UAE Embassy Discusses Arab Youth At Berlin Event

Young Arabs believe that religion is essential to their identity, but also say that it plays too much of a role in today’s Middle East. This was part of the findings from the 2018 ASDA’A BCW Arab Youth Survey, unveiled at a German-Arab Friendship Association event hosted by Ali Abdulla Al Ahmed, the UAE Ambassador to Germany, at the Embassy of the UAE in Berlin.

Held under the theme ‘Investing in Arab Youth – Fostering Responsible Leadership’, the event saw participation from more than 80 guests including MPs, diplomats academics and business leaders.

In his opening remarks, the UAE Ambassador to Germany said, “The UAE is a young country both in terms of when we were established and in terms of our population. We are fortunate that, from our earliest days, our leadership has always focused on the issues most important to youth, especially education and employment, so our young people today are empowered to face the challenges and opportunities of our future diversified economy.”

He added that this dedication explains why the UAE is consistently ranked by the survey as the number one country in which young Arabs would like to live and would like their own countries to resemble.

New findings from the survey revealed that youth in the Arabian Gulf states are more likely to see religion as key to their identity, with 89 percent agreeing with the statement ‘my religion is central to my identity’ compared with 74 percent of those in the Levant countries, comprising Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and the Palestinian Territories.

However, perhaps surprisingly given the importance of religion to their identity, two-thirds (68%) of youth in the Gulf Co-operation Council states (GCC) agreed with the statement ‘religion plays too big a role in the Middle East’ – compared with just 56 percent in the Levant.

“As the only European country to make the top five nations which Arab youth would choose to live in and emulate, the findings from the Arab Youth Survey clearly show an appreciation and recognition of Germany among the region’s youth,” said Sunil John, founder & CEO of ASDA’A BCW and President of BCW Middle East, who presented the findings at the event at the Embassy of the United Arab Emirates in Berlin.

“What’s more ambiguous in this year’s findings is the attitudes towards religion among young Arabs. Young people across the region clearly believe religion is central to their identity; it’s interesting, though, that a majority also believe it plays too big a role in defining the region itself,” he added.

With the aim of exploring attitudes and sentiments of Arab youth across 16 countries in the Middle East and North Africa region, the ASDA’A BCW Arab Youth Survey is an annual snapshot of the hopes, fears and perceptions of the region’s youth including how they view their future, the digital revolution and the shifting attitudes towards the region’s friends and foes.

The survey showed that while the UAE is the country young Arabs would most like to live in, as well as that which they would most like their country to emulate, Germany ranked fifth in both responses, and was the only European nation to feature in this top five.

The three countries where Germany scored highest as an aspirational country to live in were Morocco (23%), Jordan (22%), and Bahrain (21%). Among those looking for their country to emulate Germany were youth responders from the Palestinian Territories (35%), Jordan (19%), and Bahrain (18%).

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