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Open Access
Published by De Gruyter
2023
Religious Minorities: conceptual
perspectives
Michael Stausberg, Alexander Van Der Haven and Erica Ba elli
https://doi.org/10.1515/rmo.23389320
Entry Type
Article
Entry Language
English
Keyword
Themes; Religious minorities; minorities; minoritization
Abstract
This essay proposes definitions of key terms such as ‘minoritization’, ‘majoritization’, and
‘religious minority’, and problematizes standard criteria of identification of religious
minorities while also advocating for an understanding of religious minorities as dynamic,
processual, relational, contextual, situational, and intersectional. By doing this, it also
warns against homogenizing representations of religious minorities and addresses
minorities within minorities. It presents several important distinctions among and within
religious minorities in terms of size, location, origin, legitimacy, recognition, social
position, and self-perceptions. The essay discusses the mechanisms that turn assemblages
of people into minorities and di erent criteria and strategies that establish such social
formations as ‘religious minorities.’ This includes processes of recognition and nonrecognition by societies and di erent forms of minorities (‘wild’ and ‘tame’ ones). The
essay historicizes the emergence of the category and the problem of ‘religious minorities’
in the context of colonialism, modern conceptions of the nation-state, democracy, and
international politics. Last but not least, it reflects on the importance of religious
minorities as a theme for research, and as a lens for understanding the dynamics of
religion in society.
Table of Contents Show
Definitions
Relational, contextual, situational
Intersectional minorities
The primacy of numbers
Classification for extraction: taxing religious minorities
Subordination and discrimination: ‘Wild’ and ‘tame’ minorities
Density and geographical scale
Minorities within minorities
Diversity and ‘sects’: minor religions
Graded recognition and non-recognition
Identification and markers
Formation processes
What makes minorities ‘religious’: denials, genealogies and typical features
Religious minorities as problem in international politics
Why religious minorities matter
Acknowledgments
The term ‘religious minorities’ (or some vernacular equivalent) is part of the common
lexicon of political language; in many countries this and similar terminologies such as
‘minority religions’, ‘minor religions’, or ‘minority religious groups’ are used in everyday
talk, in self-identifications, and in processes of othering. The term is also used to celebrate
‘diversity’, ‘pluralism’, ‘multiculturalism’, and similar ideas. Majority/minority tropes are
also invoked by people who are numerically a majority, but claim to have lost their
predominance in a society or remember their past, real or imagined, as a minority;
mobilizing an understanding of being ‘a threatened majority’ is a typical ingredient of
what Arjun Appadurai calls “predatory identities”—namely, such identities “whose social
construction and mobilization require the extinction of other, proximate social categories”
(Appadurai 2006, 51). In contexts where homogeneity is emphasized, such as nationalist
discourses, minorities can be perceived as potentially disruptive and dangerous, and
feature prominently in conspiracy narratives. Similarly, the fear of a perceived threat
implies dichotomised views about ‘good’ and ‘bad’ minorities. This essay o ers a
discussion of conceptual perspectives on religious minorities; we will begin by proposing
definitions of key terms.
Definitions
In 1979, Francesco Capotorti, an Italian lawyer who for a long time served as Italy’s
representative in the United Nations General Assembly, published an extensive discussion
of the concept of minority. Capotorti also proposed the following definition:
a group, numerically inferior to the rest of the population of a State, in a nondominant position, whose members—being nationals of the State—possess ethnic,
religious or linguistic characteristics di ering from those of the rest of the
population and show, if only implicitly, a sense of solidarity, directed towards
preserving their culture, traditions, religion or language. (Capotorti 1979, 96,
paragraph 568)
Capotorti drafted his report during his tenure as Special Rapporteur of the SubCommission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities (see below). The
definition was put forward after consultation with various governments. In 1985, the then
Special Rapporteur of the same Sub-Commission, the Canadian judge Jules Deschênes,
revised this definition as follows:
A group of citizens of a State, constituting a numerical minority and in a nondominant position in that State, endowed with ethnic, religious or linguistic
characteristics which di er from those of the majority of the population, having a
sense of solidarity with one another, motivated, if only implicitly, by a collective
will to survive and whose aim is to achieve equality with the majority in fact and in
law (Deschênes 1985, 30, paragraph 181).
The supposed aim of achieving equality shows the normative agenda of this definition.
Both definitions are (a) numerical and (b) teleological: (a) they use numbers as the core
defining features and (b) they assume a directionality and intentionality, or a “will” that
makes them appear as driven by a common goal. This essay will show that both
assumptions are problematic.
While Capotorti and Deschênes focus on the internal dynamics of minorities and
emphasize numbers, other definitions shift the focus to the treatment minorities receive
by society at large. For example, the American Merriam-Webster Dictionary o ers several
definitions of ‘minority.’ Among them is the following (3.a):
a part of a population thought of as di ering from the rest of the population in
some characteristics and often subjected to di erential treatment.
This wording implies two main defining features, a negative and a positive one:
fractionation and di erentiation. In a negative sense, even though the definition avoids a
strictly quantitative perspective, minorities can never be the whole population, but must
be a fraction thereof. The positive feature has two corresponding dimensions: mind
(thinking) and body (action)—di erence as perceived and as enacted. The wording
“subjected to […] treatment” makes clear that the agency is perceived as not lying with the
minority “part of the population” but with the majority. This agentive dimension is now
often expressed by the transitive verb “to minoritize”, which at the time of writing
(January 2023) has not yet found its way into the Merriam-Webster Dictionary but is
already included in the Oxford English Dictionary, which gives the following description:
To make (a person, group, or concept) a minority; to treat as or place in a minority;
to force (an individual, minority group, etc.) to the periphery of a dominant group,
to marginalize.
Similarly, the transitive verb ‘to majoritize’ should be established to point to the
corresponding process (Predelli et al. 2012, 107). As neither the Merriam-Webster nor the
Oxford English Dictionary provides lexical definitions of this word we may stipulate the
following definition of ‘to majoritize’:
To make (a person group, concept) a majority; to treat as or place as a majority; to
a ord an agent (an individual, group, etc.) to be at the center as a supposed
representative of an assumed majority; to assign to others or oneself a position of
relative agency and power (dominance, hegemony, or supremacy).
Although earlier attempts to identify ‘objective’ features of minorities had the advantage
of making it more di cult for states to deny the existence of (religious) minorities on
their territory (Ghanea 2012, 63), these emerging terms indicate an important shift in the
scholarly perspective (White 2011, 23-27). Rather than prioritizing overarching categories
(‘minority’) and collectives (‘groups’), scholars increasingly pay attention to what
subjects think and feel, namely to the experiences of being placed in a minority position.
Moreover, seemingly stable categories like ‘minority’ are becoming less relevant than
processes and constructions that turn people into minorities or place them in minority
positions (see Gunaratnam 2003).
