Agama di Suriah (Indonesian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Agama di Suriah" in Indonesian language version.

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arab-reform.net

archive.org

  • Drysdale, Alasdair; Hinnebusch, Raymond A. (1991), Syria and the Middle East Peace ProcessPerlu mendaftar (gratis), Council on Foreign Relations, hlm. 222, ISBN 0876091052, roughly 85 percent of all Syrians are Arabic-speaking and some 70 percent are Sunni Muslim, but these categories are not completely congruent and Arabic-speaking Sunni Muslims account for less than 60 percent of the total population. The religious and ethnic minorities that comprise 40 percent of Syria's population are diverse. Although 85 percent of all Syrians are Muslim and almost all the rest are Christian, both communities are subdivided into many sects. Among the former, the main minorities are the Alawis (11.5 percent), Druzes (3 percent) and Isma'ilis (1.5 percent), all of whom are Arabic-speaking splinter Shiite groups. The largely Arab Christians are divided among a large number of denominations, with the Greek Orthodox the largest (4.7 percent). The main ethnic minorities, among whom Arabic is now widley used, are the Kurds (8.5 percent), Armenians (4 percent), Turcomans (3 percent), and Circassians (under 1 percent). Of these, all but the Christian Armenians are Sunni Muslim. 

cmeps-j.net