Middle East Facts
- A variety of countries make up
the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), including Algeria, Bahrain,
Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman,
Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab
Emirates, and Yemen.
- Widely spoken languages in the Middle East and North Africa include Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Berber,
Kurdish, French, and English.
- The Middle East has been referred to as the crossroads of the world? because it connects the three
continents of Asia, Africa, and Europe.
- The majority of Muslims do not live in the Middle East. More Muslims live in South Asia than in the Middle East and North Africa combined.
- The country with the world's largest Muslim population is Indonesia, which is in South Asia, not the Middle East.
- Roughly 60% of the population in the Middle East is under 25 years old.
- The term “Arab” generally refers to people who speak Arabic as their first language.
- The majority of Arabs are
Muslims, but the majority of Muslims are not Arabs.
- The words Islam and Muslim are derived from the Arabic word salam, which means peace.
- Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are the three largest monotheistic and Abrahamic religions in the world,
each of which originates in the Middle East.
- The Islamic calendar is based
on lunar cycles, unlike the Gregorian and other calendars that are based
on the Earth's rotation around the sun.
- The Arabic language uses the
same punctuation marks as English, but some of them are inverted or
reversed.
- Arabic is the most commonly spoken language in the Middle East. It is the official language of more
than 20 countries and is spoken by approximately 300 million people
worldwide.
- Sunni Muslims make up roughly
85% - 90% of the global Muslim population and 60% of the population in the Middle East.
- The global population of
Muslims is approximately 1.6 billion people, roughly 23% of the world’s
population.
- The term “mocha” is derived
from the city of Mocha in Yemen, where coffee production was
commercialized by the year 1400.
- In 1997, three men from Yemen
tried to sue NASA for trespassing on Mars, claiming they had inherited it
from their ancestors 3,000 years ago.
- Arabic is the world’s 5th most widely spoken language after Chinese, Spanish, English, and Hindi.
- Some of the world’s oldest civilizations were connected with parts of today’s Middle East. These include the Egyptian, Sumerian, Assyrian, and Babylonian civilizations.
- Three of the seven wonders of
the ancient world are in the Middle East: the Great Pyramid of Giza, the
Hanging Gardens of Babylon, and the Lighthouse of Alexandria.
- Cairo, Egypt is the largest city in the Middle East with a population of roughly 16 million.
- The world’s tallest building,
the Burj Khalifa in Dubai is 2,717 feet tall and the second tallest building is the Royal Clock Tower Hotel in Mecca, which is 1,972 feet tall.
- The five pillars of Islam are
prayer, pilgrimage to Mecca, the profession of faith, fasting, and
almsgiving.
- The Prophet Muhammed had four daughters and three sons. Each of these children died before Muhammad,
except for Fatimah.
- There are no permanent rivers
in Saudi Arabia, but the country does have permanently or intermittently
dry riverbeds, which are called wadis.
- Ibn al-Haytham, the
eleventh-century Middle Eastern scientist, mathematician, astronomer, and
philosopher wrote a seven-volume book on optics and is widely considered
to be one of the world's first theoretical physicists.
- Abu Rayhan al-Biruni, the
eleventh-century Middle Eastern scholar explained the lunar eclipse six
centuries prior to Galileo.
- Ibn Bajjah, the twelfth-century
Middle Eastern scholars proposed an early version of Newton’s third law of
motion, which states that for every action there is an equal and opposite
reaction.
- Psychiatric hospitals were first constructed in Baghdad and Cairo in the 8th and 9th centuries CE.
- Tulips were cultivated by the
Ottomans and exported to Europe in the early modern period, resulting in
“tulip mania” in which tulip bulbs were bought and sold at exorbitant
prices, especially in the Netherlands.
- Coffee houses were first
popularized in the capital city of the Ottoman Empire, Istanbul, in the
sixteenth century.
- Many English words are derived
from Arabic, especially words that relate to science, which indicates that
Europeans heavily borrowed from Middle Eastern scientists in the Middle
Ages. Borrowed words include: alcohol, algebra, alkali, almanac, amalgam,
chemistry, elixir, lemon, magazine, sodium, zero, tobacco, guitar, and
traffic.
- Middle Eastern scientists in
the Middle Ages made great contributions to science and launched entirely
new fields of study, especially in algebra, chemistry, medicine, trigonometry,
optics, and astronomy.
- The shopping mall is a
derivative of the pre-modern bazaar, which flourished in the Middle East.
Currently, the largest shopping mall in the world is in Dubai, which includes the major international fashion labels.