This constructivist-processual perspective finds its expression in the noun
‘minoritization’,[1] which at the time of writing can be found neither in the Merriam
Webster nor in the Oxford English Dictionary (an interesting example of how academic
jargon sometimes is ahead of common language). We propose the following definition of
the noun ‘minoritization’:
Structures and processes that make some (person, group, concept) a minority.
Correspondingly, here is our definition of the noun ‘majoritization’[1]:
Structures and processes that make some (person, group, concept) a majority.
Any analysis and theory must keep in mind the interrelatedness of these two processes
because there is no majoritization without minoritization and vice versa. Likewise, there
are no minorities without a majority as much as “majorities need minorities to exist, even
more so than the reverse” (Appadurai 2006, 50). In principle, any analysis of the dynamics
of minoritization/majoritization requires a holistic field perspective, and any theory of
minoritization/majoritization would need to bring to light the structures and processes
that allow for majoritization/minoritization to work — for example, by including
‘othering’ through language and other forms of social practice that allow for
majoritization/minoritization to work.
A critical theory of majoritization/minoritization would seek to destabilize such a system,
to make it less oppressive for the minoritized parts in the whole, for the sake of equality
and justice, and in the name of liberty. Even for states that are neither committed to antior pro-religious agendas, this poses the dilemma that ameliorating religious inequality
will require them to enter prohibited territory by actively regulating the field of religion.
Likewise, the acceptance or even embrace of ‘minority’ as an identity marker or seeking
the social and/or legal status of minority are not neutral acts because when a state
recognizes a group as a minority this “transforms its self-understanding” (Mahmood
2016, 60).[2]Rather, these decisions or choices are e ects of either or both minoritization
by a ‘majority’ and the agency of the respective ‘minority’, directed to seeking out
particular benefits, either in society or within a particular social group.[3]Thus, the label of
minority and o cial and uno cial practices that minoritize certain groups or individuals,
are never merely descriptive of a social reality but serve the interests of one social group
‘minoritizing’ another or a social group minoritizing itself. In this sense, ‘minority’ is “a
political term” (Mahmood 2016, 54). For this reason, reflexive scholarship no longer uses
‘religious minorities’ as a neutral descriptor but asks, for example, why and for what
reasons certain groups came to be classified as ‘religious minorities’ by certain actors in
certain contexts and situations (e.g. White 2011).
Religion can come into play in this field in various ways. For example, being part of a
certain religion can be an attribute of minoritized or majoritized individuals. Religion
a ords particular resources for the working of minoritization/majoritization. To make a
minority a religious minority we can modify the definition provided by Merriam-Webster
as follows: a religious minority is a part of a population that regards itself and/or is
regarded by others as di ering from the rest of the population in characteristics
categorized as religious or relating to a religion. This is not a definition that fits all
purposes, nor will it be useful in all possible contexts. In the following, we will focus on
religious minorities as collectives and unpack several implications of the discussed
terminology. [4]
Relational, contextual, situational
As aformentioned, the meaning of minority is relational, contextual, and situational—the
latter term referring to specific choices made in given contexts by specific actors based on
their respective interests, necessities, and opportunities. As this article's previous
discussion about definitions of minoritization and majoritization has shown, speaking of a
minority only makes sense by contrasting it with or distinguishing it from an (assumed)
majority (e.g. Gurr 1993, 163). In other words, to call something a minority implies that it is
essentially di erent from a majority. Religious diversity alone does not necessarily result
in the existence of religious minorities. Indeed, where several religions (understood as
religious communities, groups, or traditions) coexist of whom none is acknowledged to be
considerably larger and/or more powerful than the others, and where all are considered as
members of the same category, we can avoid speaking of religious minorities. However, if
in the same context there are micro religions (such as so-called new religious movements)
that are not being treated on an equal level by this assemblage of minor religions, these
micro religions could then be considered minority religions.
Moreover, as will be discussed more in detail below, when political bodies or dominant
media label a group as a religious minority or, conversly, deny a group to be recognized as
such, or when members of a group embrace or reject the identity of religious minority,
these are not merely matters of definition but processes or decisions with important social,
political, and legal implications. For instance, some groups resist the label of minority
because they do not like its association with victimization (Gleason 2019, 98) or with
illegitimacy. This association can lead to further isolation (Murre-van den Berg 2016, 6) or
persecution, risk dividing rather than uniting people, or foster a condition of fear of and
among minorities (see also Rowe 2019, 4). These reasons and the subsequent choice to
accept or reject the ‘minority’ label depend on di erent ideological positions and
situational concerns, such as territorial autonomy or nationalist discourses (see White
2011, 54-55).
The contextual setting of minority discourses is also highlighted in how di erent
disciplines, such as anthropology, history, law, international relations, politics, and
sociology, to name but the most salient ones, employ and define the term. These
disciplines have di erent research questions, theoretical models, and empirical materials,
but rarely engage in a dialogue with each other.
Context, however, is not only societal and academic, but also historical. Therefore, we need
to always historicize the category instead of treating it as a timeless notion (see also White
2011, 26, who aims to “recover the historicity of the concept”). In addition to the realm of
taxonomy, also religious minorities are ever changing internally and externally—and so
are the historical contexts, so that some religions that were majorities at one time in the
past are now minorities, like Zoroastrianism in Iran. In some European countries, formerly
dominant varieties of Christianity have in recent years lost their socio-cultural-political
prominence as the majoritarian religion. The fact that their population ratio has declined
beyond 50 percent in several countries symbolizes this change of status. While the
processual approach outlined above for the terms minoritization/majoritization points to
the temporal dynamics of the concept of religious minorities in specific situations, we will
focus on its historicity further below.
Intersectional minorities
While ethnic, language, national, and racial minorities each enjoy distinct legal
protections[5] and are established concepts that constitute fields of scholarship in their
own right, the case of religious minorities shows that these types of minorities are often
intersectional. To begin with, many religious minorities are also ethnic/racial or language
minorities, meaning that such groups can be described by stakeholders, governments,
scholars, media, and others by invoking any of these three categories of minority. Scholars
have proposed terms such as ‘ethno-religious minority’ or attempt to distinguish between
such categories by for instance defining the non-religious attachment to tradition and
culture as a trait that distinguishes ethnic from religious minorities (Rößner, Gvili and
Eisend 2021, 392). Yet, whether minorities are labeled as religious or not tends to depend,
rather than on scholarly skills of classification, on the strategic interests or tactical moves
of those who decide which category to use. In South Asia, caste is an important factor and,
when interfaith marriages are dubbed intercaste marriages, this shows the prevalence of
caste over religion (Thomas 2018). The Pakistani case of the Christian low-caste woman
manual worker Asia Bibi who in 2010 was convicted of blasphemy and sentenced to death,
then later acquitted whereupon she left the country in 2019, illustrates the dynamics of
intersectionality: the original accusation centered on caste, and only later did the issue of
caste-pollution turn into a religious blasphemy case (Fuchs and Fuchs 2020, 63). Gender,
sex, and class also factor in here. The conjunction of caste and religion has resulted in the
scholarly trope of ‘double discrimination’ on caste and religious grounds (Fuchs and Fuchs
2020, 54).
