South Asian people in Ireland

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

Tá 60,000 - 100,000 muintir na hÁise Theas ina gcónaí in Éireann de réir an 2011 daonáireamh iad Muintir na hÁise Theas in Éirinn. rdf:langString
South Asian people in Ireland are residents or citizens of Ireland who are of South Asian background or ancestry. There has been an important and well-established community of people of South Asian descent in Ireland since the eighteenth century. Non-Chinese Asian people (the category which mainly includes South Asian people) were reported to be the fastest growing ethnic group in Ireland in the 2011 census. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Muintir na hÁise Theas in Éirinn
rdf:langString South Asian people in Ireland
rdf:langString Irish people of South Asian origin
xsd:integer 38489101
xsd:integer 1110422422
rdf:langString English, Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi, Bengali, Other Indo-Aryan, Malayalam, Tamil, and Other Dravidian languages.
rdf:langString Irish people of South Asian origin
rdf:langString Ballyhaunis, Galway, Dublin, Cork, Limerick, Athlone including respective suburban areas
rdf:langString Hinduism, Islam, Sikhism, Christianity, Zoroastrianism, others
xsd:integer 60000
rdf:langString About 1.5% of the Irish population . Other sources estimate from 1% to 3%.
rdf:langString Tá 60,000 - 100,000 muintir na hÁise Theas ina gcónaí in Éireann de réir an 2011 daonáireamh iad Muintir na hÁise Theas in Éirinn.
rdf:langString South Asian people in Ireland are residents or citizens of Ireland who are of South Asian background or ancestry. There has been an important and well-established community of people of South Asian descent in Ireland since the eighteenth century. Non-Chinese Asian people (the category which mainly includes South Asian people) were reported to be the fastest growing ethnic group in Ireland in the 2011 census. There is great variation in how much the South Asian people are integrated into Irish society. Many people of South Asian descent are well-integrated and embrace the culture of Ireland. Many children of South Asian descent are born in Ireland or have come to Ireland at a very young age, and therefore learn the Irish language in schools (which is compulsory to children who have been living in the country before the age of 7). There are South Asian people who are up to 2nd and 3rd generation Irish-born. However, many South Asian people still maintain their ancestral customs and languages, and therefore many religious festivals (such as Diwali) are well-known and accepted within Ireland. As the Irish government does not collect detailed data on ethnicity in Ireland, population estimates vary, and non-Chinese Asian people are generally grouped in one category rather than groups based on people from individual South Asian countries. Estimates say that people of South Asian ethnicity make up around 1 to 3% of Ireland's population. The Irish-India Council estimates that there are approximately 91,520 Indian-born people in Ireland.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 23989
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2 60000

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