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In a religiously diverse Asia, Pakistan one of the least diverse: Report

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In a religiously diverse Asia, Pakistan one of the least diverse: Report
By Khurram Siddiqui
Published: April 4, 2014
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Countries shown with varying religious diversity. PHOTO: PEW RESEARCH CENTER

Pakistan ranks among the least religiously diverse countries in a religiously diverse Asian region, including immediate neighbours Afghanistan and Iran, according to theReligious Diversity Index published by the Pew Research Center on Friday.

The 10-point index, which ranks each country by its level of religious diversity, is divided into four ranges, “very high”, “high”, “moderate”, and “low”. Pakistan ranked among the 136 “low diversity” countries, the largest range on the index indicating that most countries in the world are not religion diverse.

The 12-nation top range of “very high” diversity countries comprised of six from Asia-Pacific – Singapore, Taiwan, Vietnam, South Korea, China, and Hong Kong – and five from sub-Saharan Africa – Mozambique, Benin, Ivory Coast, Guinea-Bissau, and Togo.

Of the 232 countries in the study, Singapore with a population of more than 5 million had the highest score on the Religious Diversity Index. About a third of Singapore’s population is Buddhist (34%), while 18% are Christian, 16% are religiously unaffiliated, 14% are Muslim, 5% are Hindu and less than 1% are Jewish.

According to the data, Pakistan had the 23rd largest proportional Muslim population at 96.4%, smaller than immediate neighbours Afghanistan and Iran, but larger than Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Indonesia.

Pakistan had a Religious Diversity Index score of 0.8 featuring an overwhelming Muslim population of 96.4%. The largest minority community of Hindus made up 1.9% of the population with Christians a close second comprising 1.6% of the population. Buddhists, Jews, and those belonging to ‘folk religions’ all comprised 0.1% of the population each.

Among Muslim majority nations, Pakistan ranked 26th in terms of religious diversity, with Malaysia topping the list and Morocco being the least diverse. Interestingly, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Indonesia are more diverse than Pakistan, and so are all Arabian Gulf countries, except Yemen. Turkey and immediate neighbours Afghanistan and Iran ranked lower than Pakistan in religious diversity.

Interestingly, the United States and the United Kingdom did not rank very high on the overall index with both countries falling in the “moderate” diversity range, below “high” diversity countries like North Korea, Bahrain, Qatar and Cuba. Australia and Canada also ranked within the “high” diversity range.

Czech Republic, North Korea, Estonia, Japan, Hong Kong, and China topped the list of proportional population that was “religiously unaffiliated”, those who say they are atheists, agnostics or nothing in particular.

The Pew Research Center, a research group that does empirical social science research, developed the Religious Diversity Index which looks at the percentage of each country’s population that belongs to eight major religious groups – Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam and Judaism. The closer a country comes to having equal shares of the eight groups, the higher its score on the index.
 
China is more religiously diverse than India o_O
 
Sri Lanka is one of the most religiously diverse countries? Even more than India? o_O
 
I think they are looking at the percentages. Although India is one of the most diverse countries in the world, the dominance of one group (80%+) lowers its ranking. This is just my guess, I haven't read the report.
 
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Sri Lanka is one of the most religiously diverse countries? Even more than India? o_O

India has a high density of a single religion, 80% Hindu, vs 70% Buddhists in Sri Lanka. Other religions have higher proportion in Sri Lanka (30%) than India (20%).
 
strange I always thought India was the most diverse country in the world
 
Sri Lanka is one of the most religiously diverse countries? Even more than India? o_O



That is why they had this debilitating "Civil War ".

The Buddhist hate the Muslims and Hindu Tamils and the Tamils hate the other two. The Muslims are too weak to hate anyone in Sri Lanka.
 
China is mostly Atheist, lol. :P

Though we have a large percentage of people who follow Buddhism/Confucianism/Taoism, and native Chinese Folk Religion (which is a mix of all three).

And we have a small percentage of people who follow the Abrahamic religions (Christians/Muslims/Jews).
 
That is why they had this debilitating "Civil War ".

The Buddhist hate the Muslims and Hindu Tamils and the Tamils hate the other two. The Muslims are too weak to hate anyone in Sri Lanka.

And that is why Hindus joined Muslims under the leadership of Christians to fight Buddhists? Cause they hated other religions?

China is mostly Atheist, lol. :P

Though we have a large percentage of people who follow Buddhism/Confucianism/Taoism, and native Chinese Folk Religion (which is a mix of all three).

And we have a small percentage of people who follow the Abrahamic religions (Christians/Muslims/Jews).

You guys don't have any Hindus? And I don't mean immigrants but Hans.
 
Very small numbers, and they are not ethnically Han (immigrants from South Asia at some point or another).

Xuanzang brought Buddhism as the primary Dharmic philosophy in East Asia.

It surprises me that there was no spill across the Himalayas of Hinduism while Buddhism spread far and wide. Though I guess there is no formal conversion procedure in Hinduism.

And who is Xuanzang? Also, wasn't there someone who brought martial arts, a Hindu?
 
It surprises me that there was no spill across the Himalayas of Hinduism while Buddhism spread far and wide. Though I guess there is no formal conversion procedure in Hinduism.

Buddhism was merged with native Chinese philosophies and religions (Confucianism and Taoism), creating something we might call "East Asian Buddhism" which was widely accepted across the whole of East Asia. This is a part of the Mahayana branch of Buddhism.

South East Asia has a different form of Buddhism (Theravada), since they got it from the other route, i.e. directly from South Asia.

And who is Xuanzang? Also, wasn't there someone who brought martial arts, a Hindu?

I think you guys write his name as Hsuan-tsang, which is an old Romanization. The more correct way to write it is Xuanzang.

The other one you're talking about, the founder of the Shaolin Temple is Batuo. And no, he did not bring Martial Arts, Chinese martial arts are native to China, what he brought was the religion and ideology of Buddhism.
 
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