Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 29 – A survey of
Moscow university students found that they overwhelmingly oppose gas marriage,
do not believe that chastity before marriage is important, and do not plan to
have large families, although there are important differences between believers
and non-believers and between Orthodox Christians and Muslims.
The results of the study (D.
Tikhomirov, “Sexual Morality of Moscow Students: The Religious Aspect” [in
Russian], Znaniye. Ponimaniye.Umeniye,
2 (1917)) have now been summarized on the Tolkovatel portal at ttolk.ru/2017/10/24/половая-мораль-московских-студентов/).
Tikhomirov
surveyed 605 students in Moscow higher educational institutions last year.
Sixty-four percent of them were women and 36 percent men, roughly the share of
the two genders on average in such institutions. Both those who identified themselves as
believers and those who did not were asked the same set of questions.
More
than half (56 percent) consider themselves religious and other 24 percent say
they believe in a higher power. But very few regularly attend services,
although Muslims do so more regularly than Orthodox. Only 15 percent say they are non-believers,
while five percent say they have not yet made up their minds.
Among
religious students, 79 percent identified as Orthodox, 12 percent as Muslims,
five percent as Armenian Christians, and three percent as Buddhists. According
to the study, “the most clearly expressed religiosity was among Muslims; the
least was among Orthodox Christians.”
A
majority of all students in each faith community say that creating a family is
“a most important life goal,” but “more than half” overall don’t think having a
lot of children is. But there are important variations among faiths: 51 percent
of Muslims say having a lot of children is important, while only 36 percent of
Muslims and 14 percent of the irreligious have that view.
The
study found that Russian students overall have become more liberal in their
views on pre-marital sex, with the number considering it impermissible having
fallen from 41 percent in 1992 to 21 percent in 2015. But there are important
religious divisions: 72 percent of Muslim students say pre-marital chastity is
important, while only 36 percent of Orthodox and far lower percentages of
non-believers do.
The
Moscow students are also more tolerant to divorce, a reflection of the fact
that today more than half of all marriages are dissolved in that way. Only 11 percent of the students say that
divorce is impermissible, although again there are religious differences.
Sixty-five percent of Muslim students say divorce is not allowed, while only 33
percent of non-believers feel that way.
But
there is one area where Russian students have not become more liberal but
rather more conservative: homosexuality.
That pattern reflects a change in Russian society as a whole: In 1991,
71 percent of Russians did not accept the rights of homosexuals; last year,
that figure had risen to 81 percent.
Three
quarters of Russian students say that single-sex marriages should not be
allowed, with only 15 percent opposing that view. On this issue, unlike in many others, the
views of Muslim and Orthodox students “practically coincides.” The only group adopting a more tolerant
position is that of the non-relievers.
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