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Vietnam Population & Religions

13/04/2019 717 Views
On the eastern tip of the Indochina peninsula in southeast Asia, Vietnam is one of the larger and more densely populated countries in the region. Vietnam's major religions are Buddhism and Catholicism, although the largest percentage of the population follows Vietnamese folk traditions or identifies as non-religious.

Vietnam Population

  • Close portrait of a Hmong woman Recent census estimates the population of Vietnam at beyond 86 million (2008). Vietnamese people, also called "Viet" or "Kinh", account for 86.2% of the population. Their population is concentrated in the alluvial deltas and coastal plains of the country.
  • A homogeneous social and ethnic majority group, the Kinh exert political and economic control.
  • There are more than 54 ethnic minority groups throughout the country, but the Kinh are purveyors of the dominant culture. Most ethnic minorities, such as the Muong, a closely related ethnic of the Kinh, are found mostly in the highlands covering two-thirds of the territory. travel vietnam.
  • Before the Vietnam War, the population of the Central Highlands was almost exclusively Degar (over 40 hill tribal groups).[citation needed] The Hoa (ethnic Chinese) and Khmer Krom are mainly lowlanders.
  • The largest ethnic minority groups include the Hmong, Dao, Tay, Thai, and Nung. From 1978 to 1979, some 450,000 ethnic Chinese left Vietnam.

Religion of Vietnam

  • In Vietnam, little is what it appears to be on the surface. The country’s religion is an excellent examboudismeple. Ostensibly, Vietnam is a Buddhist country – around 80% of the population regard themselves as adherents. Pagodas are everywhere, and the Buddhist festivals are embedded in the calendar. Also evident are temples with large effigies of obviously non-Buddhist deities and historical figures, Christian churches and signs of other religious sects.
  • Visitors often correctly assume that, as in their own country, several religions are practiced in Vietnam. However, in most countries people commit themselves to a specific religion, sect or cult. In Vietnam, people subscribe to several different canons of beliefs simultaneously.

The triple religion

  • The bedrock of religious practice in Vietnam is an amalgam of several components. The major religious inheritance from China, Confucianism, Taoism and ancestor worship, have coalesced with ancient Vietnamese animism to form a single entity – ‘tam giao’ – the ‘triple religion’. Each element exists in a pure form in Vietnam, and there are sects and cults that adhere to a single set of beliefs, but the great majority of people describe themselves as ‘Buddhist’, a portmanteau term for the ‘tam giao’.
  • Vietnam’s major religions are described separately in this section, but it must be noted that many of the orthodoxies referred to have been adapted to ‘fit’ the way of life, rather than the other way round. For example, although Mahayana Buddhism requires its followers to abstain from eating meat, Vietnamese Buddhists (apart from monks and other acolytes) avoid meat only on two days each month, the full and the new moon. People arriving with a belief that vegetarianism will be widespread are dismayed to find that this is not so.

Christianity in Vietnam

  • Of the major religious faiths present in Vietnam, the Catholics adhere most closely to their creed. Hocatholicismewever, many still maintain an altar in their houses to worship the ancestors, or use a Christian shrine for the same purpose.
  • The Catholic Church has been prominent in Vietnam’s recent history. Initially, little notice was taken of European missionaries entering Vietnam from the 16th century onwards. However, when Christianity began to gain a foothold, the mandarins and other authorities increasingly saw it as a threat to Confucianism and banned the religion. The French invaded and gave Catholicism preferential treatment, a policy extended to suppression of Buddhism by the Catholic-led Saigon regime after the country was partitioned. Thich Quang Duc, a Buddhist priest from Hue, publicly burned himself to death in protest in 1963. A graphic photograph of the event had a major impact in turning public opinion against the US presence in Vietnam.

The post-war years

  • After re-unification, the communist authorities followed Marx’s dictum that religion was ‘the opiate of the people’ and introduced controls on religious expression by placing religion under state control, confiscating land and property, and sending priests, monks and other devotees who had been politically active supporters of the Saigon regime for ‘re-education.
  • Since ‘doi moi’ opened Vietnam to the rest of the world in 1986, restrictions have eased, land has been returned and religious freedom has been enshrined in the nation’s constitution. Nevertheless, although the vast majority of the people are now free to worship more or less what and where they like, the authorities continue to keep a firm hold on religion and its more fervent followers, mindful of attempts by Vietnam’s political enemies abroad to use it to foment dissent.
  • From time to time, critical reports are issued by religious and political organisations in the West, claiming this as suppression of freedom and abuses of human rights, an accusation vigorously denied by the Vietnamese and by many senior Vietnamese clerics. In reality, the Vietnamese government has recognised the destabilising potential of ‘social evils’ such as drug abuse and crime, and is encouraging religion and religious values as a contribution towards maintaining social cohesion at a time of rapid development.
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