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Religious Identity in the Imagining of Public Religious Diversity A Canadian Case Study Peter Beyer University of Ottawa.

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Presentation on theme: "Religious Identity in the Imagining of Public Religious Diversity A Canadian Case Study Peter Beyer University of Ottawa."— Presentation transcript:

1 Religious Identity in the Imagining of Public Religious Diversity A Canadian Case Study Peter Beyer University of Ottawa

2 The Research project (Canada) “2 nd gen” for recent immigrants Sample of 86 interviews ▫ From across country (incl. French & English) ▫ From various religious & ethnic families ▫ Different recruiting techniques Main questions: ▫ How individual religious identity constructed? ▫ How public religious diversity understood? ▫ Attitudes to religious diversity

3 “CULTURE” “SPIRITUALITY”“RELIGION” Conceptual Vectors

4 Demographic Profile of 86 participants Average age = about 23 (18-32) 52 women, 34 men (3 LGB, 5 married) Slightly less than half born in Canada ▫ Others born in 22 different countries ▫ Range of ethnicities from 5 continents, some mixed 55 Christians (17 RC, 5 Eastern, 33 Protestant), 12 Sikhs, 9 Muslims, 4 Hindus, 3 Buddhists, 2 No religion

5 Personal religious identity & orientation to religious diversity Identification with “a religion” or not Exclusive or non-exclusive identification “SBNR status” (incl. SBNR, bricoleurs, à la carte, seekers, but not no religion or atheists) How other religions/religious identities conceived Attitudes to other religions/identities

6 Identification with “a religion” Positive identification = 81 ▫ But, a few explicitly “cultural” only = 5 No religion = 3 Atheist = 2 ▫ All three LGB no religion or atheist Vast majority has clear, self-declared, identification with “a religion” ▫ Note: 24 of 37 recruitment texts encourage this  17 of the interviews from the 13 others

7 Exclusive or non-exclusive All but 15 (at most) have clear and single religious identity, as self-reported Of the 15, eight are of East & Southeast Asian origins ▫ Already a cultural component in religious identification ▫ Of other 7: 1 NR, 4 RC, 2 Sikh Single, exclusive religious identities are the norm in sample ▫ = few people identify with more than one religion ▫ … and when they do, it’s within a religion Reprise: proportions do not represent population

8 “Spiritual but not religious” status 34 of 86 qualify by own identification Mostly à la carte, but many expressly SBNR Includes all: NR/atheist, cultural identifiers Strong correlation between religious identification and “SBNR” status

9 Religious identity and SBNR status Roman Catholics: 14 of 17 Eastern Christians: 3 of 5 (1 non-SBNR) cultural/low level) Protestant: ▫ Mainline: 1 or 2 (both cultural Christians; 1 low) ▫ “Evangelical”: 5 of 31 Sikhs: 5 of 12 (2 non-SBNR cultural/low level) Muslims: 2 of 9 (1 cultural & SBNR) Hindus: 1 of 4 (3 cultural, incl. the one SBNR ) Buddhists: 2 of 4 (2 cultural, 2 SBNR) No Religion: 1 of 2

10 How other religions conceived or identified 2 ways: ▫ Identifiable religions, especially “world religions” ▫ Personal religions of other individuals  E.g. everyone has their own, if they have one Recognition of fuzzy boundaries between religion, culture, and spirituality ▫ For many = religion & spirituality same ▫ For most = religion & culture related  The “Evangelical” pattern: first not second

11 Attitudes to other religions/identities Most accept equal value of all religions / religious paths 2 big exceptions: ▫ Evangelical Christian: 15 of 31 say their religion the best, the only true, although tolerate others ▫ 6 of 9 Muslims accept others only in Islamic way, but tolerant of all (neo-Nurcu skewing)


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