Persian Arab

For Arabs settled in Iran, see Iranian Arabs.

Persian Arab generally refers to people who are of both mixed Arab and Persian ethnic or cultural background.

Many Arabs in Bahrain, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates and the other Gulf states are of Persian ancestry.

History and current situation

In pre-Islamic times, there were many Arabs who lived in the cultural sphere of Persia and used Persian as their written language. These are referred to as Persian Arabs (in Arabic العرب الفرس al-?Arab al-furas).

One of Muhammed's early followers and best friend, Salman Al-Farsi, was Persian.

After the rise of Islam and the Arab conquest of Persia, Persians in turn began to use Arabic as their written language. Many famous Arabic writers were ethnic Persians and others (e.g. Harun Al-Rashid) were of mixed ancestry.

Self-identification

The term Persian Arab is rarely used as a self-appellation. Most tend to identify more strongly as either Persian or Arab and consider themselves to be members primarily of one ethnic group, but at the same time being aware of their mixed background. For many the most important factor determining their identity is the sovereign state in which they live or from which their recent ancestors came from.

In Arab countries

Many Arabs in Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, UAE and the other Gulf states are of Persian descent.

There are 500,000 Persian speakers in Iraq, 400,000 in UAE, 194,000 in Qatar, 177,000 in Bahrain and 118,000 in Kuwait.[1]

In Iran

Conversely, ethnic Arabs and Arabic speakers living primarily in the Khuzestan province of Iran.[2][3] Most of them self-identify as Iranian Arabs, or Ahvazis,(see Ahvaz) and consider their mother tongue to be Arabic, though almost all are bilingual in Persian and many may have a better command of written Persian than written Arabic, since the medium of education at schools in Iran is Persian. Some Arabs (e.g. those of the Khamseh clans) even use Persian as first language.[4]

See also

References

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