Ethnic religion
An ethnic religion is generally defined by the ethnicity of its adherents, and conversion essentially equates to cultural assimilation into that ethnoreligious group. Ethnic religions are distinguished from religions that actively seek converts worldwide, regardless of ethnic affiliation.[1] In contrast, ethnic religions have (diasporas excluded) limited geographic scope, and membership is (by definition) determined by ethnic affiliation.[1]
Religion was a defining part of a nation's culture, along with language and customs. With the rise of the aggressively proselytizing religions that actively sought to cross ethnic boundaries, in particular Christianity and Islam, many of the established ethnic religions began to be polemically belittled as "pagan" (rustic), "heathen" (uncivilized) or shirk (idolatrous, polytheistic), kafirun (unbelieving). In the last 2,000 years, most ethnic religions have been supplanted or marginalized by either one of these two proselytizing religions: In Europe, for example, the indigenous Slavic, Germanic, Celtic, Norse, Greek and Roman ethnic religions were supplanted by Christianity. Accompanying colonial expansion, the same occurred later for the indigenous ethnic religions in the Americas and in Central and Southern Africa. Similarly, Islam replaced not only the traditional religions of the Arabs and the Zoroastrianism of the Iranians. Less stridently, Buddhism, another (historically) proselytizing religion, contributed a moral and ethical framework to various ethnic belief systems in eastern Asia, and these are now considered variants of Buddhism. Some ethnic religions however remain numerically strong, for instance Hinduism of the Indians, Judaism of the Judeans/Jews, Shenism of the Han Chinese, and Shinto of the Japanese.
Over time, even non-ethnic (international) religions assumed local traits, or developed forms specific to a certain ethnic group. This has notably happened in the course of the history of Christianity, which saw the emergence of national churches with different ethnic customs such as Germanic, Ethiopian, Armenian, Syriac, Greek, or Russian Churches. In this context, the term "ethnic religion" is sometimes also applied to a religion in a particular place, even if it is a regional expression of a non-ethnic religion. At the same time, expatriate communities often retain the customs of their homeland, and thus non-ethnic religions acquire ethnic characteristics, such as the Korean churches for immigrant Korean American Christians.[2] Even ethnic religions can fracture in this manner. For example, Hinduism is a collective term for the traditional beliefs and practices of the ethnic Indians (historically, "Hindu" and "Indian" are synonyms). But the Hindus in Trinidad, Guyana, and Suriname consider themselves a distinct ethnic group, and thus insist on the qualifier "Caribbean Hinduism".[3]
Since ethnic religions were simply the religion for each ethnic group, most simply called it "religion" (or "belief" or "piety" or "way" or similar) and in that sense most ethnic religions did not historically have distinguishing names. In time they were sometimes named after the ethnic group itself (Hinduism, Shenism, Judaism, 'Ancient Egyptian religion' etc.), but sometimes also given derogatory names (e.g. Gabr).
A partly overlapping concept is that of folk religion referring to ethnic or regional religious customs under the umbrella of an inter-national religion (e.g. folk Christianity).
Adherents.com does not include any of the numerically significant ethnic religions in its totals for "tribal religionists," or "ethnic religionists."
Traditional ethnic religions
Africa
- Akan religion (Akans of the Gold Coast)
- Bantu religion (Bantu of Central/Southern Africa)
- Berber religion (Berbers of northern Africa)
- Igbo religion (Igbo of southeastern Nigeria)
- Mbuti religion (Mbuti of Congo and central Sudan)
- Egyptian religion (of ancient Egypt)
- Serer religion (Serer of Senegal and northern West Africa)
- Vodun (Fon and Ewe of Benin and southwestern Nigeria)
- Yoruba religion (Yoruba of southwestern Nigeria and southern Benin)
Asia
- Bon (Tibetans)
- Chinese folk religion or Shenism, Taoism (Han Chinese)
- Dongbaism (Nakhi of the north-western flanks of the Himalayas)
- Dravidian folk religion of southern India
- Druze
- Hinduism of India
