Houston Chronicle Sunday

Europe’s Muslim population still on the rise

- By Emily McFarlan Miller

Even if migration to Europe ceased — no immigrants, no refugees — the percentage of Muslims in those countries would still rise over the next three decades.

That’s according to new projection­s released recently by the Pew Research Center.

Though it hasn’t been long since Pew made its last projection­s on population growth of world religions, which were based on 2010 numbers, a record number of asylum seekers from Syria and other predominan­tly Muslim countries has changed the picture considerab­ly.

As of mid-2016, Muslims make up nearly 5 percent of the population in the 28 countries of the European Union, plus Norway and Switzerlan­d, according to the new Pew report. That’s an estimated 25.8 million people — fewer than Pew originally estimated. It’s up from 19.5 million (or nearly 4 percent of the population) in 2010.

By comparison, Muslims make up about 1 percent of the population in the United States and could reach 2 percent by 2050, according to Pew estimates released earlier this year.

The new European numbers are based on Pew analysis and projection­s of census and survey data from each country, as well as data on immigratio­n from Eurostat and other sources.

With the recent wave of Muslim immigrants and refugees to Europe, anti-Muslim movements have sprung up in several countries, including PEGIDA (Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisati­on of the West), which has protested the arrival of Muslim migrants, claiming Germany will be “overrun” by Muslims.

That sentiment can cross the Atlantic: On Wednesday, President Trump retweeted three inflammato­ry videos purporting to show violence committed by Muslims that had been posted by the deputy leader of the farright group Britain First, Jayda Fransen.

How much Europe’s Muslim population actually will grow over the next three decades depends on future migration and birthrates. Pew created projection­s for three possible scenarios.

If all migration to Europe stopped, the Muslim population could grow to 7.4 percent by the year 2050. One reason for that growth is that European Muslims are younger than other Europeans by 13 years, on average. They also have more children — an average one more child per woman.

If no more refugees were admitted into European countries as of mid-2016, but immigratio­n continued at its current pace, the Muslim population could more than double to 11.2 percent.

If refugees and immigrants continued to come to Europe in similar numbers with a similar religious makeup from now until 2050, the Muslim population could nearly triple to 14 percent.

Previously, Pew had estimated Europe’s Muslim population at nearly 6 percent of the region, projecting it would reach 10 percent by 2050.

Meantime, Europe’s total population would drop from about 521 million to an estimated 482 million without any future migration, according to the report.

The non-Muslim population is projected to decline in each scenario — at most, by about 10 percent in the scenario with no migration.

But even the scenario with the largest growth leaves the Muslim population considerab­ly smaller than the population­s of both Christians and people with no religion in Europe.

“There will be no country where Muslims make up more than a third of the population,” said Conrad Hackett, Pew’s associate director of research and senior demographe­r.

“There have been sort of sensationa­listic claims that due to different fertility or migration patterns, France or other countries might perhaps have a Muslim majority by midcentury. Even in our highest scenario, we just don’t find that to be an outcome that would materializ­e.”

 ?? Andrew Testa / New York Times ?? Worshipper­s pray in the parking lot of London’s Al Madina Mosque, where all the main prayer areas are full. In the working-class East London neighborho­od of Barking, roughly 9,000 people attended the morning prayer session.
Andrew Testa / New York Times Worshipper­s pray in the parking lot of London’s Al Madina Mosque, where all the main prayer areas are full. In the working-class East London neighborho­od of Barking, roughly 9,000 people attended the morning prayer session.
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