Berliner Boersenzeitung - Who are the Middle East's Druze religious community?

EUR -
AED 4.326998
AFN 75.393857
ALL 95.5279
AMD 434.702457
ANG 2.108524
AOA 1081.424837
ARS 1646.882189
AUD 1.625688
AWG 2.123385
AZN 2.007315
BAM 1.958422
BBD 2.372365
BDT 144.530626
BGN 1.965061
BHD 0.444591
BIF 3504.616123
BMD 1.178022
BND 1.4937
BOB 8.139898
BRL 5.789277
BSD 1.177872
BTN 111.230009
BWP 15.815175
BYN 3.328957
BYR 23089.235637
BZD 2.368961
CAD 1.611929
CDF 2727.12188
CHF 0.914805
CLF 0.026656
CLP 1049.09994
CNY 8.011435
CNH 8.006045
COP 4417.229942
CRC 541.476707
CUC 1.178022
CUP 31.217589
CVE 110.402975
CZK 24.303664
DJF 209.358573
DKK 7.472714
DOP 70.053793
DZD 155.802101
EGP 62.103687
ERN 17.670333
ETB 183.933564
FJD 2.572216
FKP 0.865636
GBP 0.864374
GEL 3.15756
GGP 0.865636
GHS 13.269767
GIP 0.865636
GMD 85.996041
GNF 10334.916001
GTQ 8.994042
GYD 246.469993
HKD 9.222129
HNL 31.315928
HRK 7.533499
HTG 154.22649
HUF 354.383295
IDR 20450.46585
ILS 3.417801
IMP 0.865636
INR 111.208774
IQD 1543.166109
IRR 1546625.381397
ISK 143.789847
JEP 0.865636
JMD 185.658574
JOD 0.835264
JPY 184.485395
KES 152.142024
KGS 102.983297
KHR 4726.32797
KMF 493.591725
KPW 1060.162209
KRW 1722.139364
KWD 0.362466
KYD 0.981714
KZT 544.390349
LAK 25833.587986
LBP 105047.746667
LKR 379.223933
LRD 216.159411
LSL 19.325575
LTL 3.478394
LVL 0.712574
LYD 7.448308
MAD 10.772663
MDL 20.14397
MGA 4920.148927
MKD 61.660503
MMK 2473.383461
MNT 4216.02678
MOP 9.498017
MRU 47.08404
MUR 55.155446
MVR 18.206379
MWK 2042.2343
MXN 20.257447
MYR 4.619071
MZN 75.280013
NAD 19.325575
NGN 1601.462759
NIO 43.344169
NOK 10.842499
NPR 177.984299
NZD 1.975367
OMR 0.452939
PAB 1.177977
PEN 4.07249
PGK 5.201501
PHP 71.273294
PKR 328.276462
PLN 4.233989
PYG 7194.991899
QAR 4.305381
RON 5.219078
RSD 117.387604
RUB 87.410372
RWF 1726.912122
SAR 4.455323
SBD 9.462179
SCR 16.493534
SDG 707.406677
SEK 10.861006
SGD 1.492205
SHP 0.879513
SLE 28.983666
SLL 24702.532559
SOS 673.201333
SRD 44.056898
STD 24382.681668
STN 24.530657
SVC 10.306881
SYP 130.223224
SZL 19.312858
THB 37.941785
TJS 10.990615
TMT 4.134858
TND 3.421581
TOP 2.836395
TRY 53.436978
TTD 7.982977
TWD 36.926878
TZS 3060.965929
UAH 51.739962
UGX 4413.515765
USD 1.178022
UYU 46.978711
UZS 14287.856164
VES 584.545302
VND 30991.408731
VUV 139.037421
WST 3.18548
XAF 656.836423
XAG 0.014592
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.183664
XCG 2.122853
XDR 0.819328
XOF 656.777804
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.080331
ZAR 19.296287
ZMK 10603.617886
ZMW 22.427027
ZWL 379.322676
  • RYCEF

    -1.0800

    16.37

    -6.6%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    23.11

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    0.5100

    16.2

    +3.15%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    50.41

    -0.18%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    58.28

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    2.2700

    105.38

    +2.15%

  • AZN

    0.3300

    182.85

    +0.18%

  • NGG

    0.9800

    86.89

    +1.13%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    24.14

    -1.78%

  • RELX

    0.0759

    33.58

    +0.23%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.15

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.1140

    23.534

    +0.48%

  • BCC

    -2.0900

    70.67

    -2.96%

  • BP

    -0.4700

    43.34

    -1.08%

Who are the Middle East's Druze religious community?
Who are the Middle East's Druze religious community? / Photo: Jalaa MAREY - AFP

Who are the Middle East's Druze religious community?

