Jewish Population in U.S. Increases
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NEW YORK — The nation’s Jewish population reached 6,136,000 as of 2000, an increase of 75,000 over 1999, according to the new “American Jewish Year Book.”
The number gains special interest with U.S. Muslims’ claims that the number of adherents to Islam surpasses or equals that of Jews in this country.
The annual, a reference standard compiled by the American Jewish Committee, obtains population estimates from local Jewish groups.
Surveying longer trends, the book said that in 1900, 52% of the 1.1 million U.S. Jews lived in the New York City area, but only 32% of today’s total live there.
The annual said that since 1995, Las Vegas has seen the largest Jewish increase among U.S. cities, up 35% to 75,000, followed by Seattle, up 27% to 37,200. The biggest drop, a loss of 10,000, occurred in the Miami area.
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