Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 20 – Thirty percent
of Russians now identify as Muslims, according to a new survey by the
ZoomMarket marketing agency, just 12 percent fewer than the 42 percent who say
they are Orthodox Christians. Some 18
percent say they are atheists, with all other denominations in the single
digits.
Thus, three percent of Russians say
they are Roman Catholics, two percent say they are Protestants or Old Believers,
and one percent each identify as Buddhists, Jews, Greek Catholics or Slavic pagans
(mazm.ru/article/a-2013.html and znak.com/2017-06-20/42_rossiyan_schitayut_sebya_pravoslavnymi).
The most Orthodox places were
Samara, where 57 percent said they were Orthodox Christians, Nizhny Novgorod
and Perm (53 percent), Novosibirsk (49 percent), St. Petersburg and Krasnoyarsk
(43 percent), Voronezh (41 percent).
The most Muslim places were Kazan
(72 percent), Krasnodar (43 percent), Voronezh (31 percent), Yekaterinburg (29
percent), Krasnoyarsk (28 percent), and Moscow (26 percent). And the most “atheist”
were St. Petersburg (26 percent), Voronezh and Yekaterinburg (23 percent),
Krasnoyarsk (22 percent), Moscow (21 percent), and Novosibirsk (18 percent).
These figures are important for at
least three reasons. First, they show just how rapidly Islam is gaining ground
in Russia. Second, they cast doubt on the claims of the Kremlin and the Moscow
Patriarchate about how “Orthodox” Russia in fact now is. And third, they set
the stage for even more changes ahead.
One indication of that: a third of
all those queried said that they would vote for a religious party if one were
available to them.
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