MOFET – Unit 19 – The Middle East

Unit 19 — The Middle East

About this unit

The Middle East is one of the most important regions in human history — the birthplace of three world religions and the home of many of the world’s oldest cities. In this unit you will watch a video, look at a map, read about the region, learn about the countries around Israel and their populations and religions, and answer comprehension questions in an interactive practice.


Watch — A Look at the Middle East

Watch this video carefully. You can replay it and turn on subtitles if it helps. After watching, the worksheet at the bottom of the page asks for your reflection.


Map of the Middle East

Here is a map of the region. Find Israel in the middle, and try to identify the countries around it: Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, and the Palestinian Authority.

Map of the Middle East
The Middle East — a small region with a huge influence on world history.

Reading: The Heart of the Old World

The Middle East is a region in southwest Asia and northeast Africa. It is one of the most important regions in all of human history. It is the place where humans first built cities, where the first letters and writing were invented, and where some of the most famous events of history have happened.

The Middle East does not have one fixed list of countries, but most experts include: Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, the Palestinian Authority, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and the smaller Gulf states (the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman) plus Yemen. Together, these countries are home to about 500 million people.

The region’s geography is dominated by big deserts (the Sahara in Egypt, the Arabian Desert in Saudi Arabia, the Negev in Israel), mountains (Mount Lebanon, the Zagros in Iran, the Anti-Lebanon range), important seas (the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, the Dead Sea — the lowest place on Earth) and a few major rivers: the Nile in Egypt, the Jordan between Israel and Jordan, and the Tigris and Euphrates in Iraq.

The Middle East is the birthplace of three of the world’s most important religions:

  • Judaism — born about 4,000 years ago in the Land of Israel.
  • Christianity — born about 2,000 years ago in the Land of Israel.
  • Islam — born about 1,400 years ago in the Arabian Peninsula (today’s Saudi Arabia).

All three of these religions are monotheistic — they believe in one God. They share many of the same stories, prophets, and ideas, but they have grown into very different faiths with their own books, languages, and traditions.

Today, most people in the Middle East are Muslim, but there are also millions of Jews (mainly in Israel) and millions of Christians, especially in Lebanon, Egypt (where Christians are called Copts), Syria, and Iraq. Many smaller religious communities also live in the region — among them the Druze, the Yazidis, the Bahá’í, and the Zoroastrians.


Israel and Its Neighbors

Israel is a small country in the heart of the Middle East. Let’s look at the countries directly around it — their populations, their capitals, and the main religions of their people. (Numbers are approximate; populations change every year.)

🇱🇧
Lebanon
Direction from Israel: North
Population: About 5.5 million
Capital: Beirut
Main religions: Islam (Sunni + Shia ~60%), Christianity ~33%, Druze ~5%
Lebanon has the largest Christian community among Arab countries.
🇸🇾
Syria
Direction from Israel: Northeast
Population: About 22 million
Capital: Damascus
Main religions: Islam (mostly Sunni, also Alawite ~87% total), Christianity ~10%, Druze ~3%
Syria has been in a long civil war since 2011.
🇯🇴
Jordan
Direction from Israel: East
Population: About 11 million
Capital: Amman
Main religions: Islam (Sunni ~95%), Christianity ~4%
Jordan signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994.
🇪🇬
Egypt
Direction from Israel: Southwest
Population: About 110 million (the most populous Arab country)
Capital: Cairo
Main religions: Islam (Sunni ~90%), Christianity (Coptic ~10%)
Egypt was the first Arab country to sign a peace treaty with Israel (1979).
🟢
Palestinian Authority
Direction from Israel: West Bank & Gaza
Population: About 5 million
Capital: Ramallah (administrative)
Main religions: Islam ~93%, Christianity ~6%
The Palestinian Authority is recognized by many countries (but not all) as a state.

Other Important Countries in the Middle East

Beyond Israel’s direct neighbors, here are other key countries in the region:

Country Capital Population Main Religions
🇸🇦 Saudi ArabiaRiyadh~36 millionIslam (Sunni majority, with a Shia minority) — ~100%
🇮🇶 IraqBaghdad~45 millionIslam (Shia ~64%, Sunni ~32%), small Christian community
🇮🇷 IranTehran~88 millionIslam (Shia ~90%, Sunni ~9%), small Christian, Jewish, Bahá’í, Zoroastrian
🇹🇷 TurkeyAnkara~85 millionIslam (mostly Sunni, with Alevi and other minorities)
🇦🇪 United Arab EmiratesAbu Dhabi~10 millionIslam ~76%, Christianity ~9%, Hinduism & others (many migrants)
🇾🇪 YemenSana’a / Aden~35 millionIslam ~99% (Sunni and Shia)
🇮🇱 IsraelJerusalem~9.8 millionJudaism ~74%, Islam ~18%, Christianity ~2%, Druze ~1.6%, others

The Three Great Religions of the Middle East

✡️
Judaism
Born ~4,000 years ago in the Land of Israel. Sacred book: the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible). Today, about 16 million followers worldwide, mostly in Israel and the United States.
✝️
Christianity
Born ~2,000 years ago in the Land of Israel. Sacred book: the Bible (Old & New Testament). Today, about 2.4 billion followers — the largest religion in the world.
☪️
Islam
Born ~1,400 years ago in Saudi Arabia. Sacred book: the Qur’an. Today, about 1.9 billion followers — the second largest religion in the world.

All three are monotheistic religions — they believe in one God.


Vocabulary

Word Meaning
Middle Easta region in southwest Asia and northeast Africa
regiona part of a country, a continent, or the world
deserta place that gets very little rain (e.g. the Sahara, the Negev)
mountaina very high piece of land
rivera long line of fresh water that flows across the land
sea / gulfa large area of salt water / a sea partly surrounded by land
religiona system of belief in God or gods, with prayers and traditions
monotheisticbelieving in one God
Judaismthe religion of the Jewish people; sacred book: the Tanakh
Christianitythe religion based on Jesus; sacred book: the Bible (Old + New Testament)
Islamthe religion based on the Prophet Muhammad; sacred book: the Qur’an
Sunni / Shiathe two main branches of Islam
Copticdescribing the ancient Christian community of Egypt
Druzea religious community living mainly in Lebanon, Syria, and Israel
Arab worldthe countries where Arabic is the main language
capitalthe main city of a country, usually where the government is
populationthe total number of people living in a place
borderthe line that separates one country from another
peace treatyan official agreement between countries to stop war and live in peace
civil wara war between groups of people inside the same country
propheta person believed to bring a message from God
sacredholy or specially important to a religion
civilizationa developed society with cities, writing, and government

Practice — The Middle East

The questions check what you’ve read about the region: its geography, Israel’s neighbors, the three big religions, and key vocabulary. At the end you’ll see your score and can retest only the questions you missed.


After the Lesson — Personal Worksheet

Now think about what you have read and seen. Use this worksheet to write your own answers in your own words. Your answers are saved automatically. When you’re done, you can print your worksheet.

1. List the four countries that share a land border with Israel, and write the direction of each one (north, east, southwest, etc.).

2. Pick one of Israel’s neighbors. Write its name, capital, population, and one religion that is common there.

3. The reading says Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are all “monotheistic.” In your own words, explain what this means.

4. Why do you think the Middle East has been so important in human history? Give two reasons in your own words.

5. The reading mentions that Egypt and Jordan signed peace treaties with Israel. Why do you think peace treaties are important between neighbouring countries?

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