الموارنة | |
---|---|
Total population | |
c. 7–12 million[1][2][3][4][5][6] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Lebanon 1.4 million (2006)[7] | |
Brazil | 3–4 million (incl. ancestry)[8] |
United States | 1.2 million (incl. ancestry)[8] |
Argentina | 750,000[9] |
France | 285,520[10][11][12] |
Mexico | 167,190[9] |
Australia | 161,370[9] |
Canada | 96,100[9] |
Syria | 50,000–60,000[9] |
Venezuela | 25,000[13] |
South Africa | 20,000[14] |
Cyprus | 13,170[9] |
Israel | 10,000[9] |
Egypt | 6,350[nb 1][9] |
Nigeria | 5,850[15] |
Germany | 5,400[13] |
UK | 5,300[13] |
Belgium | 3,400[13] |
Côte d'Ivoire | 2,250–3,000[15] |
Italy | 2,500[13] |
Sweden | 2,470[13] |
Switzerland | 2,000[13] |
Jordan | 1,000–1,500[9] |
Jerusalem and Palestine | 513[9] |
Languages | |
Lebanese Aramaic (Historical)[20][21] Classical Syriac[22][23] and Arabic[24][25][26] (Liturgical) | |
Religion | |
Maronite Catholicism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Other Lebanese Christians[27] |
Maronites (Arabic: الموارنة, romanized: Al-Mawārinah; Syriac: ܡܖ̈ܘܢܝܐ, romanized: Marunoye) are a Syriac Christian ethnoreligious group[28] native to the Eastern Mediterranean and the Levant whose members belong to the Maronite Church. The largest concentration has traditionally resided near Mount Lebanon in modern Lebanon.[29] The Maronite Church is an Eastern Catholic sui iuris particular church in full communion with the pope and the rest of the Catholic Church.[30][31]
The Maronites derive their name from Saint Maron, a Syriac Christian whose followers migrated to the area of Mount Lebanon from their previous place of residence around the area of Antioch, and established the nucleus of the Maronite Church.[32]
Christianity in Lebanon has a long and continuous history. The spread of Christianity in Lebanon was very slow where paganism persisted, especially in the mountaintop strongholds of Mount Lebanon. During the 5th century AD, Saint Maron sent Abraham of Cyrrhus, often referred to as the Apostle of Lebanon, to convert the still significant pagan population of Lebanon to Christianity. The area's inhabitants renamed the Adonis River the Abraham River after Saint Abraham preached there.[33][34]
The early Maronites were Hellenized Semites, natives of Byzantine Syria who spoke Greek and Syriac,[35] yet identified with the Greek-speaking populace of Constantinople and Antioch.[36] They were able to maintain an independent status in Mount Lebanon and its coastline after the Muslim conquest of the Levant, keeping their Christian religion, and even their distinct Lebanese Aramaic[37] as late as the 19th century.[32] While Maronites identify primarily as native Lebanese of Maronite origin, many identify as Arab Christians.[38] Others identify as descendants of Phoenicians. Some Maronites argue that they are of Mardaite ancestry, while other historians, such as Clement Joseph David, the Syriac Catholic Archbishop of Damascus, reject this.[39][40]
Mass emigration to the Americas at the outset of the 20th century, famine during World War I that killed an estimated one third to one half of the population, the 1860 Mount Lebanon conflict and the Lebanese Civil War between 1975 and 1990 greatly decreased their numbers in the Levant; however Maronites today form more than one quarter of the total population of modern-day Lebanon. Though concentrated in Lebanon, Maronites also show presence in the neighboring Levant, as well as a significant part in the Lebanese diaspora in the Americas, Europe, Australia, and Africa.
The Maronite Church, under the patriarch of Antioch, has branches in nearly all countries where Maronite Christian communities live, in both the Levant and the Lebanese diaspora.
The Maronites and the Druze founded modern Lebanon in Ottoman Lebanon in the early 18th century, through the ruling and social system known as the "Maronite-Druze dualism" in the Ottoman Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate.[41] All Lebanese presidents, with the exception of Charles Debbas and Petro Trad, have been Maronites as part of a continued tradition of the National Pact, by which the prime minister has historically been a Sunni Muslim and the speaker of the National Assembly has historically been a Shi'ite.
[E]stimates vary between 16 million émigrés of Lebanese descent and 4 million. But they all agree on the fact that Christians amount to between 65 percent and 70 percent, among whom Maronites alone represent roughly 48 percent of this diaspora, and are thus the largest 'Lebanese' community abroad
There are reportedly over seven million Maronites alone living in Brazil, the United States of America, South America, Canada, Africa, Europe and Australia.
The number of Maronites abroad is estimated to be 8 million.
There are more than 10 million Maronites around the world
Every year, on the ninth of February, more than ten million Maronites from all over the world celebrates St. Maroun's day.
There are 12 million Maronites in the world today.
Today there are about 7 million Maronites worldwide, most of them in Brazil (with 3 million or 4 million) and the United States (with 1.2 million Maronites, and 83 Maronite churches).
Britannica
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Cyprus
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Being largely mountaineers and still Syriac-speaking the Maronite community was evidently looked upon as a minority ethnic group rather than a separate denomination.
This identity was underlined by Christian resistance to adopting Arabic as the spoken language. Originally they had spoken Syriac but increasingly opted to use "Christian" languages such as Latin, Italian, and most importantly, French.
The Lebanese have never spoken Ktovonoyo, but it was and is the liturgical language of the Syriac Maronite Church. This language was taught in their schools until 1943 and it is the only language they wrote and the one they still sing in the form of hymns. It is the language taught in schools that defines the identity of the people and their land.
The continuation of the presence of the Maronite Christian Church in the United States connects people to a larger ethnic community, and most importantly, helps preserve cultural, social, and religious traditions.
Maronites started their own churches wherever they settled in the United States, a sign of their attachment to their ethnic and religious identities.
Their religious identity was part of an ethnic identification that was rigorously maintained as a result of the turmoil surrounding the history and current status of Maronites in Lebanon.
If we take as an example the Maronite community of Cyprus, it is considered as a minority by all international standards and they match perfectly the definition for national and ethnic minorities adopted by the United Nations and the Council of Europe.
The Maronite ethnic identity is centred on their religion and on a historical sense of being a distinct group.
Many petitioned the patriarch to assign Maronite priests to serve in the U.S., stressing the importance of preserving Maronite spirituality and traditions and the urgent need to convey faith, language, and ethnic traditions to the children of immigrants.
Surien (West Syriac from Canaan) The third form is also part of West Syriac but is located further west
the Maronites and the Druze, who founded Lebanon in the early eighteenth century.
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