British Census 2011: Islam Is The
Fastest Growing Religion
21 December 2012
By Imaan Ali
New census data has been released in UK and it has
some new facts
-Islam is the fastest growing religion in UK
-Islam is the second largest religion after
Christianity
-Indians are the largest ethnic minority
-Christianity is on rapid decline.
The census is held every 10 years in UK and the latest
was conducted in 2011, which results out this week.
The facts are based on how people identify themselves
in terms of religion and racial ethnicity. Although it
is contested that not everyone may be what they
identify themselves as especially when it comes to
racial ethnicity.
The census was based on 56.07 million people and 33.7
million people identified as Christians, whereas the
number of self-identifying Muslims rose to 2.7 million
increases from 3% to 4.8% of the population in last 10
years.
The Muslim Council of Britain welcomed the result,
saying Muslims were playing "a significant part in the
increasing diversity of Britain."
Islam's 2.7 million adherents make it the
second-largest religion in England and Wales, far
ahead of Hinduism (817,000), Sikhism (423,000),
Buddhism (248,000) and Judaism (263,000). The other
fringe religions are pagan, pantheist, wiccan,
satanist, druid, "Jedi Knight" and others
This comes after the latest U.S. Religion Census that
was just released on May 1, 2012, the fastest growing
religion in America is Islam. The data for the census
was compiled by the Association of Statisticians of
American Religious Bodies, and the results were
released by the Association of Religion Data
Archives. From the year 2000 to the year 2010, the
census found that the number of Muslims living inside
the United States increased by about 1 million to 2.6
million – a stunning increase of 66.7 percent.
Thus Islam is the fastest growing religion in Both US
and UK according to the latest census reports
announced this year. No wonder Barack Obama had
recently said 'we are no longer a Christian country'.
He wasn't much off the mark.
The biggest surprise was the phenomenal increase of
people who said they do not follow any religion and
they increased from 7.7 million to 14.4 million almost
doubling in last decade, which means more then quarter
of people identify themselves as adhering to no
religion. The assumption is that majority of these
people identified earlier as Christians. This resulted
in decrease in Christian's population from 7r% to 59%
in last decade alone.
In the U.S., by contrast, a 2007 Pew Forum on Religion
& Public Life survey found 16.1 percent of respondents
identified as "unaffiliated" with any particular
religion
Major Christian denomination put up a brave face
saying that most of the people who identified as
Christians are practising one rather then the ones who
associate themselves as ‘cultural Christians'
Another contrast in UK is that while the Muslim
The results of the 2011 census released this week
apply to England and Wales only. Separate data from
Scotland will be published shortly.