In religious studies and religious liberty advocacy discourses, among others, there is the
tendency to single out religion as the main identifier or super-category, which can result
in an analytical overemphasis of religion compared to other factors. Such qualifying a
minority as religious reinforces the degree of perceived di erence. Being a religious
minority is then the super-identity that covers the others and obscures the fact that
adherents of minority religions in most countries share the same plight as people
belonging to the majority, for example when facing economic hardship, corruption,
ecological degradation, societal violence, war, and political failure (see also Fuchs and
Fuchs 2020, 59).
In other instances, like in early modern Spain, religion is superseded by other factors of
identity—in that case, it was not enough for Jews or Muslims to become Christians to be
admitted to the dominant part of society becasue conversos (Jewish converts and their
descendants) and moriscos (Muslim converts and their descendants) lacked the alleged
limpieza de sangre (‘purity of blood’) claimed by the Christian majority (Shahar 2007, §
12). Similarly, in Nazi Germany, Jews were considered primarily in racial terms, so that
even Jews who had converted to Christianity and their descendants continued to be
considered Jews and were therefore deemed targets for extermination; Judaism was not
regarded as a religious minority but as an inferior and dangerous race—race was the
super-category, not religion.
Minorities can also benefit from the multiplicity of labels—for instance, by emphasizing
shared ethnicity with the majority. One example are Vietnamese Catholics, who find their
religious minority status alleviated by their belonging to the ethnic Viet majority (Trân
2016, 135). Similarly, Zoroastrians in Iran and Copts in Egypt consider themselves the
original inhabitants of their respective countries, suggesting that their claim to
primordiality and indigeneity outweighs their relatively lower numbers.
The primacy of numbers
On the surface, the term ‘minority’ seems clear and unambiguous insofar as the key
essential (monothetic) defining trait is held to be a quantitative one: a minority is lesser in
number than the rest of the population. Even though this primarily quantitative approach
has raised concerns for qualitative and critical research in the humanities and the study of
culture (Laurie and Khan 2017), it continues to be widespread and has played an important
role in the emergence of the concept of minorities. Even though numbers alone are no
longer considered the most relevant feature of minorities—the theoretical focus shifting
to power and related issues—numbers remain salient as a primary identifier.
Quantitative management of population can set minoritization and majoritization
processes into motion. Identifying a group as a minority in a quantitative sense
presupposes a numerical (demographic) assessment of the entire population, for example
in the form of a census. The most well-known example is the census of India that was
initiated by the British colonial rulers around 1872. Contrary to the census conducted in
Great Britain (since 1801), the census of India included a question on religion, where the
latter category was broken down into 9 distinct and mutually exclusive categories: Hindu,
Muslim, Christian, Buddhist, Jain, Sikh, Parsi [Zoroastrian], Jewish, Animist. (The last
category was tailored to apply mainly to Adivasis, the indigenous or tribal peoples of
India). Presumably, this categorization was based on the assumption that Indian society
was in fact already divided among these lines.[6]The practical implications of this religious
categorization in the census posed many di culties for the o cials, and respondents were
forced to make unprecedented binary and counterintuitive identifications—like being a
Jain would now mean not being a Hindu, or Shaivites as well as Vaishnavas having to opt
for the category ‘Hinduism,’ and several ‘fuzzy’ communities/groups that combined
‘Hindu’ and ‘Muslim’ features—eventually had to be defined according to one of the
o cial categories of religious a liation. Collapsing the complexity of religious groups,
orientations, and traditions into the category Hindu first constituted this entity as a
demographic majority; it is only after the census and its specific way of classification that
some Hindu leaders came to perceive that Hindus were a majority in British India and that
Muslims and others were minorities. As the census was conducted every ten years, it also
allowed tracking demographic developments. For example, since the early twentieth
century, it gave rise to the perception that the population classified as Muslim was growing
faster than the Hindus, thereby creating the rhetorical trope of Hindu decline and Muslim
takeover (Bhagat 2013). Superior birth rates among minorities and their growth by
proselytization are quantitative features that can feed into fears among majorities. In
other countries, the use of a comprehensive category of ‘others’ in censuses or o cial
statistics can serve to obscure the degree of religious diversity. In Japan, for instance, the
Yearbook of Religion (shūkyō nenkan) published annually by the Agency for Cultural
A airs gives three main options—namely, Buddhism, Shinto, Christian, plus one ‘other’—
so religious groups could either select one of the three main categories or be classified
under a generic ‘other’, independently of their size.[7] The importance of numbers reflects
the rise of democracy as a dominant form of government, where most (but not all!)
segments of the population are eligible to participate in elections and where each vote
counts equally. Historically, democracy emerged in nation states, and the combination of
these two modern political features—the nation state and democracy—made the concept
of minority politically salient (see also Mahmood 2016; Østebø and Pontzen 2022).[2]
Minorities were no longer subjects of imperial patronage but were measured up
quantitatively within territorial boundaries of the nation states and their increasing
control over populations within their territories. The minorities’ rights were defined in the
interplay of international and national law and politics.
This perceived importance of numbers is also reflected in disputes about them and about
the criteria governments use to make censuses. Nearly all religious minorities in Pakistan
claim that the government systematically underreports their numbers or refuses to
acknowledge their existence by classifying their members as ‘other’ (Fuchs and Fuchs
2020, 61-62). Likewise, Japan bases the minority status on so-called ‘new religions’,
which are not necessarily numerically small, on the perceived di erence between them
and ‘traditional’ practices and organizations. In other words, rather than the smallness of
their numbers it is the gap that separates them from what is defined as tradition that is
relevant (Reader 2015).
Classification for extraction: taxing religious minorities
Let us move back in history. Can we find similar classificatory strategies in pre-modern
times? Several ancient states and empires, including ancient Egypt, China, and Rome, have
indeed undertaken censuses of their population, but mainly for administrative purposes,
in particular taxation, and religion does not appear as a category here. The Tanakh
(Hebrew Bible) describes several incidents of a population census, partly for reasons of
taxation—the costs for the Tabernacle are to be paid based on a poll tax (head/capita tax)
—but also in relation to the foundation narrative of the exodus: God commands Moses to
take a census while the people find themselves in the “wilderness of Sinai”; a second
census is commanded by the deity after a plague. These incidents are narrated in a text that
in Latin became known as Numeri, the book of Numbers, a name that highlights the
paramount importance of counting. The most famous biblical kings, David and Solomon,
each conducted a census—David even against God's will (2 Samuel 24, 1 Chronicles 21).
