Afghans in Germany
Total population | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
297,000 (2020)[1] | |||||||
Regions with significant populations | |||||||
Hamburg, Northrhine-Westphalia (Essen, Dortmund), Hesse (Frankfurt, Darmstadt), Bavaria (Munich), Lower Saxony (Hanover) | |||||||
Languages | |||||||
Pashto, Dari (Afghan Persian), German | |||||||
Religion | |||||||
predominantly Islam with minorities of Hinduism, Sikhism, Christianity, Judaism and Irreligion |
German Afghans (German: Afghanistanstämmige in Deutschland) are German citizens with Afghan ancestry and non-citizen residents born in, or with ancestors from, Afghanistan. It is the largest Afghan community in Europe and part of the worldwide Afghan diaspora, of which it is one of the largest. In 2019, the Federal Statistical Office of Germany estimated the number of people of Afghan descent residing in Germany at 253,000, making it the ninth largest foreign background community in the country,[2] the third largest from outside the EU, and the largest group from Asia excluding the Middle East and Caucusus.[3] In particular, there are 35,805 Afghans in Hamburg alone (as of 2015).[4] Offenbach am Main and Hamburg had the highest shares of Afghan migrants among all German districts in 2011.[5]
The Afghan community in Germany is heterogeneous with various political views, as they are in Afghanistan (see Demography of Afghanistan). Though with the NATO involvement in Afghanistan, the community has come closer together due to shared hopes and worries; however, there are relatively few representative associations or organizations.
History[]
In the 1970s, about 2,000 Afghans resided in West Germany, most were businessmen and students. The trade city of Hamburg particularly attracted Afghan carpet traders who would sell Afghan carpets. With the onset of the Soviet-Afghan War in Afghanistan, many fled to West Germany and the population grew to about 11,000 by 1982. Another wave started in the 1990s and the Afghan population reached about 50,000 by 1994.[6]
Germany forms one of the biggest Afghan diaspora communities in the world. It was estimated that the population numbered around 70,000 as of 2001.[7]
Following the European migrant crisis, the community rapidly expanded, numbering 253,000 in 2016, up from 75,000 in 2014.[8][9] Afghanistan was one of the main sources of migration to the region, while Germany was the most prominent destination.[10]
In late December 2016, Germany decided to repatriate 11,900 Afghans back to their home country, what is known as Second collective deportation.[11]
Thousands of Afghans came to Germany following the withdrawal of German training forces in Afghanistan in 2021. They are mostly people who worked with the German army or German aid agencies in Afghanistan.[12]
Demography[]
Under the definitions of the German Federal Statistics Office, Afghan citizens who choose to obtain German citizenship will have their "statistical" migration background gone, meaning second or third generation immigrants are not put under the definition.[10] Of the approximately 156,000 Germans of Afghan descent, around 25,000 had a German or some other non-Afghan passport.[10]
Age and gender[]
Historically most Afghans came to Germany as families. From 2012 there was a rising number of Afghan asylum seekers and a shifting trend to individual arrivals of Afghan men, rather than whole families.[6] The migrants in the 2010s period were predominantly male, significantly shifting the gender balance. As of 2015, 44,778 (34.1%) of 25 to 35 year old Afghans in Germany were women.[10] The male-female ratio is somewhat balanced for adults over 35 and children under 15, but in those between 15 and 35 there is a huge male surplus.[10]
Distribution[]
In 2008 Hamburg had the highest Afghan diasporic population of any city in the continent, with 7,000 German citizens of Afghan origin and 14,000 other residents of Afghan origin. Immigration began with the start of the Soviet–Afghan War in 1979 and additional immigration came after its end. Due to the differing origins and political affiliations of the émigrés, et al. wrote in Der Spiegel that "Hamburg's Afghan community was relatively loose-knit and was rarely perceived as an ethnic group, partly because these immigrants had been so deeply divided at home that there was little left to unite them as a community abroad."[13] Therefore, the residents focused internally on their own families and keeping them together.[13]
The large Afghan community in Hamburg make the city feel like home to many German Afghans, despite the low-lying port city contrasting to the mountainous and landlocked Afghanistan.[14]
The single state with the most Afghan citizens as of 2017 was Bavaria followed by Hesse and North Rhine Westphalia. The community predominantly resides in territory belonging to the former West Germany.[10] While Hamburg continues to have the highest concentration of Afghans, the population is now more spread out in the country than before, and by 2015 all states in former East Germany had numbers in the thousands.[10]
State | Population |
---|---|
Baden-Württemberg | 9,995 |
Bavaria | 21,891 |
Berlin | 8,138 |
