Algerian Americans

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Algerian_Americans an entity of type: Thing

الأمريكيون الجزائريون هم الأمريكيون الذين ينحدرون من أصول جزائرية صرفة أو مختلطة. وفقًا لتعداد سكان الولايات المتحدة لسنة 2010، بلغ عدد المواطنين الأمريكيين ذوي الأصول الجزائرية 14,716 مواطنًا. rdf:langString
Algerian Americans are Americans who are of Algerian descent or Algerians who have American citizenship. According to the 2000 United States Census, there are over 8,000 Americans of Algerian descent. After Algeria's war of independence, which ended in 1962, many Algerian students immigrated to the US to enroll in universities. Other Algerians, including scientists and doctors, also immigrated to the US to live there permanently. In the 1990s many Algerians were persecuted in their homeland for their political views which, together with the lack of jobs there, forced many of them to emigrate. However, the European Union limited the number of North Africans who could immigrate to its member countries, which diverted most of the Algerian immigration to the US, which had increased the number rdf:langString
rdf:langString Algerian Americans
rdf:langString أمريكيون جزائريون
rdf:langString Algerian Americans
xsd:integer 65428016
xsd:integer 1111099914
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Algerian Americans
rdf:langString New York, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles , Atlanta
rdf:langString Islam
rdf:langString Judaism, Christianity
xsd:integer 8000
rdf:langString الأمريكيون الجزائريون هم الأمريكيون الذين ينحدرون من أصول جزائرية صرفة أو مختلطة. وفقًا لتعداد سكان الولايات المتحدة لسنة 2010، بلغ عدد المواطنين الأمريكيين ذوي الأصول الجزائرية 14,716 مواطنًا.
rdf:langString Algerian Americans are Americans who are of Algerian descent or Algerians who have American citizenship. According to the 2000 United States Census, there are over 8,000 Americans of Algerian descent. After Algeria's war of independence, which ended in 1962, many Algerian students immigrated to the US to enroll in universities. Other Algerians, including scientists and doctors, also immigrated to the US to live there permanently. In the 1990s many Algerians were persecuted in their homeland for their political views which, together with the lack of jobs there, forced many of them to emigrate. However, the European Union limited the number of North Africans who could immigrate to its member countries, which diverted most of the Algerian immigration to the US, which had increased the number of work visas for people from North Africa. Algerian communities are established in major cities such as New York, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and Chicago. Algerians in Chicago commemorate the anniversary of the start of the war between Algeria and France that led to their country's independence every November 1.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2543

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