Irreligion in Uruguay

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Contents

Religion in Uruguay (2021) [1] [2]
  1. Deist (30.1%)
  2. Atheist or Agnostic (14.4%)
  3. Catholic (44.8%)
  4. Other Christian (9.5%)
  5. Other/Unspecified (1.2%)

Secularism

During the Spanish colonial period, the Catholic Church had less influence in Uruguay than in other Hispanic regions because of the relatively-small number of indigenous peoples. Catholicism was easily introduced to Spaniards and mestizos and, until the first half of the nineteenth century, the church regulated the state, a number of institutions, and land as it did in other Latin American countries. [6] According to some historians, the Uruguayan dioceses were South America's least powerful; Spanish and Italian priests, less able to teaching religion, preferred to evangelize the rural poor. When Uruguay became a secular republic in 1917, the country began to receive Spanish, Italian, and French immigrants. French immigrants in Uruguay were traditionally anti-clerical; many Spanish and Italians immigrants arrived as Catholics, but became independent of religion because of little ecclesiastical influence.

Independent of Spain and the Empire of Brazil, many educated Uruguayans were influenced by skeptical European writers and ancient Greek philosophy. After independence, cultured Uruguayans began espousing secular and humanist political views against the Catholic Church and the small (but growing) number of Afro-Brazilian religious practitioners. Control of Uruguay's cemeteries passed to the state in 1861, ending mandatory religious funerals. [7] The Colorado Party dominated the government during the mid-1860s, with secular reforms which included civil marriage and the development of technology and urban areas. Many people with little knowledge of Catholicism became irreligious due to ignorance rather than disbelief.

In 1877, José Pedro Varela advocated secular education in Uruguay. Although Catholic leaders opposed state schools, the educated elite supported the concept of secular schools which taught science. A decade later, Archbishop Mariano Soler championed Catholic education. [8]

Secularism waned for about a decade during the early 1890s. José Batlle y Ordóñez revived the movement early in the 20th century, allowing women to divorce and banning religious symbols from children's hospitals. "Batllism" enacted total separation of church and state in 1917, when Uruguay became a republic with a secular constitution and Marxist-inspired economic reforms. After the Batllist period (1903–1931), the church focused on educating Catholics and providing a Christian spiritual refuge to all citizens. The Colorado Party's influence was declining, and it was defeated by the National Party in the 1958 election. [9]

By year

Year% Unaffiliated% ChristianOthersSurvey
190837.237.2
 
62.862.8
 
0Census [10]
1910*3939
 
6161
 
0Pew Forum [11]
1950*3737
 
6363
 
0Pew Forum
19703131
 
6868
 
11
 
Pew Forum
197028.428.4
 
67.867.8
 
3.83.8
 
Conwell Studio[ citation needed ]
19803535
 
61.461.4
 
3.63.6
 
Census
200640.440.4
 
58.258.2
 
1.31.3
 
Census
20143737
 
6060
 
33
 
Pew Forum
202029.829.8
 
61.261.2
 
9.09
 
Conwell Studio
202362.962.9
 
33.433.4
 
5.05
 
AmericasBarometer

By 1900, about ten percent of the world's nonreligious people lived in Uruguay. [12] According to Latinobarómetro, the number of irreligious Uruguayans increased from 18 percent in 1995 to 38 percent in 2013.[ full citation needed ]

According to the Pew Research Center's Religion and Public Life Project, Uruguay's nonreligious population will be 42.1 percent by 2050. The irreligious fertility rate is virtually identical to the Christian one, with Christian and nonreligious women giving birth to an average of two children from 2010 to 2015. [13]

References

  1. "Encuesta Continua de Hogares (ECH) - Instituto Nacional de Estadística".
  2. "Los uruguayos y la religión". 7 February 2019. Archived from the original on 14 October 2023. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  3. "Christianity in its Global Context, 1970–2020 (P.60)" (PDF). Gordon Conwell PDF. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 September 2018. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  4. "Flash 6_ Religion" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2006. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  5. "Nigel Barber: Uruguay: A Secular Outpost Legalizes Abortion". HuffPost. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  6. "Religion in Uruguay". Country Studies.
  7. Armet, Stephen. "Explaining How Uruguay Became a 'Religious Ghetto'" (PDF). ResearchGate.
  8. Pereira, Carmen. "Religion and the Secular State: Uruguayan Report" (PDF).
  9. Jermyn, Leslie; Wong, Winnie (2010). Uruguay – Leslie Jermyn, Winnie Wong – Google Books. ISBN   9780761444824 . Retrieved 15 July 2012.
  10. "PROLADES – Religión en Uruguay" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 March 2022. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  11. "Religion in Latin America". Pew Research Center. 13 November 2014.
  12. "Annual Table of World Religions, 1900–2025". WNRF.org.
  13. "Religions in Uruguay | PEW-GRF". 34.194.250.140.[ permanent dead link ]