Religion
According to a 2010 Israel Central Bureau of Statistics study on Israelis aged over 18, 8% of Israeli Jews define themselves as haredim (or Ultra-Orthodox); an additional 12% are "religious" (non-haredi orthodox, also known as: dati leumi/national-religious or religious zionist); 13% consider themselves "religious-traditionalists" (mostly adhering to Jewish Halakha); 25% are "non-religious traditionalists" (only partly respecting the Jewish Halakha), and 43% are "secular". Among the seculars, 53% say they believe in God. Due to the higher birth rate of religious and traditionalists over seculars, the share of religious and traditionalists among the overall population is even higher.
Religion | Population | % of total |
---|---|---|
Jewish | 70065569200000000005,569,200 | 75.5% |
Muslim | 70061240000000000001,240,000 | 16.8% |
Christian | 7005153100000000000153,100 | 2.1% |
Druze | 7005121900000000000121,900 | 1.7% |
Unclassified by choice | 7005289800000000000289,800 | 3.9% |
Year | Jews | Muslims | Muslim Percentage |
1950 | 1,203.0 | 116.1 | 8.80% |
1972 | 2,752.7 | 360.6 | 11.58% |
1995 | 4,522.3 | 811.2 | 15.21% |
2000 | 4,955.4 | 970.0 | 16.73% |
Read more about this topic: Ethnic Groups In Israel
Famous quotes containing the word religion:
“Unless criticism refuses to take itself quite so seriously or at least to permit its readers not to, it will inevitably continue to reflect the finicky canons of the genteel tradition and the depressing pieties of the Culture Religion of Modernism.”
—Leslie Fiedler (b. 1917)
“Whereas Freud was for the most part concerned with the morbid effects of unconscious repression, Jung was more interested in the manifestations of unconscious expression, first in the dream and eventually in all the more orderly products of religion and art and morals.”
—Lewis Mumford (18951990)
“I read ... an article by a highly educated man wherein he told with what conscientious pains he had brought up all his children to be skeptical of everything, never to believe anything in life or religion or their own feelings without submitting it to many rational doubts, to have a persistent, thoroughly skeptical, doubting attitude toward everything.... I think he might as well have taken them out in the backyard and killed them with an ax.”
—Brenda Ueland (18911985)