Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Religion_in_Turkey> ?p ?o }
- Religion_in_Turkey abstract "Islam is the largest religion in Turkey according to the state, with 99.8% of the population being automatically registered by the state as Muslim, for anyone whose parents are not of any other officially recognised religion, while other sources give a little lower estimate of 96.4%. Due to the nature of this method, the official number of Muslims include people with no religion; converted Christians/Judaists; people who are of a different religion than Islam, Christianity or Judaism; and anyone who is of a different religion than their parents, but hasn't applied for a change of their individual records. It should also be noted that the state currently doesn't allow the individual records to be changed to anything other than Islam, Christianity or Judaism, and the latter two are only accepted with a document of recognition released by an officially recognised church or synagogue. Recent independent polls show dramatically lower percentages, with 9.4% being not religious at all. The same studies show that roughly 90% of irreligious people are younger than the age of 35. Most Muslims in Turkey are Sunnis forming about 80%, and Alevis belonging to Shia denomination form about 20% of the Muslim population. There is also a Twelver Shia community which forms about 3% of the Muslim population. Among Shia Muslim presence in Turkey there is a small but considerable minority of Muslims with Ismaili heritage and affiliation. Christians (Oriental Orthodoxy, Greek Orthodox and Armenian Apostolic) and Jews (Sephardi), who comprise the non-Muslim religious population, make up 0.2% of the total.Turkey is officially a secular country with no official religion since the constitutional amendment in 1924 and later strengthened by Atatürk's Reforms and the appliance of laïcité by the country's founder and first president Mustafa Kemal Atatürk at the end of 1937. However, currently all public schools from elementary to high school hold mandatory religion classes which only focus on the Sunni sect of Islam. In these classes, children are required to learn prayers and other religious practices which belong specifically to Sunnism. Thus, although Turkey is officially a secular state, the teaching of religious practices in public grade schools has been controversial. Its application to join the European Union divided existing members, some of which questioned whether a Muslim country could fit in. Turkish politicians have accused the country's EU opponents of favouring a \"Christian club\".Beginning in the 1980s, the role of religion in the state has been a divisive issue, as influential religious factions challenged the complete secularization called for by Kemalism and the observance of Islamic practices experienced a substantial revival. In the early 2000s (decade), Islamic groups challenged the concept of a secular state with increasing vigor after Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) came into power in 2002.Although the Turkish government states that more than 99% of the population is nominally Muslim, academic research and polls give different results of the percentage of Muslims which are usually lower, most of which are above the 90% range. In a poll conducted by Sabancı University, 98.3% of Turks revealed they were Muslim. A poll conducted by Eurobarometer, KONDA and some other research institutes in 2013 showed that around 4.5 million of the 15+ population had no religion. Another poll conducted by the same institutions in 2015 showed that the number has reached 5.5 million, which means roughly 9.4% of the population in Turkey have no religion at all.".
- Religion_in_Turkey thumbnail Turkey-3019_-_Hagia_Sophia_(2216460729).jpg?width=300.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageExternalLink The_Legal_Status_of_the_Ecumenical_Patriarchate.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageExternalLink Written_question.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageRevisionID "708110617".
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink 2003_Istanbul_bombings.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Ahmet_Davutoğlu.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Armenian_Patriarch_of_Constantinople.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Ashkenazi_Jews.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Azerbaijanis.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Büyükada.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Category:Demographics_of_Turkey.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Category:Religion_in_Turkey.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Cathedral_of_the_Holy_Spirit.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Chaldean_Catholic_Archeparchy_of_Amida.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Chief_Rabbi.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_St_Peter.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Constantinople.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Constitution.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Cultural_Muslim.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Divriği_Great_Mosque_and_Hospital.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Orthodox_Church.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Ecumenical_Patriarch_of_Constantinople.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Epistle_to_the_Colossians.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink European_Union.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Hakham_Bashi.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Halki_seminary.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Headscarf_controversy_in_Turkey.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Istanbul.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Istanbul_University.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Italian_Synagogue_(Istanbul).
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Jafari_jurisprudence.
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Jews.
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- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Justice_and_Development_Party_(Turkey).
- Religion_in_Turkey wikiPageWikiLink Jyllands-Posten_Muhammad_cartoons_controversy.