Solomon had the foreigners counted and subsequently assigned them to specific tasks, as
carriers and stonecutters. Even though we have no information on these foreigners—for
example in terms of their religious identity—we can read this as an early instance of
di erential treatment and classification; we can assume that these foreigners were maybe
also a minority. While in this case, classification resulted in the assignment of specific
duties, in other cases, classification could result in di erent forms of taxation.
Some first incidents of religion-specific forms of taxation—that is taxes on religious
minorities avant la lettre—made their appearance during the first millennium CE. They
were first applied to Jews and Christians. After the destruction of Jerusalem and its temple
in 70 CE, the Roman emperor Vespasian imposed a tax on Jews—applicable not only to
male adults, but also to women, children, and slaves. The revenues of this so-called fiscus
ludaicus were directed to a Jupiter temple in Rome; thus, money was extracted from one
religious group to support a cultic structure of another, more powerful, group and its
religious infrastructure. At the same time, that payment served as a kind of religious
ransom by making the tax-paying Jews exempt from the duty to sacrifice to the emperor.
After the reform of the ‘Jewish tax’ by emperor Nerva in 96 CE, Christians who claimed not
to follow Jewish ancestral ways could avoid the tax—thereby possibly accelerating the
“parting of the ways” between Jews and Christians (Heemstra 2010). It is unclear when the
tax was abolished, but in 1342 it was revived by Emperor Louis IV the Bavarian under the
name Guldenpfenning or Goldener Opferpfennig. Jews had to pay special taxes in many
European countries from the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century. Yet, they were never
referred to as a minority religion/religious minority during this long period. They were
treated as a singular and exceptional case, not as a species belonging to the genus of
minorities.
A taxation relevant classification of the population where religious identities come into
play is also attested for the Sasanian empire in pre-Islamic Iran. There are Christian
hagiographical sources from the early fifth century that report about a fourth century king
(Shapur II) who is said to have extracted from Christians double the ordinary rate of the
poll tax; moreover, the ecclesiastical head of the Christian community of one region of the
empire was to take responsibility to collect this tax (Goodblatt 1979, 249). It is unclear to
what extent this was an extraordinary measure or whether it reflected the ordinary state of
a airs; there is no hard evidence that a similar arrangement applied to the Jewish
population of the Sasanian empire. So, we cannot speak of di erential treatment for
religious minorities—a concept that did not, it seems, steer the political thinking of the
actors at that time. In Islamic legislation, which in part was inspired by pre-Islamic
(Sasanian) precedence, a new religion-based taxonomy of taxation emerged; the
population was divided into Muslims and non-Muslims, where separate sets of taxes were
applied to each category, with the non-Muslims (dhimmi) being obliged to pay a poll tax
(jizya) not levied from Muslims. In sum, taxation has been an important context for
distinguishing di erent segments of population, where groups that we today would
classify as religious minorities have been treated di erently from the majority; taxation
was acted out as minoritization.
Subordination and discrimination: ‘Wild’ and ‘tame’
minorities
Often described as a contractual arrangement to ensure the ‘protection’ of these religions,
the dhimmi-status also amounted to minoritization in the sense of structural
subordination within an Islamic policy. In other words, it combined opportunities for civic
and religious self-governance with negative discrimination. By contrast, the modern
discourse of religious minorities problematizes such a status of structural subordination,
and presents discrimination as a practice that should be condemned and abolished. It
premises as unjust and immoral the facts that religious minorities are marginalized, su er
violence, or are experiencing some kind of power imbalance vis-à-vis the majority
population in the form of, for instance, restricted access to or exclusion from institutions.
This modern discourse on religious minorities is tied to the political ideal of social and
religious equality—that no religion counts more than others—and equality between
religious communities, even if one community has more members or enjoys certain
privileges.
This premise that subordination and discrimination require remedy is expressed in calls
for action and in actual policies by states. For instance, the legal scholars Gideon Sapir and
Daniel Statman (2019), who write about Israel, argue that religious minorities should be
given additional support or preferential treatment to remedy their disadvantaged
situation. This notion of preferential treatment of (religious) minorities has been put into
practice, often with ambivalent e ects—for instance, by the U.S. and Canadian
governments to improve the social position of Native Americans/First Nations.
Yet, discussions and practices aiming at emancipation and support of religious minorities
usually come with conditions. Majority societies that profess these values nevertheless
tend to distinguish, at least implicitly, between ‘wild’ (nonconformist, problematic) and
‘tame’ (conformist, unproblematic) religious minorities (see Seiwert 2014 for the term
‘wild religion’ as a form of nonconformism). The former are considered a challenge to the
normative order, often rooted in dominant models of religion, on which society is built.
‘Wild’ religious communities are perceived as rejecting societal values and refusing to
integrate or compromise and therefore as violating fundamental social agreements.
‘Tame’ religious minorities, in contrast, appear to be content with their assigned place in
society without making demands for change or ‘creating problems,’ even though their
ideology may, at least in theory, reject or be in disagreement with wider society values and
practices. Due to this, they are usually not seen as a threat but as a good example other
minorities should follow.
Moreover, the (secular) attempt by states to achieve a position of neutrality vis-à-vis
religious claims tends to position the state as the arbiter of religious di erence. States,
however, have widely di erent understandings of religious equality (Mahmood 2016), and
these understandings are usually rooted in the majority's hegemonic standard against
which minorities are measured (Østebø and Pontzen 2022).
However, it would be incorrect to assume that religious minorities are invariably powerless
in processes of minoritization or othering. Some of them may resist and actively respond
to the fact that they are perceived as a potential threat, or as “objects of fear and of rage”
(Appadurai 2006, 49). Others may embrace the minority status as a form of empowerment,
by rejecting mainstream values or views they disagree and creating a feeling of elitism
amongst members. In recent decades, following what has been called the minorities rights
revolution (Skrentny 2002), minorities have become more vocal in asserting and
protecting their rights (Østebø and Pontzen 2022, 118).
