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Religion in Switzerland

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Religion in Switzerland Empty Re: Religion in Switzerland

Post  gaunpro Thu Dec 02, 2010 3:48 am

Dr Ashley Gonzalez is Board Certified by the American Academy of Pediatrics. She did her medical training at LSU and her residency at All Children's Hospital in Little Rock Arkansas. Presently she is on staff at Winter Haven Hospital, and the Regency for new borns.
She is bilingual, speaking fluent English as her first language, and Spanish as her second. She is married to Marco Gonzalez, and they have adopted two sons.


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Religion in Switzerland Empty Religion in Switzerland

Post  taixyz1992 Fri Oct 22, 2010 12:03 am

Switzerland has no official state religion, though most of the cantons (except Geneva and Neuchâtel) recognize official churches, which are either the Catholic Church or the Swiss Reformed Church. These churches, and in some cantons also the Old Catholic Church and Jewish congregations, are financed by official taxation of adherents.[130]
The reformed church of Glarus.

Christianity is the predominant religion of Switzerland, divided between the Catholic Church (41.8% of the population) and various Protestant denominations (35.3%). Immigration has brought Islam (4.3%, predominantly Kosovars, Bosniaks and Turks) and Eastern Orthodoxy (1.8%) as sizeable minority religions.[131] In a 2009 referendum, Swiss voters banned the construction of new minarets. The 2005 Eurobarometer poll[132] found 48% to be theist, 39% expressing belief in "a spirit or life force", 9% atheist and 4% agnostic. Greeley (2003) found that 27% of the population does not believe in God.[133]

The country is historically about evenly balanced between Catholic and Protestant, with a complex patchwork of majorities over most of the country. One canton, Appenzell, was officially divided into Catholic and Protestant sections in 1597.[134] The larger cities (Bern, Geneva, Zürich and Basel) are predominantly Protestant. Central Switzerland, as well as Ticino, is traditionally Catholic. The Swiss Constitution of 1848, under the recent impression of the clashes of Catholic vs. Protestant cantons that culminated in the Sonderbundskrieg, consciously defines a consociational state, allowing the peaceful co-existence of Catholics and Protestants. A 1980 initiative calling for the complete separation of church and state was rejected by 78.9% of the voters

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