Irreligion in Africa

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Irreligion in Africa
Leo Igwe at TAM 7-12-2012.JPG
Prominent Nigerian atheist Leo Igwe
Religion
Irreligion
(including agnosticism, atheism, deism, skepticism, freethought/freethinker, secular humanism, ignosticism, nonbeliever, non-theist, rationalist)

Irreligion in Africa, encompassing also atheism in Africa as well as agnosticism, secular humanism and general secularism, has been estimated at over tens of millions in various polls.[citation needed] While the predominant religions in Africa are Islam and Christianity. Many groups and individuals still practice their traditional beliefs. Despite this the irreligious population is notable, especially in South Africa where 15.1% of the population describe themselves as irreligious and in Botswana, where 20% of the population describes themselves as non-religious.

History

Sources promoting irreligion in Africa have been dated to go back several millennia.[1] Other sources have noted that many African philosophies such as Ubuntu are rooted in a secular humanistic framework.[2] During the 1950s and 1960s, irreligion in Africa became increasingly widespread among the educated classes as communism, socialism and anti-colonial movements gained influence on the continent.

Demographics

The largest self-declared populations of the irreligious in Africa are found in Southern African countries such as South Africa, Mozambique, and Botswana. Irreligion in Ghana has also been the subject of some study.[3] Irreligious people are also growing in North Africa, where ex-Muslims are more and more vocal, especially in Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria.

Trends

In tandem with the increase of irreligion around the world, the declared population of irreligionists in Africa has been noted to be on the rise.[4][5]

Notable irreligious people in Africa

Wole Soyinka, Nigerian writer and winner of the 1986 Nobel Prize in Literature

References

  1. M.B. Mat'e, The History of Freethinking in Ancient Egypt (1956), no. 3.
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Further reading