There you go
https://www.pewforum.org/2021/06/29/religion-in-india-tolerance-and-segregation/
Stuff on belief in god/gods is about half way down. Rather detailed and rather impressive research I think you'll find. Pew are good for this kind of stuff.
Thanks - this is really interesting. In India despite rapid economic growth, India’s population so far shows few, if any, signs of losing its religion. Religion is prominent in the lives of Indians regardless of their socioeconomic status or level of college education. Which is very different from the Western European experience since WW2. But the biggest exception is Christians in India, among whom those with higher education and those who reside in urban areas show somewhat lower levels of observance. So there seems to be something common to Christian beliefs and practices in Europe and to a lesser extent in India, that leads to a higher degree of non-observance.
A substantial minority of Muslims express a degree of open-mindedness on who can be a Muslim, with fully one-third (34%) saying a person can be Muslim even if they don’t believe in God. (The survey finds that 6% of self-described Muslims in India say they do not believe in God). I can't find any further info on what they mean when they say they don't believe in God.
Most Muslims in India say a person cannot be Muslim if they never pray or attend a mosque. Similarly, about six-in-ten say that celebrating Diwali or Christmas is incompatible with being a member of the Muslim community. And what's funny is that more Muslims think eating pork is incompatible with identifying as a Muslim compared to not believing in God.
Nice to see 85-91% of those surveyed from the following religions - Hindu, Muslim, Christian Sikh, Buddhist, Jain - feel they can practise their religion freely. Of the Muslims surveyed 89% said that so it paints a different picture from the one created by the media by focusing on Hindu nationalist violence against Muslims in India.
But 64% of Hindus say it is very important to be a Hindu to be truly Indian - so that seems a Hindu nationalist view. Of those 64% about 80% also say it is very important to speak Hindi to be truly Indian. Though this view is far more common in the parts of India where Hindi is spoken, compared with just 5% having this view in South India, where Hindi is not spoken much. But despite this support for Hindu nationalism about half the Hindus seem to think that on balance religious diversity benefits India. More Muslims than Hindus think Partition was a bad thing for Hindu-Muslim relations.
And 78 - 85% think it is an important part of being truly Indian to respect all religions.
And 73- 85% think it is a very important part of their religious identity to respect other religions
So this supports the Many Paths idea.
And 77% of Hindus and Muslims in India believe in Karma. Nearly three-in-ten Muslims and Christians say they believe in reincarnation (27% and 29%, respectively) despite the obvious theological contradictions and lack of Muslim or Christian religious doctrine supporting those beliefs. That just goes to show how prevailing culture can really influence beliefs. I don't think I know any Muslims here in the UK who believe in karma or reincarnation, in the few conversations I have had with people about it.
Substantial minorities of Christians (31%) and Muslims (20%) report that they do celebrate Diwali (Deepavali in Sri Lanka). Coincidentally, I was at a Deepavali celebration last night at the Sri Lanka High Commission, representing a Muslim organisation.
I see they seem to be following some of our evolutionary innate moral mind traits suggested by Haidt (based on research) that we tend to form groups and tribes and worry about sanctity/ purity (in relation to food). Though there is variation across regions. Southern Indian Hindus are considerably less likely than others to disqualify beef eaters from being Hindu (50% vs. 83% in the Northern and Central parts of the country).
Also the different religious groups see themselves as very different from each other. In-group loyalty seems important in Indian culture. 67% of Hindus surveyed think it is very important to stop Hindus marrying outside their religion. 80% of the Muslims surveyed think the same way about Muslims marrying outside their religion. I assume the Hindus and Muslims mean in situations where the spouse does not convert. So most Indians seem to want to keep separate from other groups but at the same time tolerate other groups - patchwork fabric rather than a melting pot of cultures.