yes, because if you want to practice any religion they want they can it shouldn't matter if you are christian and you want to practice jewish. so yes it is free to practice any religion the want!!
Taiwan is a free country. The residents are free to choose which ever religion they wish to practice. There is high tolerance for many different religions to be practiced side by side. Major religions Buddhism, Taoism, folk religion makes up about 93% of total religious population. There is about 4.5% Christians, and 2.5% other religions.
Taiwan is a free country. The residents are free to choose which ever religion they wish to practice. There is high tolerance for many different religions to be practiced side by side. Major religions Buddhism, Taoism, folk religion makes up about 93% of total religious population. There is about 4.5% Christians, and 2.5% other religions.
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution allows people to practice their own religion. It includes the Free Exercise Clause, which protects the right to freely practice one's religion without government interference.
Well yes. America is a free country and one of the admemdments to the constitution says that we have freedom of religion.
There is no established religion in New York because New York is in the USA, and the USA is a free country.
It made people feel free and independent to religion
"new" atheists often insist that people are free to practice their religion but warn that religion poisons one's ability to think freely.
Because people were free to practice their own choice of religion.
The only relevance religion has in secular schools is to put literature into context. Schools are not religious establishments, they are places for learning how to read, write and do arithmetic. The right of freedom to practice your religion, also means other people have the right to be free from it. ;)
yes
As a colony where the free practice of religion was accepted.
depends on which government the US government can't because of free speech and free right to practice your religion