- Judaism (Israelites and Judaeans of the Levant)
- Kirant Mundhum (Kirat of the south-western flanks of the Himalayas)
- Korean shamanism or Sinism (Koreans)
- Mandaeism (Mandaeans of southern Mesopotamia)
- Ryukyuan religion, Ijun (Ryukyuans of the Ryukyu Islands near Taiwan)
- Samaritanism
- Shabak in Iraq
- Shinto (Japanese)
- Donyi-Polo (Arunachali of Northeastern India)
- Sanamahism (Meitei of Northeastern India)
- Santhal religion (Santhals of Eastern India and the Ganges delta)
- Tengrism (Turks, Mongolians, Hungarians)
- Yazdânism (Kurds of northern Iraq and eastern Anatolia)
- Yupik religion (Yupik of Alaska and Eastern Russia)
- Zoroastrianism (ancient religion of the Iranians)
- Non-specific:
- Central Asian folk religions
- Siberian folk religions
- Turco-Mongol religion of Central Asia
Indigenous America
- Yupik religion (Yupik of Alaska and Eastern Russia)
- Inuit religion (Inuit of North America and Greenland)
- Native American religion
- Anishinaabe traditional beliefs
- Ancient Mexica religion, Santa Muerte worship
- Maya religion (Maya; Guatemalans)
Europe
- Ancient Balkan religions (Dacians, Thracians, and the ancestors of modern Albanians, the Illyrians)
- Armenian religion of the southern Caucasus
- Baltic religions of Lithuania, Latvia and Western Russia
- Basque religions of the western end of the Pyrenees
- Celtic polytheism (Ancient Britons, Cumbrians, Gaels, Manx, Picts, Gallaeci of what is now Ireland, Scotland, Wales, the Isle of Man and Galicia-Northern Portugal)
- Etruscan religion (Etruscans of the central Italian peninsula)
- Native Finnic religion (Ludes, Olonets, Veps, Izhorians, Votes, Livonians, Võros and Setos of eastern Scandinavia and the eastern Baltic)
- Mari native religion
- Germanic paganism (pre-Christian Teutons and Germanii of west-central Germany)
- Ancient Greek religion (pre-Christian Greeks)
- Ancient Georgian religion (pre-Christian Colchis of the southern Caucasus)
- Norse religion (pre-Christian Norsefolk and Vikings of Scandinavia)
- Ancient Roman religion (pre-Christian Romans)
- Sami religion (Sami people of Scandinavia)
- Slavic paganism of Eastern and Southeastern Europe
- Vainakh (Nakhs of the Caucasus)
- Folk Catholicism
Revivals and reconstructions
- Ancient West Asia and North Africa
- Semitic neopaganism
- Kemetism (Egyptian neopaganism)
- Celtic
- Celtic Reconstructionism (1980s)
- Neo-Druidism (More often Neopagan than Reconstructionist)
- Reformed Druids of North America (1963)
- Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids (1964)
- Ár nDraíocht Féin (1983)
- Germanic
Heathenism (also Heathenry), or Greater Heathenry, is a blanket term for the whole Germanic Neopagan movement. Various currents and denominations have arisen over the years within it.
- Íslenska Ásatrúarfélagið (1972)
- The Troth (1987)
- Asatru Folk Assembly (1996)
- Swedish Asatru Assembly (1994)
- Åsatrufellesskapet Bifrost (1996)
- Folktrú (folklorist Scandinavian Forn Siðr)
- Foreningen Forn Sed (1999)
- Samfälligheten för Nordisk Sed (1999)
- Odinic Rite (1973)
- Odinist Fellowship (1996)
- Theodism (American tribalist movements)
- Armanism or Irminism (or Irminenschaft) (German Paganism and Ariosophical movements)
- Heidnische Gemeinschaft (1985)
- Artgemeinschaft (1951)
- Deutsche Heidnische Front (1998)
- New Armanen-Orden
- Other Indo-European
- Hellenic Polytheistic Reconstructionism (Hellenismos)
- Roman Way to the Gods or Religio Romana
- Armenian polytheism (Hetanism)
- Slavic neopaganism (Rodnovery)
- Baltic polytheism
- Other
- Tengrism (Turkic)
- Church of the Guanche People (Canary Islands)
- Finnic
- Finnish Neopaganism (Suomenism)
- Estonian Taaraism, Maausk (Maavalla Koda)
- Mexicayotl (Mexico)
See also
References
- 1 2 Hinnells, John R. (2005). The Routledge companion to the study of religion. Routledge. pp. 439–440. ISBN 0-415-33311-3. Retrieved 2009-09-17.
- ↑ Chong, Kelly H. (1997). "What It Means to Be Christian: The Role of Religion in the Construction of Ethnic Identity and Boundary Among Second- Generation Korean Americans". Sociology of Religion 59 (3): 259–286. doi:10.2307/3711911. JSTOR 3711911.
- ↑ van der Veer, Peter; Steven Vertovec (April 1991). "Brahmanism Abroad: On Caribbean Hinduism as an Ethnic Religion". Ethnology 30 (2): 149–166. doi:10.2307/3773407. JSTOR 3773407.
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