Discrimination in the sense of restrictions that are imposed on minorities but not on the
majority, as well as other forms of marginalization or even persecution and violence, are
typical experiences of religious minorities. However, this is not always the case. Minorities
can be treated equally with the majority religion, even though this rarely happens in
practice. Moreover, the typical experience of discrimination does not mean that all
religious minorities are always powerless. Sometimes rulers belong to religious minorities
(e.g. in contemporary Syria). Religious minorities can be conquerors (like the Christian
Normans in Sicily; see Weltecke 2017, 17 for other examples) or colonial powers, who rule
over a population they tend to consider inferior on ideological (often including religious)
grounds. In such cases, minorities can be oppressive powers. Last but not least, some
religious minorities enjoy an elevated socio-economic status. An example are the Parsis in
colonial India, whose high social position can be explained by, among others, how the
British Empire was in part built on cooperation with ethnic and religious minorities
(Biagini 2012, 234). The British Empire's approach is not unique, but reflects a common
imperial strategy to patronize and advantage minorities that are perceived as more
dependent on and thus more loyal to the rulers. Despite experiencing discrimination,
religious minorities can even be economically more successful than the majority
population—as was sometimes the case with Christians and Jews in the Ottoman empire,
partly due to their business connections to and active support by other European powers.
Moreover, intersectionality with other social determinants such as caste can make a
religious minority's social position, or at least of a part of this group, superior to that of a
(part of the) majority. The Syrian Christians in the South Indian state of Kerala are an
example of such a privileged minority, sharing several traits, including dress, with upper
caste Hindus; a religious minority can thus enjoy a high rank in the caste system and
belong to the upper-class stratum of society (Thomas 2018).
Density and geographical scale
The cases of the Christians and Jews in the Sasanian and successive Middle Eastern Muslim
empires bring to mind the importance of population density and geographical scale (in
addition to numbers). There were administrative parts and regions of the Sasanian empire
—even in its political core lands, Mesopotamia—where Jews and Christians constituted
the numerical majority of the population. Likewise, during the first centuries of rule of
Muslim dynasties, Muslims did not constitute most of the population on the conquered
territories. Even after Islam had been adopted by most of the population in the Middle
East, minority religions continued to thrive in some territories including towns and cities,
and in most of the European parts of the Ottoman Empire, Muslims never became the
numerical majority of the population. The Middle East is also an example of how religious
minorities have often found refuge in parts of states and empires that are not easily
accessible, hard to militarily control, and/or with harsh living conditions. We can speak of
insular majority settings. In sum, in national or imperial contexts, minorities can be
determined both in numerical and in spatial/territorial terms. The geographical context
factors into the categorization of groups as religious minorities.
Minorities within minorities
Labeling a group as a religious minority tends to encourage viewing it as a more or less
coherent social entity with shared worldview, and fixed sets of behavior. However, these
groups are rarely homogeneous, and attention should be paid to internal tensions,
disputes, clashes, and power struggles that often are of an intersectional nature as they
involve matters of gender and sex, class, ethnicity or race. In other words, attention should
be paid to minorities within minorities.
When a group receives political recognition, it occurs often that those in power within the
group or those who are favored by the recognizing political body, are invested with the
power to represent the ‘will’ of the community, while internal minority voices are silenced.
Power relations within religious minorities are thus also defined through the relationship
of the group with the outside world. For instance, in her study of the Syrian Christians in
Kerala, Sonja Thomas has noted how how during protests in the late 1950s to secure
minority rights, “‘minority’, a label that united all Christians [...] became an invented
identity, one that was defined by dominant minority culture and created at the expense of
subordinated lower-caste Christian and tribal minority communities” (Thomas 2018, 17).
The pressure of homogeneity can function as a line of defense, instinctive or strategic,
against a majority. A typical result—although this is certainly not the universal rule—is
that sexual di erence, unusual social roles, and religious heterogeneity, especially if these
are identified with the majority, can be experienced as threatening the very survival of the
group.
It is therefore important to pay attention also to processes of minoritization happening
inside religious minorities. For example, youth groups inside religious minorities may be
in disagreement regarding social values and doctrinal matters but are in a powerless
position vis-à-vis senior members. As a consequence, they may experience a condition of
double minoritization, both internally and externally. This can also result in internal
tensions and, especially in the case of second generation members in new religions,
disa liation. LGBTQ+ groups inside religious minorities often find themselves in a
condition of double marginalization, feeling that their sexual orientation is not accepted
by their religious community and, at the same time, not feeling completely at ease in lay
LGBTQ+ rights organizations.
Finally, attention to internal di erentiations highlights power dynamics inside religious
minorities. For example, when examining Buddhism in the United Kingdom, one should
pay attention to di erences in access to power and cultural capital between ‘convert’
Buddhists on the one hand, and ‘diaspora’ or ‘heritage’ Buddhists on the other, as well as
between di erent Buddhist immigrant communities and di erent Buddhist
denominations.
Diversity and ‘sects’: minor religions
Religious diversity in Muslim-ruled societies has not been limited to non-Muslim
religious communities, and Islamic diversity has included a range of groupings that would
today be categorized as religious minorities. Yet, rather than recognizing other varieties of
Islam as minorities, Muslim political authorities have tended to reject these as heretics.
Even a state like Turkey, which in article 2 of its constitution declares itself a “secular”
(lâik) state, does not grant the Alevis the status of a recognized religious minority. In some
cases, such as the Ahmadiyya in Pakistan, Muslim groups have been persecuted and their
legitimacy denied.
The recognition of religious minorities can also lead to pressures to homogenize the
majority. To take the example of Israel, its Orthodox rabbinate has, at the exclusion of for
instance Reformed and Conservative rabbis, the monopoly over Jewish marriages, divorce,
burial, and conversion. This homogenization process has also set in motion counter
reactions, such as secular Jews calling for civil marriage or opting out of state-recognized
Jewish marriage ceremonies altogether (Sezgin, 2010, 633, 645-651).
In fact, religious dissenters and nonconformists have often been more frowned upon and
treated with greater degrees of suspicion and control than minorities that did not claim the
same denominational belonging. For example, Jews enjoyed greater liberties than
Protestants in certain parts of Catholic-ruled early modern Europe like, for example,
Venice. Yet, the o cial recognition of certain religious minorities by states or empires
often entailed only the recognition of a particular denomination or subgroup of these
minorities and the exclusion of others.
Some of these varieties of religious di erences—i.e., versions of Islam or Christianity—
were, in earlier parlance, called ‘sects’. This term can either imply a religious value
judgment (similar to ‘cult’ or ‘heresy’: see below) or, alternatively, be a more value-free
typological device (e.g., when scholars call branches of Buddhist doctrine schools ‘sects’)
or even a sociological descriptor in the sense of relative small groups that are spin-o s
from a religious tradition. Sects, according to sociological typology, are characterized by
stricter rules than the majority religion, rigid social boundaries, and doctrinal or
behavioral particularities that set them visibly apart. Sects can be called minor split-o
religions or be considered a type of religious minority. Adapting this latter term
deemphasizes their genealogical relations with their respective parental religious tradition
or their social features—a religious minority is a minority acknowledged as being (among
other things) religious no matter its genealogy or relationship to its socio-religious
environment.
