Religion in South Africa

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Religion in South Africa

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St. Mark's Anglican Cathedral, George, South Africa
Mint colored Mosque in Cape Town.

South Africa has a wide mix of religions. Many religions are represented in the ethnic and regional diversity of South Africa's population. The traditional spiritualities of the Khoisan and Bantu speakers were succeeded in predominance by the Christianity introduced by the Dutch and, later, British settlers. In 1930 the majority of Afrikaners were Afrikaner Calvinists

Islam was introduced by the Cape Malay slaves of the Dutch settlers, Hinduism was introduced by the indentured servants imported from the Indian subcontinent, and Buddhism was introduced by both Indians and Chinese immigrants.

The Bahá'í Faith was introduced in 1911 and grew after Bahá'ís from Canada, the United States and Germany settled in the country.[1]

Judaism in SA came about some time before the discovery of the Cape of Good Hope, by the participation of Jewish astronomers and cartographers in the Portuguese discovery of the sea-route to India. They assisted Bartolomeu Dias and Vasco da Gama who first sailed around the Cape of Good Hope in 1488 and 1497. However, Jews only began to arrive in numbers from the 1820s.

Demographics

Religion Adherents % Adherents %
2001[2] 2007[3]
Christianity 35,750,641 79.77 29,684,861 73.52
Non-religious 6,767,165 15.1 3,262,428 8.08
Other 283,815 0.63
Buddhism/Chinese folk 12,113 0.03
Islam 654,064 1.46 985,460 1.45
Undetermined 610,974 1.36
Hinduism 551,668 1.23 504,707 1.25
African traditional religion 125,898 0.28 6,056,487 15.0
Judaism 75,549 0.17 68,640 0.17

References


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