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*Rank by total Jewish and non-Jewish population. The Data are for Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA’s) as defined by the US Census Bureau. Source: Ira M. Sheskin & Arnold Dashefsky. “United States Jewish Population, 2024,” in Arnold Dashefsky & Ira M. Sheskin. (Editors) , 2024, (Cham, SUI: Springer, 2024).
This is a list of Jewish populations in different cities and towns around the world. It includes statistics for populations of metropolitan areas, as well as statistics about the number of Jews as a percentage of the total city or town population.
20 wrz 2018 · Findings revealed that 83,000 people lived in 31,500 Jewish households, up 1,500 from 2005. Of those people, 12,460 were not Jewish. Metro Detroit has the 26th largest Jewish community in America, down from No. 21 in 2005, similar in size to Dallas and Las Vegas.
A 2018 population study showed that more than half of the Jewish population (including a high percentage of young adults) are moving east toward greater Berkely, an area known as the Woodward Corridor, a 30–45-minute drive from The J’s West Bloomfield campus.
Illustrated with a series of demographic and historical maps, this chapter provides an historical geography of the Jewish spaces of Detroit and a theoretical overview of how sociologists and historians have understood urban neighborhoods.
DETROIT, largest city in Michigan, U.S., with a Jewish population of around 103,000 (with Ann Arbor) in 2001, comprising 1.9% of the city's total population. Part of the distinction of Detroit Jews derives from the nature and history of Detroit.
Jews have been living in Metro Detroit since it was first founded, and have been prominent in all parts of life in the city. The city has a rich Jewish history, but the Jewish community has also seen tensions and faced anti-Jewish backlash.