In The Name of Allah The Almighty
Argentina
(9 July: National Day)
Dr Sajid Khakwani
drsajidkhakwani@gmail.com
Country
of South America, covering most of the
southern portion of the continent. The world's eighth largest country. The
country is bounded by Chile
to the south and west, Bolivia
and Paraguay
to the north, and Brazil,
Uruguay,
and the Atlantic Ocean to the east. Its
undulating Atlantic coastline stretches some 2,900 miles. It encompasses
immense plains, deserts, tundra, and forests, as well as tall mountains,
rivers, and thousands of miles of ocean shoreline. Argentina also claims a portion of Antarctica, as well as several islands in the South Atlantic, including the British-ruled Falkland Islands. In
1982 Argentina invaded this South Atlantic islands it claimed as its own and was
defeated by British forces in a short but bloody campaign.
In Argentina the
independence movement began in 1806–07, when British attacks on Buenos Aires were repelled in the two battles.
An assembly representing most of the viceroyalty met at San Miguel and on July 9, 1816, declared the
country independent. Argentine nationalists were instrumental in revolutionary
movements elsewhere, South America's
independence was, to a great extent, an Argentine enterprise. The country's
Spanish name means “Land
of Silver,” and Argentina is
indeed a great source of valuable minerals.
Heavy
immigration, particularly from Spain and Italy, has
produced in Argentina
a people who are almost all of European ancestry. In the colonial period,
though, the Spanish explorers and settlers encountered a number of native
peoples. Most other Argentine Indians were hunters and gatherers who fought the
Spanish tenaciously but were eventually exterminated or driven away. The
Indians traveled over the mountains from Chile and raided Spanish
settlements in the southern Argentina
until the Conquest of the Desert in the 1870s. Population estimates of the
colonial period suggest that by 1810 Argentina had more than 400,000
people. Of these perhaps 30 percent were Indian, their numbers drastically
depleted from a pre-Columbian regional population estimated at 300,000. Ten
percent of the total were either African slaves or descendants of slaves who
had been smuggled into the country through Buenos Aires, and there was a large element
of mestizos (European and Indian
mixture). European descendants were in the minority.
A great wave of
European immigration after the mid-1800s molded the present-day ethnic
character of Argentina.
The Indians and mestizos were pushed aside or absorbed, and the blacks and
mulattos disappeared, apparently also absorbed into the dominant population.
Since that time mestizos from Chile,
Bolivia,
and Paraguay
have grown numerous in bordering regions, but only since the late 20th century
has there been substantial immigration from Paraguay and Uruguay into
the urban areas of Argentina.
The Italian influence on Argentine culture became the most important of any
immigrant group, and Italian is still widely spoken in Buenos Aires. Other major foreign influences
have come from Spanish and Polish immigrants. Smaller groups have also made
notable contributions, however. British capital and management, in particular,
built railroads and created the meat-processing industry; the British also left
a relatively small but influential community. The Germans established farm
settlements and cooperatives; the French contributed their viticulture
expertise; and the Japanese invested in business, as did the Syrians and
Lebanese. Spanish is the national language, although in Argentina it is
spoken in several accents and has absorbed many words from other languages,
especially Italian. The vast majority of Argentine people are adherents of
Roman Catholicism. Of the remainder, about equally small percentages are
Protestants and Jews. Roman Catholic influence is strongly reflected in
government and society, and Catholicism is constitutionally recognized as the
official state religion, although freedom of worship is guaranteed.
Argentina's
economy, which is one of the more powerful in the region, is dependent on
services and manufacturing, although agribusiness and ranching dominated the
economy for much of the 19th and 20th centuries. Argentina still produces more grain
than any other country in Latin America and is
second in cattle rising only to Brazil,
and its receipts from tourism are second in the region only to those of Mexico. Meat
and grain were exported to expanding markets in Europe
in exchange for fuel and manufactured products. Fruits, vegetables, oilseed
crops such as soybeans and sunflowers, and industrial crops such as sugarcane
and cotton increased their share of total agricultural production at the
expense of the dominant grain crops. Overall, however, Argentina
remained one of the world's major agricultural producers.
Wheat is Argentina's largest crop in
harvested land area. Argentina
is one of the world's major exporters of soybeans and wheat, as well as meat.
It is also one of the largest producers of wool and wine, but most of its wine
is consumed domestically. More than nine-tenths of the country's grapes are
used for wine making. Although agriculture is an important source of export
earnings, and it employs only a tiny portion of the nation's workforce. The forestry industry does not supply
all of Argentina's
needs. Most of the harvest is used for lumber, with smaller amounts for
firewood and charcoal. The fishing industry is comparatively small, owing in
part to the overwhelming preference among Argentines for beef in their diet.
