Alabama, Iran have more in common than first thought

(UNDATED) Baptists in Tuscaloosa and Muslims in Tehran might not seem to have much in common, but Alabama and Iran do agree on one thing: the importance of religion. Nearly identical percentages of people in both locations — 82 percent of Alabamians and 83 percent of Iranians — say religion is an important part of […]

(UNDATED) Baptists in Tuscaloosa and Muslims in Tehran might not seem to have much in common, but Alabama and Iran do agree on one thing: the importance of religion.

Nearly identical percentages of people in both locations — 82 percent of Alabamians and 83 percent of Iranians — say religion is an important part of their daily lives.

The comparisons come from the Gallup Poll, which recently compiled findings about the importance of faith to individuals in all 50 states and 143 countries.


“Georgians in the United States are about as religious as Georgians in the Caucasus region,” wrote Steve Crabtree and Brett Pelham, in a Monday (Feb. 9) report on the Gallup Web site. “On the less religious end of the spectrum, residents of New Hampshire look similar to their neighbors in Canada and Alaskans are about as religious as Israelis.”

The least religious U.S. state — Vermont — registered the same percentage (42 percent) as Switzerland when people were asked, “Is religion an important part of your daily life?”

Among the most religious countries — with 98 percent or more answering in the affirmative — are Egypt, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Congo. Least religious include Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and the Czech Republic, with 21 percent or less saying “yes.”

Just as the U.S. has a disparity in religious fervor — from a high of 85 percent in Mississippi to a low of 42 percent in Vermont — similar diversity is likely in countries across the globe, Gallup researchers said. That means one shouldn’t assume that people in a particular country are less or more devout than the average American.

“Recognition of that fact should give Americans pause when we’re tempted to apply blanket generalizations to other cultures,” wrote Crabtree and Pelham. “It should also help those outside the United States avoid applying such oversimplified judgments to Americans.”

The global findings are based on face-to-face and telephone interviews conducted between 2006 and 2008 of about 1,000 adults per country, with a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. The survey of U.S. states was based on telephone interviews with 355,334 adults and had a margin of error for most states of plus or minus 1 percentage point, though some states had a margin of error as high as plus or minus 4 percentage points.


(OPTIONAL TRIM/SIDEBAR FOLLOWS)

Following is a list of Gallup’s least and most religious U.S. states, along with comparable findings in nations across the globe. The list is based on the percentage of people who said religion is an “important part” of their daily lives:

Most Religious U.S. States and Countries with Comparable Religiosity:

Lebanon (86)

Mississippi (85)

Iran (83)

Alabama (82)

Zimbabwe (81)

South Carolina (80)

India (79)

Iraq (79)

Tennessee (79)

Louisiana (78)

Arkansas (78)

Romania (78)

Botswana (77)

Georgia (U.S. state) (76)

North Carolina (76)

Haiti (76)

Tajikistan (76)

Oklahoma (75)

Georgia (Caucasus region) (75)

Cyprus (75)

Kentucky (74)

Texas (74)

Least Religious U.S. States and Countries with Comparable Religiosity

Vermont (42)

Switzerland (42)

South Korea (45)

Canada (45)

Taiwan (45)

New Hampshire (46)

Montenegro (46)

Slovakia (47)

Maine (48)

Massachusetts (48)

Israel (50)

Singapore (50)

Alaska (51)

Serbia (51)

Washington (52)

Oregon (53)

Rhode Island (53)

Nevada (54)

Connecticut (55)

Austria (55)

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