A viral social media post has shed light on a striking historical trend — the exponential decline of Jewish populations in several Middle Eastern and North African countries over the past seven decades.
According to the post, which has gained widespread attention online, countries that once hosted vibrant Jewish communities have seen their numbers dwindle to mere dozens — or even vanish entirely — since 1948.
The data shared (claimed by social media users) paints a stark picture:
🇦🇫 Afghanistan — 1948: 5,000 | 2019: 1
🇮🇷 Iran — 1948: 100,000 | 2016: ~9,800
🇮🇶 Iraq — 1948: 150,000 | 2017: 10
🇹🇳 Tunisia — 1948: 105,000 | 2017: 1,700
🇩🇿 Algeria — 1948: 140,000 | 2017: ~50
🇱🇾 Libya — 1948: 38,000 | 2019: 0
🇱🇧 Lebanon — 1948: 24,000 | 2017: 100
🇪🇬 Egypt — 1948: 75,000 | 2017: 20
🇸🇾 Syria — 1948: 30,000 | 2017: 100
🇲🇦 Morocco — 1948: 265,000 | 2017: 2,000
🇧🇭 Bahrain — 1948: 1,500 | 2018: ~35
🇾🇪 Yemen — 1948: 64,000 | 2017: 50
🇴🇲 Oman — 1948: 5,000 | 2019: 0
🇵🇰 Pakistan — 1948: 2,000 | 2017: 745
The figures — though not officially verified — highlight a sweeping demographic transformation across the region since the establishment of Israel in 1948.
Historians often cite factors such as wars, political instability, persecution, and migration to Israel and Western countries as key reasons behind this exodus. Once-thriving Jewish quarters in Baghdad, Cairo, Tripoli, and Damascus now remain silent reminders of a vanished heritage.
While some nations, such as Morocco and Iran, still maintain small Jewish communities and synagogues, others like Libya and Oman have seen their Jewish presence completely disappear.
Social media users have called the data “a sobering reminder of how history reshapes entire civilizations.”
Whether viewed as migration, exile, or displacement, the decline represents one of the most profound demographic shifts in modern Middle Eastern history.