Graded recognition and non-recognition
Classical Islamic legal-political theories operate with a two-tier system of religious
minorities outside of Islam: (1) there are the traditions categorized as ahl al-dhimma—
mainly limited to the religions Islamic regimes acknowledge as possessors of pre-Islamic
scripture, ahl al-kitab, especially some indigenous religious communities—and (2) the
rest (typically classified as ‘polytheists’). While the former are tolerated, the status of the
latter is more precarious. For example, a country like the Islamic Republic of Iran grants
privileges to some religions but not to others by assigning a constitutional role to one
version of Islam. Also countries outside the Islamic legal sphere have two-tier systems of
recognition of religions, but, in these cases, explicit classifications build on non-religious
criteria, such as imposing a minimum number of members or a minimum number of years
of existence. Even though these criteria do not use religious language, they tend to benefit
established religions, like in Russia or Austria. Even without constitutional or other legal
restrictions, social or cultural factors can play into depriving groups that seek to define
their identities in religious terms of this desired recognition. For example, widespread
racism stands in the way of accepting the aspirations of Afro-Caribbean religions (Boaz
2021), and since 2001, prevention of ‘extremism’or ‘terrorism’ has been used in di erent
parts of the world as a non-religious code that targets religious groups, in particular
Muslims.
Moreover, recognition of religious minorities and their religious commitments is based on
what governments, representing particular religious cultures, qualify as ‘religious’.
Protestant-dominated cultures have excluded practices that are not clearly related to
‘o cial’ doctrine commitment—such as with the 1920s Pueblo Indian Dance controversy
in the United States over whether Native American traditional practices were religious or
not (e.g. Wenger 2009). In in sub-Saharan Africa, practices of traditional African religions
are often dismissed as ‘cultural’ rather than as ‘religious’ (Hackett 2015, 92), framed as
witchcraft (e.g. Tebbe 2007), or restricted for reasons of ‘public morality’ or ‘public health’
(e.g. Mutua 1999, 177–78). Moreover, there is also the category of ‘pseudo-religions’ or
‘quasi religions’ that has been leveled against new religious formations, especially those
that challenge normative or traditional models of religion, denying them the status of
‘real’ religions. During the colonial Japanese rule over Korea, the Government-General of
Korea introduced in 1915 this category of ‘pseudo-religion’ as a legal category, which, even
though no longer in use, can still impact current evaluations of minority religions (Grisafi
2021).
In the case of Japan, although there is no legal terminology for minority religions,
following the end of World War II, the term ‘new religions’ (shinshūkyō) has been used to
indicate a variety of groups that are seen as di erent from ‘established religions’ (kisei
shūkyō), namely Buddhist schools and Shinto temples and practices. The term was initially
introduced by the newly formed Federation of New Religious Organisations of Japan
(Shinshuren) as a response to pejorative terminology such as ‘pseudo-religions’ (ruiji
shūkyō) and ‘heresies’ (jakyō) (Ketelaar 1993, 42; Dorman 2012, 25). These terms had been
used since the Meiji period (1868-1912) to indicate minority practices and groups
perceived as superstitious, marginal and a potential threat to cultural identity or religious
orthodoxy. While derogatory terms such as ‘pseudo-religions’ are no longer used in the
public discourse or in the media, the term ‘cult’ (karuto) has been used especially since
1995, after the sarin gas attack in 1995 perpetrated by members of the religious group Aum
Shinrikyō in Tokyo, to label groups that are seen as dangerous, fraudulent, and not
‘proper’ religion—cases of what we labeled above as ‘wild minorities.’ Groups referred to
as ‘new religions’ have also started feeling less at ease with the terminology both because
it still implies a negative nuance of marginality, and because some of them are now over
two hundred years old and do not see themselves as ‘new’ groups anymore (Ba elli and
Reader 2019). In China since 1912, religious policies have operated with the distinction
between religion (zongjiao) and superstition (mixin). The former is seen as acceptable and
granted religious freedom and the latter to be condemned (Goossaert 2005).
While the use of pejorative language to indicate religious minorities reduces such groups'
legitimacy as a religion and increases their marginal status, religious minorities
sometimes internalize and use negative terms (such as 'cult') to distinguish themselves
from other groups perceived as di erent or potential threat to society. Being recognised
legally or otherwise as a ‘legitimate’ (and therefore ‘proper’) religion is, more often than
not, crucial for the survival of religious organizations, and this sometimes implies
attempts at delegitimizing other groups.
Even in such countries that only impose ‘soft’ (implicit) and ‘open’ (negotiable)
distinctions between legitimate and illegitimate religion, those challenging or even
rejecting traditional religion and developing alternative worldviews as forms of nonreligion, now often called ‘the secular,’ have until fairly recently been met with fierce
resistance. Since the nineteenth century, especially in the United States, several
individuals who have disengaged from Christianity or Judaism sought to calibrate their
alternative worldviews as new varieties of religion. In many cases, this was driven by the
conviction that traditional forms of religion provided an erroneous, biased, or reductionist
understanding of religion—for example, by focusing on transcendental powers rather than
on this-worldly, immanentist, or ethical aspirations that support human flourishing.
Claiming to have a religion, or organizing groups in ways that could seem to mimic
traditional churches, was one strategy for obtaining equal rights in a society where
‘freethinkers,’ ‘atheists’ and other rejectors of religion were maligned and discriminated
against. For most of the time, such new religious formations have remained marginal and
short-lived, and their impact was more to serve as a foil and imagined threat for
majoritarian forms of Christianity (Schmidt 2021). Yet, since the late twentieth century, in
some countries like Norway, membership rates in humanist organizations that criticize
traditional religions—in particular Christianity, but also Islam—have increased sharply; in
Norway, Human-Etisk Forbund (Humanist Association) now operates as a kind of
mainstream religious minority. Not only does the Humanist Association o er similar
services, such as life-cycle rituals, which are grounded in a (humanist-secular) worldview
that is imparted on participants who wish to attend a confirmation service, but it also has
successfully applied to the government the reception of the same financial benefits as
religious organizations and actively takes part in various interfaith activities. In the past
decades, the notion of ‘belief’ has been added to that of ‘religion’ in human rights
language. For example, article 9 of the European Convention of Human Rights (drafted in
1950 and entered in force in 1953), establishes “the freedom to change a religion or belief,
and to manifest a religion or belief in worship, teaching, practice and observance, subject
to certain restrictions that are “in accordance with law” and “necessary in a democratic
society.” This resonates with attempts in legal discourse to extend the range of
phenomena classified as religion beyond o cial and traditional religion, beyond theism,
and to also include atheism (see e.g. The O ce of the High Commissioner of Human
Rights” General Comment No 22 from 1993). While communities sustaining and practicing
any sort of belief could, in theory, fall under this protection clause so that one could speak
of ‘belief minorities,’ in practice it seems that this step has not yet been taken and beliefs
not classified as ‘religious’ continue not to recieve the same amount of attention.