Brandenburg | 2,868 |
Bremen | 1,018 |
Hamburg | 14,468 |
Hesse | 19,171 |
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania | 2,232 |
Lower Saxony | 9,085 |
North Rhine-Westphalia | 18,954 |
Rhineland Palatinate | 5,126 |
Saarland | 1,147 |
Saxony | 6,123 |
Saxony Anhalt | 2,242 |
Schleswig-Holstein | 5,967 |
Thuringia | 3,029 |
Employment[]
Of the 1,256 Afghan students enrolled at universities in the 2015/2016 period, the majority enrolled in engineering programmes and a large number also enrolled in law. This was followed by smaller numbers in sciences, humanities and health, and even smaller in agricultural, sport and art programmes.[10]
Religion[]
Most Germans with Afghan heritage are Muslims. There is also a small population of Afghan Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Jews and nonreligious in Germany. There are 24 Afghan cultural and religious associations in Germany, most being Islamic, four Hindu, and one Sikh.[10]
Community and social issues[]
[The Afghan Diaspora in Germany is] a very heterogeneous group, as Afghanistan is a very heterogeneous country, a truly multi-ethnic country. And Afghan refugees didn’t all come to Germany at once. They came in waves.”[14]
— Dr Yahya Wardak, head of a German Afghan organization
Many of the early Afghan migrants were well-educated and professionally trained in Afghanistan, however they found difficulties finding work in their professional fields. Over years the backgrounds of the migrants have become more diverse, and the more recent ones tend to be less educated or professionally trained by comparison.[6]
Some Afghans in Germany feel their representation in society is limited, despite it being one of the country's largest immigrant groups.[14]
Associations include the Afghan-German Association for Education, Health and Crafts founded in 2002, the Afghanistan Information Center founded in 1993, and the Afghan Women's Association founded in 1992.[15] About 130 association with clear connections to Afghanistan have been identified in Germany as of 2017.[10] These comprise groups mainly related to politics and integration, education and social affairs, culture, religion and health.[10]
From 1998 to 2011 the privately owned Afghan Museum operated in Hamburg's Speicherstadt district.
In 2016 there were 157 underage individuals of Afghan origin in child marriages according to the interior ministry.[16]
Notable people[]
- Hamid Rahimi
- Hamid Jafari
- Izatullah Dawlatzai
- Nadiem Amiri
- Khaibar Amani
- Abassin Alikhil
- Mustafa Hadid
- Nasrat Haqparast
- Josef Shirdel
- Massih Wassey
- Milad Salem
- Masih Saighani
- Benjamin Nadjem
- Yusuf Barak
- Ahmad Milad Karimi
- Morsal Obeidi
- Burhan Qurbani
- Zallascht Sadat
- Ata Yamrali
- Sandjar Ahmadi
- Zamir Daudi
- Zohre Esmaeli
- Mansur Faqiryar
- Kabir Stori
- Rangin Dadfar Spanta
- Sulaiman Layeq
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "Population in private households according to migration background in the broader sense according to selected countries of birth". DeStatis (Federal Office of Statistics). Retrieved 14 August 2020.
- ^ Population with a migration background in Germany - Results of the German microcensus (PDF)
- ^ https://www.destatis.de/DE/Themen/Gesellschaft-Umwelt/Bevoelkerung/Migration-Integration/Publikationen/Downloads-Migration/auslaend-bevoelkerung-2010200207004.pdf?__blob=publicationFile
- ^ Population with a migration background in Hamburg's districts at the end of 2015 (PDF), p. 3. Retrieved October 25, 2016.
- ^ "Kartenseite: Afghanen in Deutschland - Landkreise". kartenseite.wordpress.com. 2017-03-26. Retrieved 2017-05-14.
- ^ a b c Afghan Migration to Germany: History and Current Debates
- ^ "Plight of Afghans in Germany". Christian Science Monitor. 20 June 2001.
- ^ "Ausländer aus Afghanistan in Deutschland bis 2020".
- ^ "Second collective deportation of rejected asylum seekers from Germany arrives in Afghanistan - Germany - DW - 24.01.2017". DW.COM.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k https://www.daug-online.org/downloads/references/reports/cim2018-en-diaspora-afghanistan.pdf
- ^ "Germany launches second wave of controversial Afghan deportations". 24 January 2017.
- ^ "As the election approaches, Germany welcomes Afghan refugees — for now". CNBC. 20 August 2021.
- ^ a b ; Per Hinrichs; Susanne Koelbl; Gunther Latsch; Sven Röbel; Andreas Ulrich (2008-05-27). "The High Price of Freedom". Der Spiegel. Translated by Christopher Sultan. p. 1. Retrieved 2019-11-30. - Original German version: Gutsch, Jochen-Martin; Hinrichs, Per; Koelbl, Susanne; Latsch, Gunther; Röbel, Sven; Ulrich, Andreas (25 May 2008). "Eigentum des Mannes". Der Spiegel. - PDF page
- ^ a b c "How does Europe's largest Afghan diaspora view the crisis back home?". 15 September 2021.
- ^ https://www.vidc.org/fileadmin/michael/studien/a_guide_to_afghan_diaspora_engagement_in_europe_.pdf
- ^ "Kinderehen: 1475 Minderjährige in Deutschland sind verheiratet". Spiegel Online. 2016-09-09. Retrieved 2018-04-02.
- Afghan diaspora in Europe
- Asian diaspora in Germany
- Islam in Germany
- Muslim communities in Europe
- Afghanistan–Germany relations
- German people of Afghan descent