- The domestication of cats traces its history back to the Middle East. Archeologists have discovered
evidence of cat domestication in Turkey in the sixth millennium BCE.
- Sufism refers to the inner mystical dimension of Islam as well as the social organization of Muslims into brotherhoods or orders.
- The Hadith is a collection of the reports attributed to the actions and sayings of the Prophet Muhammad.
After the Quran Hadith reports are the most authoritative source of knowledge and authority for Muslims.
- Lebanon’s mountainous geography and Mediterranean coastline make it possible to ski in the morning and visit the beach in the afternoon.
- The popularity of Kentucky
Fried Chicken in Gaza, Palestine is evidenced by the fact that some people
smuggle it (along with many other goods) through tunnels from Egypt.
- The United Arab Emirates is
attempting to build one of the first zero-carbon cities, Masdar City, with
driverless electric cars and a university that will specialize in green
technology.
- Immigrants make up roughly 90%
of the population in the United Arab Emirates, most of whom are migrant
workers.
- The Majlis al-Jinn (Congress of the Spirits) cave in Oman is one of the top 10 largest caves in the world.
- The United Arab Emirates and
Bahrain has very low crime rates, lower than Germany, the United States,
Canada, Britain, Australia, or New Zealand.
- One of the best-preserved Roman temples in the world is in Lebanon, in the Phoenician city of Baalbek,
referred to as Heliopolis during the Hellenistic period.
- Bayt al-Hikma (House of
Wisdom), established in ninth-century Baghdad, contained one of the
largest libraries in the world and the first observatory in the Islamic
world.
- The first mosque in the United
States is known as the “Mother Mosque of America” or ”The Rose of
Fraternity Lodge,” and was built in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1934.
- Major bodies of water in or
bordering the Middle East include the Amu Darya River, Nile River, Tigris
River, Euphrates River, Jordan River, Lake Van, Lake Urmia, Suez Canal,
Mediterranean Sea, Indian Ocean, Persian Gulf, Black Sea, Dead Sea, and The Red Sea.
- Major cities in the Middle East
include Damascus, Syria; Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Istanbul, Turkey; Baghdad,
Iraq; Tehran, Iran; Tel Aviv, Israel; Amman, Jordan; Kuwait City, Kuwait;
Sanaa, Yemen; Dubai, UAE; Gaza, Palestine; and Beirut, Lebanon.
- The Middle East and North
Africa includes diverse geographical features, such as the Zagros
Mountains, Hindu Kush Mountains, Rub al-Khali Desert, the Sahara Desert,
Anatolian Plateau, Kara Kum Desert, and the Taurus Mountains, and the Atlas
Mountains.
- The Dead Sea Depression is the lowest point on Earth (roughly 415 meters below sea level) and includes
the Dead Sea, Sea of Galilee, Jordan River, cultivated land, and settled
communities.
- The harp, lyre, zither, drum,
and tambourine were all developed in the Middle East.
- Ghawar is the largest oil field in the world. Along with Safaniya (the world’s third-largest oil field and
largest offshore oil field), Ghawar has allowed Saudi Arabia to produce
more oil than any other country.
- Iran is the first country in the Middle East where oil was discovered, in 1908. The Anglo-Persian Oil The company (later rebranded as British Petroleum, or BP) was formed in 1909,
and the British government became its largest stakeholder in 1914.
- 4.3% of the land in the Middle
East and North Africa (MENA) are farmable.
- Thomas Jefferson acquired a
copy of the Quran eleven years before writing the Declaration of
Independence and later obtained countless books about Middle Eastern
history, languages, and Islam.
- Copts are the largest population of Christians in the Middle East, who speak Arabic and live
primarily in Egypt and surrounding countries.
- The Middle East is composed of
people from many ethnicities, including Arabs, Persians, Turks, Kurds, and
Armenians.
- According to per capita income,
Qatar is one of the richest countries in the world with a per capita GDP
of nearly US $10,000.
- Idaho State University offers a
student exchange program through Al Akhawayn University in Morocco.
- Originally Muslims faced
Jerusalem when they prayed, but Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) later changed the direction of
prayer to Mecca, where Muslims are encouraged to go for pilgrimage (hajj)
at least once in their life.
- Similar to Catholicism and
Protestantism in Christianity, Islam has two major sects: Shi’ism and
Sunnism. The two Muslim sects developed after Prophet Muhammad's (PBUH) death as a power struggle over who would become the Prophet's successor.
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