Berbers in France

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Berbers in France
Total population
(over 2,000,000[1][2] (1 million Kabyles [3]))
Regions with significant populations
Paris, Marseille, Lyon, Strasbourg, Lille, Bordeaux, Toulouse.
Languages
French, Berber languages
Religion
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Berbers

Berbers in France are people of Berber descent living in France. Berbers in France, who generally call themselves Amazigh and not Maghrebis, are estimated to number over 2 million people.[1][2]

Berbers and discrimination in France

In March 1990, according to a poll reported in Le Monde, 76% of those polled said that there were too many Berbers in France while 39% said they had an "aversion" to Berbers.[4] In the following years, Interior Minister Charles Pasqua was noted for dramatically toughening immigration laws.[5]

In May 2005, riots broke out between North Africans and Romani people in Perpignan, after a young North African man was shot dead and another North African man was lynched by a group of Roma.[6][7]

The "Hijab ban" law, presented as secularization of schools, and supported by all major parties in the French parliament, as well as many feminists,[8] was interpreted by its critics as an "indirect legitimization of anti-Muslim stereotypes, fostering rather than preventing racism."[5]

In 2010, a poll found that 28 percent of French people think that Berbers are "more likely to commit crimes than members of other ethnic groups".[9]

Notable people

Entertainment

Cinema
Music

Sports

Politics

Journalism

Writer

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Yazid Sabeg et Laurence Méhaignerie, Les oubliés de l'égalité des chances, Institut Montaigne, 2004
  2. 2.0 2.1 Pour une histoire sociale du berbère en France, Salem Shaker, Inalco, 2004
  3. http://www.centrederechercheberbere.fr/kabyle.html
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  8. Alex Duval Smith: France divided as headscarf ban is set to become law The Guardian, February 1, 2013
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