Christianity is the largest religion in Armenia, and has been since about 301 CE. However, the Kurds within the country which do not practice Yezidism are generally Sunni Muslim.
Yes, but there are minorities of Shiite Muslim Kurds, Yazidi Kurds, and Baha'i Kurds.
Most Kurds are Muslims, so yes. There are a minority of Kurds who are Yazidi or Zoroastrian which are henotheistic faiths and not strictly monotheistic. There are also Kurds who are Atheists.
The first religion practiced by Kurds was likely a form of ancient Mesopotamian polytheism, which worshiped multiple gods and goddesses associated with nature, fertility, and celestial bodies. Over time, Kurds also adopted other belief systems including Zoroastrianism, Christianity, and Islam.
Generally, No. Of the overall 35 million Kurds, there are less the 35,000 Christian Kurds, which makes Christians less than 0.1% of the Kurdish population. Understandably, Christian Kurds celebrate Christmas, but Muslim, Jewish, Yazidi, Zoroastrian, and non-religious Kurds do not celebrate Christmas.
Armenian Orthodox Christianity is the only major religion. The rest is Islam and Judiasm. The Islmaic people are mostly the Kurds and Azeris. The Kurds also follow Yazidism. Links: # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_Armenia # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenia
Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Turkey. Some are in Armenia and Germany.
What religion are the Kurds
Kurds live in Iraq, Turkey, Iran, Syria, Armenia, and Azerbaijan as well as in Diaspora communities across Europe and the Americas.
The Kurds are the most populous ethnic group in northern Iraq, but there are other minorities such as Arabs, Turkmen, Yazidi, Azeri, Turkish, and Persian.
The question confuses two non-mutually exclusive groups. "Kurd" is an ethnic term that refers to a group of people with certain customs, languages, and traditions. "Yazidi" is a religious term that refers to a group of people who share certain beliefs about the nature of God, etc. Almost all Yazidis are ethnically Kurds, but the majority of Kurds are NOT Yazidis, rather they are Sunni Muslims. Non-Yazidi Kurds and the Yazidis share almost all major aspects of Kurdish culture, such as language, foods, secular holidays (like Nourouz), dress styles, mannerisms, and family organizations.
Most Kurds are Sunni Muslims.
Yazidis are ethnic Kurds, most of whom live near Mosul, with smaller numbers in Syria, Turkey, Iran, Georgia and Armenia. It is estimated that there are around 500,000 Yazidis in the world. They practise a religion that is derived from Islam, Zoroastrianism and paganism.