No, neither of them is ethnic.
in 1914, no role of ethnic or religious tensions
Yes - the best example of this is Christianity, which was a local/ethnic religion in Judea during the Roman Empire but through conquests and imperialism became a dominant world religion.
Universalizing religions seek to appeal to all people regardless of geographic location, while ethnic religions are closely tied to a specific ethnic or cultural group. Universalizing religions often have a missionary aspect and aim to spread their beliefs globally, whereas ethnic religions are typically passed down through generations within a specific community.
40% Christian, 20% Muslim and 40% ethnic minority religions
Judaism
40% Christian, 20% Muslim and 40% ethnic minority religions
Christianity, Islam, and Traditional African religions are practiced by the Ashanti ethnic group.
Most ethnic religions lack a clear perception of how the universe came to be, as they focus more on our current state of being and improving it as is. Universalizing religions tend to be theistic, so, naturally, they believe that their God has created everything. Although this answer is a bit broad for the given subject, i hope it was some help.
Christianity (40%) and ethnic religions (40%) are most common, but there is also Muslim (20%).
multi ethnic
Shamanism is not a religion. It is a anthropological description of many religions that have some traits in common such as people who go into trance states and communicate or traveling or guide souls in or heal with the spirit world. There are many differences within each religion and to lump them together is to devalue their true meaning to the believers of these religions. They are not universalizing religions although as almost all religions they make universal claims about the nature of reality as they see it. Its more of a Ethnic religion that tried to link the spiritual realm with the physical world, so then that makes it also universalizing. Its both actually, but more of a ethnic religion.