This picture taken on January 30, 2021 shows Hou Sibai (C), a migrant worker from Gansu province working in the capital, with his daughter at their flat in Beijing. Hou is just one of millions of China's migrant workers facing the dilemma whether to travel during the upcoming Lunar New Year during what is normally the world's biggest annual human migration -- the annual pilgrimage back home from industrial hotspots with better employment prospects. (Photo by AFP)
ishtartv.com - licas.news
August 20, 2024
A new Pew Research Center report indicated the significant presence of
Christians in global migration, showing that nearly half (47 percent) of the
world’s international migrants identify as Christian.
This makes Christians the largest religious group on the move,
significantly influencing religious demographics in both origin and destination
countries.
Migration from Christian-majority regions like Latin America, Europe,
and Sub-Saharan Africa has contributed to this trend.
Economic factors, political instability, and conflict have driven
millions of Christians to seek new opportunities and safety abroad.
“People move internationally for many reasons, such as to find jobs, get
an education, or join family members. But religion and migration are often
closely connected,” the study said.
Muslims are the second-largest religious group among global migrants,
accounting for 29 percent of the total.
The migration of Muslims, especially from conflict-ridden regions such
as the Middle East, is largely driven by the search for stability and better
economic prospects.
Jews, although a smaller group in absolute numbers, have the highest
likelihood of migrating, with around 20 percent of the global Jewish population
living outside their country of birth.
“Many migrants have moved to escape religious persecution or to live
among people who hold similar religious beliefs. Often people move and take
their religion with them, contributing to gradual changes in their new
country’s religious makeup,” the study said.
Sometimes, though, migrants shed the religion they grew up with and
adopt their new host country’s majority religion, some other religion, or no
religion,” it added.
This migration is influenced by both historical factors and contemporary
challenges faced by Jewish communities in certain regions.
The study also indicates that migration has led to religious
diversification in many destination countries, often introducing new religious
communities into areas that previously had limited religious diversity.
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