Humanist associations, however, are examples of the emerging societal prominence of
organized non-religious beliefs.
Identification and markers
In many of the contextual settings we have touched upon so far, the identification of
religious minorities and the recognition of people belonging to such groups is (or was)
facilitated by markers such as dress, food, language, material and performative culture,
aesthetic sensibilities and soundscapes, or dominant forms of occupation. These markers
can create tensions and they are often employed in strategies of exclusion. The case of
Muslims minorities provides ample illustration: Non-Muslims have contended audible
liturgical sounds to be undesirable and threatening, and visible parts of Muslim buildings
as disturbing. They have objected to dietary rules in the name of animal rights or
vegetarianism, and opposed Muslim clothing chosen to signal piety as potentially
dangerous for public order or violating women rights, and so on. Yet, the removal of
identity markers, which has frequently accompanied processes of modernization and
emancipation of religious minorities, often results in new forms of suspicion and
discrimination of religious minorities. Making markers invisible, as the history of modern
antisemitism suggests, does not erase perceived di erences. However, it needs to be
remembered that norms about such markers were not always enforced, or only enforced
under certain circumstances as serving specific interests (see Weltecke 2020, 30–31).
In several cases, membership in minority groups is regulated by rules of endogamy that
are self-imposed and/or imposed from the outside; marriages across religious boundaries
(aka intermarriage) has not been the norm throughout history. For instance, in countries
dominated by Islamic legal traditions, marriages between Muslim women and nonMuslim men were (and in many countries still are) not allowed. However, in practice, such
unions have become more common, often resulting in pro-forma conversions by nonMuslim men who wish to marry a Muslim woman. For non-ahl al-dhimmi people, the rule
is that the non-Muslim partner must convert to Islam and thereby cease to be a member
of her previous religious community. In the case of female converts, this constitutes an
additional cause for concern to the extent that it can potentially weaken the reproductive
power of the minority group they previously belonged to by losing the children mothered
by these women. Intermarriage is an important transgression of religious boundaries that
are vigilantly monitored. Whether based in reality or not, rumors about the abduction of
minority women by men belonging to the majority are common among minorities in
Islamic societies (e.g. in Egypt, Iran, and Pakistan), revealing not only the vulnerability of
the minority but serving also as an instructive example of the gendered nature of
majority-minority relations.
Gender and minority markers intersect in some European countries, where it is the female
veil and not the male prayer cap that ignites controversy. Other key transgressions that
spark conflict are proselytization and conversion. In India, for example, resistance against
this practice has gone so far that anti-conversion legislation has been passed in several
Indian states (see Jenkins 2019; see also Hackett 2008 for controversies on proselytization
in Nigeria).
While endogamy and markers are characteristic of many minority religions, we do not
consider these defining features of religious minorities. Endogamy is not a universal trait
of religious minorities and, especially in modern societies, membership in religious
minorities is typically not perceivable by the markers mentioned above. Where such
markers appear, they tend to index more total forms of religious commitment or groups
that emphasize their di erence, or even their exceptionality, to their environments.
Formation processes
As a classificatory taxon (category), religious minority belongs to the class of minorities.
Kindred to religious minorities are ethnic, language, national, political, and sexual
minorities—to only mention the currently most salient types. While these appear to be
natural givens, speaking of assemblages or groups of people as minorities and assigning
them distinct attributes associated with minorities is the outcome of historical processes.
In other words, history comes into play three ways at minimum: (1) the emergence of the
concept (e.g., ethnic minority tied to the concept of ethnicity, racial minorities to ideas of
race, religious to the category religion), (2) the way their past is narrated, and (3) the
events that are being admitted as facts and that are conceptualized and narrated. In other
words, assemblages of people now not regarded as minorities can receive that label in the
future. For example, specific age groups that are subject to di erent treatment and also
often amount to smaller numbers in most populations—children and seniors—are as yet
not typically conceived of as minorities, probably because people in the course of their
lives necessarily migrate from minority to majority and back to minority status. Humans
that have not yet been accorded the rights of adults are called ‘minors’ in English,
indicating semantic ties with ‘minority.’ The emergence of the term ‘agism’ (or ageism) to
capture age-related stereotypes and discrimination could show that specific age groups in
the future might conceptualize themselves as minorities, at least as lesser numbers in a
population and in terms of power imbalances as key features of minorities.
For aggregations of people that share social positions or interests to acquire the status of
minorities, they need to make conscious and strategic classificatory and organizational
e orts that manage to mobilize people around such an issue. They will make such e orts if
they consider the issue in question important for their lives and the di erence with the
majority significant. Self-consciousness and awareness of being a minority is therefore a
typical trait of minorities, a “subjective condition” (Oran 2021, 3).
For example, since the 1960s, we have seen the emergence of the term ‘sexual minorities’
as an umbrella term covering people who share sexual identities, practices, or preferences
that are di erent from those of the majority; this deviance is perceived as socially
significant as their identities, practices, and preferences su er from rejection,
criminalization, demonization, and/or pathologization, resulting in discrimination,
hatred, and violence. The emergence of the concept of ‘sexual minorities’ does work
similar to ‘religious minorities.’ Three similarities are worth pointing out. First, both
concepts provide an umbrella for phenomena that earlier on were seen as distinct;
homosexuals and transgender people were not necessarily perceived as belonging to the
same group, just as, for example,Jews and Bahais were, for a long time, not considered
under the same classification. Second, both concepts can serve as terms of legal
empowerment, as fighting for their recognition and rights. Third, sexuality or religion are
considered central to peoples' identities so that an increasing number of them engage in
activism.
Religious minorities can also be formed through reclassification as a form of abstraction.
With the example of Judaism, we have seen that while Jews were long treated as a specific
and exceptional case rather than as an exemplar of an as yet non-existent category, they
eventually became a prototypical example of a religious minority. In the mid-nineteenth
century, for example, Jews in Western Europe and the United States campaigned on behalf
of their people in East Europe. Jews were also key actors in the emerging minority
protection discourse (Fink 2004).
We can speak of a double process of reclassification and abstraction. Due to increasing
knowledge about other parts of the world, travel, and migration, the list of groups that
potentially qualified for classification as ‘religious minorities’ grew longer; from a brief
list of prototypical examples restricted in time and space, ‘religious minorities’ became an
abstract category with universal applicability. Newly labeled religious minorities, such as
the Jewish ‘minority,’ were reclassified from terms such as nations or nationalities,
corporations, people, laws, or schools, which had been common descriptors for social
formations where religion played a role. With the emergence of nationalism and the spread
of the national state as the dominant model of political systems, this terminology was
toned down and replaced with that of ‘religious minorities.’ Moreover, what previously
were single entities, such as Jews, Muslims, Christians, were abstracted into the previously
non-existent class of ‘religious minorities.’
