Muslim refugees to U.S. outnumbered by Christians

Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City)
 Saturday


Muslim refugees to U.S. outnumbered by Christians

by Adelle M. Banks, Religion News Service For the Deseret News


WASHINGTON - Muslim refugees to the United States, whose numbers have
recently increased, have still been far outpaced by Christians
refugees over the last decade and a half.

As the Trump administration continues to enforce a travel ban
affecting six Muslim-majority and other countries, a Pew Research
Center report tracking the influx of displaced people finds that 47
percent of refugee arrivals in fiscal 2017 were Christian and 43
percent were Muslim.

In the previous fiscal year, a record number of Muslim refugees were
admitted. Pew said 46 percent of refugees entering this country were
Muslim, compared with 44 percent who were Christians.

"Even with the recent rise in the number of Muslim refugees, far more
Christian than Muslim refugees have been admitted into the U.S. since
fiscal 2002," writes Phillip Connor, a senior researcher with Pew, in
the new report.

In that 15-year period, almost 425,000 Christian refugees crossed U.S.
borders, making up 46 percent of refugee arrivals. In comparison, 33
percent, or slightly more than 302,000, of admitted refugees were
Muslim.

Almost 170,000 refugees of other religions entered at the same time,
including about 55,000 Hindus (mostly from Bhutan) and about 50,000
Buddhists (mostly from Burma and Bhutan). In addition, more than
20,000 with no religious affiliation, mostly from Vietnam or Cuba,
entered the U.S. between the fiscal years of 2002 and 2017.

In those 15 years, Christian arrivals represented nearly two dozen
branches of Christianity, such as Armenian Christian and Ukrainian
Orthodox. Those of non- Christian and non-Muslim faiths included Hare
Krishnas and Zoroastrians.

Researchers found that, overall, the U.S. is resettling fewer refugees
even as the global number of displaced people is on the increase. If
projections remain on track, the percentage of refugees admitted will
be "lower even than the share admitted in 2001 and 2002, in the wake
of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks," Connor says.

The Pew findings were based on analyses of reports from the U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees and the State Department.

Other findings about refugees entering the U.S. from 2002 to 2017 show
that they:

* Increasingly come from the Middle East and Africa.

* Speak Arabic more than any other language.

* Are accepted most by California, Texas and New York.