FRANCE’S
MUSLIM DEMOGRAPHIC FUTURE, by Yves Mamou,
Searchlight Germany, February 20. 2017:
France’s
Muslim population could quickly grow to close to 15-17 million, but no one can
know precisely unless the law prohibiting the official collection of ethnic
data is changed.
These
figures do not take into consideration the Muslim population that immigrated to
France from North Africa in the 1960s and early 1970s. There are a few million
of them — nobody knows how many exactly. For demographers, their grandchildren
and great-grandchildren are not regarded as immigrants anymore. These Muslims
are, rather, integrated into statistics as French citizens born of French
parents. They are Muslim, but under the statistics radar.
From time to time, France’s National
Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (Insee) offers a glimpse of the
ethnic composition of French society. The study,
“Being born in France to an immigrant parent” (Être né en France d’un parent immigré), published in February
2017, is one of them.
Like few other glimpses, the Insee study offers a partial view of the ethnic
composition of the French population. A statistical breakdown with the answer
to the perennial question: how many Muslims in France? — would be perceived as
discriminatory and outrageous. Given France’s “integration model,” nobody
should dare identify people by their origins, religion, color of skin and so
on. A Frenchman is a Frenchman, whatever the color of his skin or his religion,
and any measurement of the sub-Saharan population — for example, their level of
education, that of their children, the type of jobs their parents are doing,
how many times they go to mosque or if they have spent time in prison — is
illegal, discriminatory and racist. Sub-Saharan populations must disappear in
aggregate data about French people.
The study, however, provides some
telling information. In 2015, 7.3 million people born in France had at least
one immigrant parent (11% of the population). Of these 7.3 million people, 45%
are of European origin, most of whom are children of immigrants who arrived in
France from Spain (8%) or Italy (12%) as early as the 1930s, or from Portugal
in the 1970s onwards. One can assume, although it is not written in the study,
that these people are of Christian origin.
Another group is composed of Africans. 42% of the 7.3 million children born in
France to an immigrant parent are of African background, mainly North Africa.
They came from Algeria (15%), Morocco (11%), Tunisia (5%) and sub-Saharan
Africa (11%). Although it is also not specified in the study, it would seem
that the great majority are Muslim.
Another group, children from Turkish migrant families, represent 4% of the 7.3 million. These people are classified as Asian; they are not included in the African and Muslim group. Most of these Turks are also presumably Muslim.
Another group, children from Turkish migrant families, represent 4% of the 7.3 million. These people are classified as Asian; they are not included in the African and Muslim group. Most of these Turks are also presumably Muslim.
A conclusion therefore would assume that 46% of the descendants of immigrants
are Muslim and 45% are Christian. The remaining 9% are from East Asia or the
Americas.
A
new study from France’s National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies,
“Being born in France to an immigrant parent,” provides some telling
information on the ethnic composition of French society.
Criticizing the limited data of this
study, Michèle Tribalat, a French demographer, published some personal conclusions in Atlántico,
a news website. First, Tribalat expressed her regrets “not to have the
population figures of persons of foreign origin for two generations”. But, she
said, it is not so difficult to compile it one’s self.
“If we add the two generations
(immigrants and children of immigrants), this gives a total of 13.5 million, or
20.4% of the population. Thus, we have slightly more than one inhabitant out of
five of foreign origin, across two generations, in 2015”.
Asked by Gatestone how she came to the
13.5 million figure, she replied:
“Very simple. I added the 2015 migrant
population (6.2 million) to the Insee’s 7.3 million children of immigrants, and
it came to 13.5 million.”
In her Atlántico article, Tribalat maintains that more
important than the 2015 data picture, is the growth-rate that led to the 2015
figure. Tribalat calculated her own estimates of this growth, with starting
points in the years 1986, 1999 and 2011, coming up with figures of a stunningly
fast growth for the number of migrants over two generations: the 13.2 million
migrants of 2015 (20.5%; 300,000 that are “missing” are from French overseas
territories), were 12.1 million four years earlier and 9.8 million in 1999. In
other words, 19.2% in 2011 and 16.8% in 1999. The population of French persons
of foreign origin would therefore have increased, when looking at two
generations, by 9% between 2011 and 2015 alone.
For the same period, French children
born in France to parents born in France increased by only 2.6%, writes
Tribalat.
Consequently, France’s population is
increasing significantly only because of immigration. But which immigration?
Christian or Muslim?
Tribalat continues:“I showed that the
annual average rate of increase of immigrants was almost zero between 1975 and
1999. But it is not the same story from 1999-2015. … The population of sub-Saharan origin is the one that grows more quickly.
In four years (2011-2015), looking at two-generations (immigrants and children
of immigrants), the sub-Saharan population seems to have increased by 43%. This population is extremely young. In
2015, 80% of the children of sub-Saharan immigrants are under 25 years of age”.
(Author’s emphasis)
These conclusions are confirmed by
another Insee study, “Demography of the
descendants of immigrants” (Démographie des descendants
d’immigrés), published in 2014.
“The Turkish and sub-Saharan African
population is growing at an extremely rapid rate (which could lead to a
doubling in less than 10 years if this continues)…. The total fertility rate of
women born in Turkey is approximately 3, as it is for women born in sub-Saharan
Africa. It is closer to 3.5 for women born in North Africa, while it is only 2
for women born in Europe, especially in France.”
In other words, if the Muslim population
of France can be estimated at around 6 million today, it could grow to 12
million by 2020-2025.
This figure does even not take into
consideration the Muslim population that immigrated to France from North Africa
in the 1960s and early 1970s. There are a few million of them — nobody knows
how many exactly. They became French very early, and for demographers, their
grandchildren and great-grandchildren are not regarded as immigrants anymore.
These Muslims are, rather, integrated into statistics as French citizens born
of French parents. They are Muslim, but under the statistics radar.
France’s Muslim population could quickly
grow to close to 15-17 million, but no one can know precisely unless the law
prohibiting the official collection of ethnic data is changed.
These questions are not spoken about
openly in the fierce pre-election presidential debate raging in France. The
question is not politically correct. But in these times of expanding Islamism,
they weigh silently in favo
Comments
The Muslim
population in France is reported as 8% according to government statistics, but
it could be closer to 25%, with 15 million of its 65 million population.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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