religious life of the community, women attempt to meet their own spiritual needs through informal and unorthodox religious beliefs and practices, which are passed on from generation to generation.
Religion and law
In matters of personal status, such as
birth ,marriage , andinheritance , the Christian, Jewish, and Druze minorities follow their own legal systems. All other groups, in such matters, come under the jurisdiction of the Muslim code.Although the faiths theoretically enjoy equal legal status, to some extent Islam is favored. Despite guarantees of
religious freedom , some observers maintain that the conditions of the non-Muslim minorities have been steadily deteriorating, especially since the June 1967 war. An instance of this deterioration was the nationalization of over 300 Christian schools, together with approximately 75 private Muslim schools, in the autumn of 1967. Since the early 1960s, heavyemigration of Christians has been noted; in fact, some authorities state that at least 50 percent of the 600,000 people who left during the decade ending in 1968 were Christians. Many Christians remaining in the country, fearing that they were viewed with suspicion, have attempted to demonstrate their loyalty to and solidarity with the state.ee also
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Syria
*Freedom of religion in Syria
*Human rights in Syria References
External links
* [http://faculty-staff.ou.edu/L/Joshua.M.Landis-1/Islamic%20Education%20in%20Syria.htm Islamic Education in Syria]
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