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Arab, Jordanian of Jordan
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Arab, Jordanian of Jordan
 
Profile Text
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The country of Jordan, which is about the size of the state of Indiana, is mostly covered with desert which can support only a few Bedouin nomads. Thus the majority of its people have settled in the northern highlands, where greater rainfall can support agriculture. The capital, Amman, is the largest city, and offers almost all Western conveniences, products, restaurants, and services.

Jordan is at the crossroads of the Middle East and has served to connect Asia, Africa, and Europe as a conduit for trade and communications from ancient times until now. In 1920, Jordan was established under the name Transjordan as a British mandate, and Abdullah I was made king. Jordan was granted independence from the British in 1946, when the name of the country was officially changed to The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. King Hussein ruled from 1953 until his death in February of 1999. His eldest son, King Abdullah II assumed the throne.

In 1948, thousands of Palestinians were displaced from their homelands and became refugees in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. In the Six-Day War of 1967, Jordan lost the West Bank, which resulted in the displacement of large numbers of these refugees into Jordan, on the east side of the Jordan River. Today 60% of the total population of Jordan is Palestinian, many as refugees. Almost 300,000 are living in ten main camps, and the rest have moved into villages and cities. Most have the rights of Jordanian citizenship, and little distinction is made between them and native Jordanian Arabs.

What Are Their Lives Like?
The climate of Jordan is very different, depending on where you live. The temperature in the Jordan Valley can be very hot in summer, while the capital city of Amman may get a small amount of snow in the winter. The plateau areas are dry and warm. The desert experiences an extreme change of all temperatures.

In the villages, the Jordanian Arabs are usually hospitable and friendly. It is common for them to welcome traveling strangers into their homes. A woman's public presence is more accepted than in other Arab countries. However, restaurants may still only welcome men or show the women to a "family room," where ladies and children are allowed.

Education of children begins at five years old and is free. There is a secondary school system for both boys and girls. The brightest students attend one of three Jordanian universities or study abroad.

The economy is centered around the production of phosphates, fertilizers, agricultural products, manufacturing, and pharmaceuticals.

What Are Their Beliefs?
The state religion in Jordan is Islam. Approximately 95% of Jordanians are Muslim. About 80% of Arabs practice Sunni Islam. Shi'ites living in the East represent 15%. Statistics show that Christians account for five percent of the population, but the largest churches are Orthodox and not evangelical. There are also a few small Muslim groups who desire to see a more extreme Islamic government. The Supreme Guide of the Muslim Brotherhood is gaining support in Jordan. This is an illegal political organization who are known for terrorist actions and violence against Christians.

What Are Their Needs?
Only a portion of the New Testament has been translated into their language. There are a few Christian radio and TV broadcasts available. A Muslim who professes faith in Jesus can lose his family, his honor, his job, or even his life. Evangelism among the Jordanian
Arab is challenging due to strong law, religion, social customs and tight family ties.

A few Jordanian Arabs attending a church service are tolerated, but when the number increases, they run the risk of being questioned by police. This discourages them. Small group meetings also arouse suspicion. Some Christians are willing to take that risk, however, for the sake of receiving teaching and having fellowship.

There are about 70 evangelical churches in Jordan, located mainly in Amman and larger cities. There is a great need for church planting outside of the cities in the rural areas.

The Jordanian Arabs are a ripe harvest field in the Kingdom of God.

Prayer Points
Pray for the work among other unreached peoples living in Jordan- the Egyptian and Iraqi Arabs.
Ask God to protect the small number of evangelical believers and help them to grow strong in Him.
Pray that Jordanian Arab Christians would be willing to sacrifice their time, and even their lives, to bring the Gospel to neighboring countries.

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Prayer Links Submit Links:
PrayerGuard.net
Global Prayer Digest: 2006-11-21
 
Web Profile Links Submit Links:
www.everyculture.com/Africa-Middle-East/index.html
www.muslimjourneytohope.com
www.alnour.com
www.arabbible.com
www.arabicbible.com
www.arabvision.org
www.photius.com/countries/jordan/society/jordan_so...
www.thefellowship.info/Missions/Global-Missions/Pe...
 
Web Resource Links Submit Links:
Audio RecordingsMegaVoice Audio Bible and Stories
Audio RecordingsArabic Bibles Online
Audio RecordingsGlobal Recordings
Audio RecordingsGospel Widgets
GeneralFour Spiritual Laws
ScriptureBible-in-Your-Language
ScriptureUnbound Bible

 
Maps
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Linguistic Map:
Ethnologue language map
  
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Country: Jordan
Continent:
Asia
Region:
Middle East and North Africa
Country Persecution Rank:37 (Only top 50 ranked, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Yes
Country Details: World Factbook
   
 
People
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People Name in Country: Arab, Jordanian
People Name General:
Arab, Jordanian
Alternate People Names:
ArabArabic, Palestinian-Jordanian
Jordanian ArabPalestinian Arab
People Code: 104301
Population in this Country: 1,092,000
Population in all Countries: 1,615,000
Yes
   
 
Arab World
Arab, Levant
People Name General:
Arab, Jordanian
CMT30
Ethnic Relationships:
Affinity Bloc -> People Cluster -> Peoples Ethnicity Tree
   
 
Language
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Primary Language:
Arabic, South Levantine Spoken (1,092,000 Speakers)
Language Code (16th): ajp    Ethnologue Listing
AJP
Total Languages Spoken:
1
   
 
Religion
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Primary Religion:
Islam
Religion Sub-division:Sunni
% Christian Adherents:2.30 %
% Evangelical:0.20 %
   
 
Joshua Project Progress Indicators
Yes
Progress Scale: 1.2     Evangelicals >.01% but <=2%. Christian Adherents <=5%.
Need-Ranking Score: 78        Details
Church Planting Team:Yes (Data from 2002)
100+ Believers:Unknown
   
 
Other Progress Indicators *
Global Evangelical Status:Level 2   Less than 2% Evangelical. Initial (localized) church planting within past 2 years
Agency Progress (API):Level 4   Functioning agency partnership
Church Progress (CPI):Level 3   Group of churches
 
 
Bible Translation Status
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Bible Portions: 1940-1973
New Testament: None Reported
Complete Bible: None Reported
Possible Bible Sources: Forum of Bible Agencies
 World Bible Finder
 World Christian Resource Directory
 
 
Ministry Activity
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Description: Register your ministry activity among this people group. Contact the Adopt-A-People Clearinghouse to learn about others that might be focused on this people group.
 
Arab, Jordanian of Jordan
* Notes:
  • Significant effort is made to match photos with people groups. In most cases the photo source has identified the people group. However, in some instances when the exact people group is not identified Joshua Project has made educated attempts at matching. As a result some photos may be representative of the people cluster rather than the specific people group. Mismatches are the fault of Joshua Project, not the photographer. Please contact us if you believe a photo is not matched with the correct people group.
  • Percentages may be printed as '0.00%' because of space limitations, but some are slightly greater than zero.
  • The exactness of the above numbers can be misleading. Numbers can vary by several percentage points or more.
  • People group population figures are now maintained as a percentage of the national population. Click here for details.
  • Joshua Project does not have specific ministry activity data supporting the "Other Progress Indicators."
  • Discrepancies may exist between "Other Progress Indicators" because of the varying sources of information.
  • Joshua Project does not know the exact content of web audio recordings. In general they are Bible reading and teaching.
  • As on-site realities are understood, barriers of acceptance may be found in many of the larger people groups that will require multiple distinct church planting efforts.
  • This data may contain errors and needs continual correcting and updating. Click here to send feedback.