The Druze are a prominent religious community of more than a million people spread mainly across Syria, Lebanon and Israel, who for centuries have sought to preserve a distinct identity.

Text size:

In Syria, Druze fighters recently clashed with forces loyal to the country's new Islamist rulers, highlighting the struggles they and other minority groups have faced with shifts in regional power dynamics.

"The Druze are a kind of an ultra-tribe which transcends space and geography," said Makram Rabah, assistant professor of history at the American University of Beirut.

Despite being a minority in a majority Sunni Muslim region, the Middle East's Druze have played "a very important role", Rabah said.

Here is a look at the community:

- Religion and customs -

The Druze emerged in Egypt in the early 11th century as a branch of the Ismaili sect of Shiite Islam.

They are monotheistic and call themselves "muwahhidun", or unitarians.

The sect is highly secretive and includes mystical elements like reincarnation.

It does not allow new converts and marriage outside the community is strongly discouraged.

A source familiar with Druze rituals, requesting anonymity to discuss matters considered sensitive, said the faith's emergence was influenced by other religious and philosophical teachings, including those of Greek philosopher Plato.

Some Druze religious occasions align with those of other Islamic sects.

Traditional Druze garb is black, with men wearing white caps or turbans and women covering their heads and part of their faces with a flowing white scarf.

- Where are they? -

"The Druze don't really recognise borders," Rabah said.

"You have marriages and you have standing relationships between the Druze across the region," he said, adding that "clerics play a very important role in keeping this relationship alive."

Before Syria's civil war erupted in 2011, the community was estimated at around 700,000 people.

According to "The Druze Faith" by historian Sami Makarem, Druze have been migrating to southern Syria since the 16th century, to an area now known as Jabal al-Druze, meaning Druze Mountain, in Sweida province.

Syria's Druze are now mainly concentrated in their Sweida heartland, as well as nearby Quneitra province, with smaller pockets in the Damascus suburbs, notably Jaramana and Sahnaya, which recently saw sectarian violence.

In Lebanon, an estimated 200,000 Druze are concentrated in the mountainous centre as well as in the south near Israel and Syria.

In Israel, some 153,000 Druze are Israeli citizens, living mainly in the north. Unlike other Arab Israelis, Druze serve in the Israeli army.

In the Israeli-annexed Syrian Golan Heights, more than 22,000 Druze hold permanent resident status. Only around 1,600 have become Israeli citizens, while others remain attached to their Syrian identity.

Israel seized much of the Golan from Syria in 1967, annexing the area in 1981 in a move largely unrecognised internationally.

The move separated extended families, though Druze in the annexed Golan were often able to cross into Syria to study, attend weddings or sell produce.

Some Druze from southern Syria also settled in neighbouring Jordan, where the community is estimated at 15,000 to 20,000.

Two delegations of Syrian Druze clerics have made pilgrimages to a holy site in Israel this year, even though the two countries are technically at war with each other.

Outside the Middle East, Druze have migrated to regions including the Americas and Australia.

Well-known Druze include prominent human rights lawyer Amal Alamuddin Clooney and Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi.

- Leading role -

Despite their minority status, Druze "have filled an important and sometimes a leading role in the political and social life" of the Middle East, according to historian Makarem.

In Syria, Druze Sultan Pasha al-Atrash led a nationalist revolt against the French mandatory power which had established a Druze statelet in southern Syria during the 1920s and 1930s.

In Lebanon, Druze leader Kamal Jumblatt played a key role in politics from the 1950s until his 1977 assassination, and his son Walid is a powerful politician.

Jumblatt last month urged Syria's Druze to reject "Israeli interference", after Israel warned the Islamist authorities who ousted president Bashar al-Assad against harming the minority.

Druze leaders have declared their loyalty to a united Syria, though some have called for international protection following recent sectarian violence.

Israeli Druze spiritual leader Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif has urged Israel to protect Syria's Druze.

Rabah said there was a Druze "power struggle across three states", adding that he believes Syria's community does not aspire to statehood.

The Druze largely stayed on the sidelines of Syria's war after it erupted in 2011, focusing on defending their heartland.

Most Druze armed groups have yet to reach a settlement with the new authorities.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)