A diverse city with Eastern European communities and a growing Iraqi population
Warren has around 138,000 residents, with a majority white population, a growing African American community, a large Iraqi Chaldean community, and significant Asian and Eastern European groups including Poles, Ukrainians, and Albanians.
Warren was once an almost exclusively white, working-class suburb, but it has changed considerably. The majority remains white, with roots in Polish, Italian, Ukrainian, Romanian, and Albanian heritage. The African American population has grown significantly over the past two decades, driven in part by internal migration from Detroit.
The Iraqi Chaldean community is one of the most prominent in the United States, Eastern Catholic Christians with their own churches, specialty grocery stores, and family businesses. There is also a meaningful presence of Bangladeshi and Yemeni residents, especially along corridors like Dequindre, adjacent to Hamtramck.
Religiously, Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox Christians, and Chaldean Catholics coexist with Presbyterians, Baptists, Sunni Muslims, and Buddhists. The environment is predominantly Christian, but religious diversity has increased alongside waves of immigration over the past two decades, without significant day-to-day tensions.
- English
- Arabic
- Polish
- Bengali
- Albanian
- +2 more
- Catholicism
- Chaldean Catholicism
- Eastern Orthodoxy
- Islam
- Protestantism
- +1 more
