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http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=249176&contrassID=2&;
subContrassID=1&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y
Jewish population of Jerusalem shrinking



About 40 percent of children up to the age of four in Jerusalem are Palestinians, and 
41
out of 100 births in the capital are to Palestinan mothers. Annual birth rates in
Jerusalem's Palestinian sector are much higher than rates in the Jewish population: 31
births per 1,000 people in the Arab population, versus 19 births per 1,000 in the 
Jewish
sector.

Annual figures for Jerusalem, released yesterday by the Jerusalem Institute for Israel
Studies and the Jerusalem Municipality, show that ultra-Orthodox children represent a
solid majority in the city's pre-school frameworks. Haredi children constitute 62 
percent
of the children in compulsory kindergarten, whereas just 38 percent of Jerusalem's
kindergarten children are enrolled in the state and state- religious streams.

On average, a Jewish woman in Jerusalem has 3.8 children, whereas the figure for
Jewish women throughout the country is 2.6 (in Haifa and Tel Aviv the figure is 1.8).
The numbers are higher in Jerusalem mainly due to the large size of ultra- Orthodox
families. Haredi women have an average of 7.5 children. Muslim families in Jerusalem
are also large; Muslim women have an average of 4.5 children, which is slightly below
the national average for Muslims.

Speaking yesterday at a press conference held to mark the release of the city's 2001
data, Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmert declared: "I am very worried by Jerusalem's
demographic situation. Nothing is more worrisome than this topic. The situation has to
be taken in hand, but doing so means wide- scale intervention, and a much more
intensive use of national mechanisms than can be done by the Jerusalem municipality."

The new data establish that departures from Jerusalem to live elsewhere lessened in
2001. In 1999 and 2000, Jerusalem lost an average of 8,000 people a year; this figure
dropped to 5,900 in 2001. The reason for the drop in the number of Jerusalemites
leaving is related to the Al-Aqsa Intifada: fewer city residents left to live in West 
Bank
and Gaza Strip settlements during 2001. However, in contrast to previous years, more
Jerusalemites left the city to live in Tel Aviv.

Jerusalem's population grew 152 percent between 1967 and 2001. The city's Jewish
population, which today stands at 456,000, grew 130 percent in this period, while the
Arab population, 215,400 today, rose by 214 percent.

Over half the city's residents - 371,000 Jews and Arabs out of 670,000 - live in areas
that were added to Jerusalem after the 1967 Six-Day War. A minority (46 percent) of
the residents of post-'67 neighborhoods are Jewish. In terms of the city's total Jewish
population, 62 percent live within the Green Line boundaries, and 38 percent live in
regions that were annexed to the city after the 1967 war.

If the current intifada has harmed tourism to all parts of the country, it has 
delivered a
lethal blow to tourism in the capital. In western section of the city, hotel stays have
dropped 80 percent over the past two years; in East Jerusalem, the figure is 100
percent. In the western areas, the number of persons staying in hotels dropped from
2.85 million in 2000 to 1.36 million in 2001; in the city's eastern (Arab) parts, this 
figure
dropped from 600,000 in 2000 to 104,500 in 2001.

The intifada also apparently influenced the frequency with which residents sought care
in hospitals located in Arab sections of Jerusalem. Some 153,000 persons received
care in the city's hospitals in 2001. Of these, 84 percent went to hospitals located in
Jewish neighborhoods, and 16 percent received care in hospitals in Arab
neighborhoods. Statistics in the new study reflect a 7 percent drop in the number of
patients admitted to hospitals in Jerusalem's Arab neighborhoods, in contrast to just 
a 1
percent drop in patients who received care in facilities located in Jewish parts of 
the city.

The statistics indicate a sharp drop in the number of visitors to museums and cultural
institutions in Jerusalem. This decrease was apparently caused by the security crisis,
and perhaps also by the stagnant economy. In 2001, 1.6 million people visited a
defined group of museums and cultural institutions in the city; in 1999, 4 million 
visited
the same group of institutions, and 3.7 million in 2000.
By Nadav Shragai


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