Manufacturing,
which accounts for about one-fifth of GDP and nearly one-sixth of the
workforce, is a mainstay of the Argentine economy. A large sector of the
country's industry is involved with the processing of agricultural products. The
growth of beef production in Argentina
gave rise to a host of associated industries, including those producing tinned
beef, meat extracts, tallow, hides, and leather. Argentina has been a consistent
world leader in the export of hides. Leather processing occurs locally, and fine
leather clothing can be obtained at retail outlets in the cities.
Argentina is a
federal union of 23 provinces
and a federal capital district, the city of Buenos Aires. Federalism came to Argentina only
after a long struggle between proponents of a central government and supporters
of provincial interests. The constitution of 1853 was modeled on that of the United States.
The constitution promulgated in 1994 provides for consecutive presidential
terms, but few other changes distinguish it from the 1853 document; in its
largely original form, the constitution has sustained Argentina with
at least a nominal form of republican, representative, and federal government.
Executive power
resides in the office of the president, who is elected with a
vice president to a four-year term (only two terms can be consecutive). The
president is commander in chief of the armed forces and appoints all civil,
military, and federal judicial officers, as well as the chief of the Cabinet of
Ministers, the body that oversees the general administration of the country.
The Argentine legislature, or National Congress, consists of two houses: a
72-seat Senate and a 257-seat Chamber of Deputies. The Senate, whose members
are elected to six-year terms, consists of three representatives from each
province and the federal capital. The Chamber of Deputies, whose members are
elected to four-year terms, is apportioned according to population.
Each province
has its own government, with executive, legislative, and judicial branches
similar to those of the federal government. The provinces retain all power not
specifically reserved to the federal government in the constitution. Local
government was nullified in 1966 and restored in 1973, only to be taken over
again in 1976 by the military dictatorship. With the restoration of
constitutional government in 1983, the provinces and municipalities once more
exercised the authority of local government. Municipal governments vary in
structure, but many towns and cities have elected mayors. The executive of Buenos Aires is directly
elected to a four-year term and is eligible for immediate reelection.
The Argentine
judicial system is divided into federal and provincial courts. The nine federal
Supreme Court judges are appointed by the president with approval of the
Senate. Lower federal court judges are nominated by a Council of Magistrates
and chosen by the president. Reforms begun in the 1990s addressed long-standing
problems of inefficiency, corruption, and unfilled vacancies. There are federal
courts of appeal in Buenos Aires
and other large cities. The provincial justice system includes supreme courts,
appellate courts, courts of first instance, and justices of the peace.
The judiciary
has been criticized as inefficient and open to political influence, despite
recent reforms. Among the persistent problems cited are arbitrary arrests,
lengthy pretrial detentions, and harsh prison conditions. However, cases
involving human rights abuses have received increasing attention since the
1980s. The government has designated a prisons ombudsman since 1993 to monitor
conditions and recommend prison reforms.
Argentina has one of the more
educated populations in Latin America, which
is reflected in its large number of schools and a nearly universal literacy
rate. Primary education is compulsory and free; secondary and higher education
is offered in free public schools and in private schools subsidized by the
state.
Though early Spanish and Portuguese explorers and
immigrants to the New World were very familiar with Muslims and Islamic culture
due to 800 years of Muslim rule, it is doubtful that any Muslims were among the
first wave of the largely Spanish and Italian settlers who formed the majority
of the immigrant population in colonial Argentina. The 20th century saw an
influx of Arab migrants to the country, mostly from Syria and Lebanon. It is
estimated that today there are about 3.5 million Argentinians of Arab descent.
The majority of these Arab immigrants were Christians and Sephardic Jews, and
though accurate information is unavailable, probably less than a quarter of
Arab migrants were actually Muslim. The descendants of Arab Jews are more likely
to identify themselves as Jewish rather than Arab today. In any case, by force conversion
to Catholicism, Argentina's state religion, was common amongst these early
Muslim pioneers.
Among other notable Arab
immigrants is the Menem family, who were of Syrian origin and Muslim
themselves. Islam in Argentina
is represented by one of Latin America's largest Muslim minorities. Although
accurate statistics on religion are not available the actual size of Argentina's Muslim
community is estimated around 1.5% of the total population (500,000 to 600,000)
There is a prominent mosque on Alberti St. in
Buenos Aires, in the city center, that was built in 1989 by local Argentine
Muslims. There are also several mosques in other cities and regions throughout
the country. The King Fahd Islamic Cultural Center, the largest mosque in South
America, was completed in 1996 with the help of the Custodian of the Two Holy
Mosques, on a piece of land measuring 20,000 m². The total land area granted by
the Argentine government measures 34,000 m², The and includes a mosque,
library, two schools, a park, is located in the middle-class district of
Palermo, Buenos Aires.
The Islamic
Organization of Latin America (IOLA), headquartered in Argentina, is considered
the most active organization in Latin America in promoting Islamic affiliated
endeavors. The IOLA holds events to promote the unification of Muslims living
in Latin America, as well as the propagation of Islam.
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