There’s a quiet but increasingly visible shift underway in the Arab world—one that few analysts are willing to confront directly.
For centuries, the dominant narrative framed the Arab world as a unified cultural and religious bloc. But history tells a more complex story. The Arab identity began in the Arabian Peninsula—what is now Saudi Arabia—and expanded outward through conquest. Large populations across the Middle East and North Africa gradually adopted the Arabic language and identity, blending it with Islam.
But not all Arabs are the same—and today, those differences are resurfacing.
A growing divide is emerging between what might be called the “original Arabs” of the Gulf and the Arab populations of countries like Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon. Sometimes described as “Bedouin” versus “urban” Arabs, this distinction goes beyond lifestyle—it reflects fundamentally different visions of culture, religion, and the future.