What makes minorities ‘religious’: denials, genealogies and
typical features
While the concept ‘sexual minority’ revolves around sexuality, ‘religious minority’
constructs a semantic relationship of a group to the qualifier ‘religious.’ As we have seen
above, the label of ‘religion’ can be denied, for instance, by reference to language such as
‘pseudo-religions’ or ‘cults.’ Even though this latter term sometimes surfaces in
scholarship, it carries negative connotations in many contexts. In fact, there is evidence
that religions publicly classified as cults su er higher degrees of discrimination by
governments than others (Peretz and Fox 2021). The term has also been adopted in nonEuropean languages. For example, the word is rendered as keolteu in Korean script, and as
karuto in Japanese, to discredit religious groups by making them appear as a social
problem (Grisafi 2021, 51; Reader 2015).
Moreover, as previously adressed, the qualifier ‘religious’ is never alone, but is most often
intersectional; ‘ethnic’ minorities can also be classified as ‘religious’ minorities and any
such classification is done with specific strategic interests in mind. But not all groups
appreciate being labeled as a ‘religious minority’; they may reject both being labeled as
‘minority’ or as ‘religious.’ For example, some branches of modern Judaism refuse to
consider Jewishness as a religion (see e.g. on Australian Jewry Creese 2019, 79 ). Likewise,
many religious minorities resist the emphasis on religious di erence and/or of minority
status because both can generate tension with majorities.
The classification ‘religious’ for certain minorities has historically come with certain
agendas. For example, European powers sought to intervene in favor of Christian churches
in the Ottoman Empire—and these churches were, next to the Eastern European Jews,
prototypes for the nascent category of ‘religious minorities.’ Moreover, given that
religious freedom features prominently in the list of human rights (see below),
categorizing institutions or practices as ‘religious’ can give a plausible claim for their
inviolability. In Japan, for instance, legal registration as a ‘religious corporation,’ although
not compulsory, allows religious organizations to obtain tax exemptions. Similar benefits
are o ered in many countries—and they can be of crucial importance for minor groups.
Many religious minorities are groups whose identities are recognized by their relation to a
given religious tradition (thereby once again pointing to the relational character of the
category). To begin with, this refers to the now publicly acknowledged canon of religions
built around the notion of ‘world religions’—i.e., a group that claims for itself to be
Christian, Muslim, etc. and that finds itself in a minority position in society. More
dominant religions would thereby potentially qualify as a religious minority. This claim of
belonging can also be disputed, for instance when others consider a group merely a sect, a
deviation (‘heterodoxy’) or as ‘not really’ belonging to Christianity, Islam, etc. Mormons,
for example, are often not considered ‘real’ Christians and Alevis not ‘real’ Muslims.
Other religious minorities are precisely such religions that are not part of the so-called
world religions canon, with Judaism being a contested case. While this is the case for
several groups with premodern trajectories, many new religions (or New
religious movements) have or claim genealogies that tie them to well-established major
religions, or derive inspiration and vocabulary from one or more of these traditions.
Religions that have been created in the modern and contemporary periods, however, tend
to be classified as distinct phenomena and labeled with the categories new religions, new
religious movements, minor religions (Nagaoka 2020), marginal religions (Grisafi 2021),
or cults. This is problematic, for there is no fundamental di erence between new religious
minorities and classical examples of religious minorities in terms of minor numbers,
power imbalance, minority awareness, claims for recognition, and sometimes even
density/insularity and distinctness as expressed by markers. Yet, the label ‘religious
minority,’ ‘minor’ or ‘minority religion’ has not been dominant in scholarship on socalled New Religious Movements, maybe so as not to confound it with the study of premodern religions.[8]
While many of these modern groups have sought recognition as religion, few if any have
presented themselves as modern day religious minorities.
Classification as ‘religion’ also invokes common associations with the category ‘religion.’
The more something resembles generally acknowledged examples of religion, the more
likely it is religion. Even in the United States, which is characterized by diversity and
competition and has no o cial preferred religion, there are normative models grounded in
the history of the country of what counts as religion, with as result that some religious
groups do not fit in these models. In an intersectional manner such models also draw on
structural racism (Boaz 2021).
Groups that aim to be recognized as religions, routinely emphasize features that match
such prototypical models. They often do so by invoking a more abstract language with
terms that are not specific to particular traditions, such as scripture, specialists or
priesthood, rituals, transcendence, the supernatural, cosmology, or liberation.
Additionally, terms like beliefs, revelation or salvation, which have a more straightforward
resonance with Christianity and Islam, are deeply ingrained as presumed characteristic
features of religion. Minority groups whose identity formations can therefore be described
in these terms have a good chance of being classified as ‘religious.’ As seen above, some
protagonists have sought to re-conceptualize religion in humanist-immanentistnaturalist manners, but it will likely take time for such an understanding of religion to gain
currency, if at all.
Religious minorities as problem in international politics
Religious minorities have initially been the main mover in the direction of minority
protection (Ghanea 2012, 57). Minorities and religious minorities became prominent issues
in international politics by way of international treaties between European powers and, in
particular, through treaties imposed by European powers on the Ottoman Empire and
nascent countries in Eastern Europe. Yet, the concept of minorities existed before the term
became common. For example, the so-called Treaty of Berlin (1878) was concerned with
combating social exclusion on religious grounds in the name of a “complete equality of
rights and prerogatives.” Even if these demands were made on behalf of minorities
residing in or interacting with the Ottoman Empire—mainly Christians—the term
‘minority’ does not occur in this document. It first became current in a series of peace
treaties following World War I. These treatises, starting with the one signed between the
Allied Powers and Poland in 1919 that served as a template for most other treatises,
promote freedom of religion for all inhabitants and equal treatment of racial, religious,
and linguistic minorities. Their protection, now vested in the League of Nations, is dealt
with as a matter of great urgency, and failing to provide it is considered a breach of
contract. This discourse brings some inherent paradoxes to the fore: The treatises sought
to provide access to wider society for people from minorities but also gave minorities the
opportunity to stay aloof from majority society. While claiming access and protection, the
treatises also o ered opportunities for autonomy by granting minorities institutional
independence from the state (as long as the state does not have to bear the costs)—for
example, by granting them the right to establish, manage and control educational
institutions. These facilities were meant to improve their well-being and to transmit their
specific traditions to future generations. Even though the treaties mention three kinds of
minorities—racial, religious, and linguistic—they give religious matters a more detailed
attention, and thus give religion a particular significance.
At the heart of this international legal concept of minority, as Saba Mahmood points out,
lies an “irresolvable tension” between equal partnership with the majority and its
di erence (religious or otherwise) from the majority as an “incipient threat to the identity
of the nation that is grounded in the religious, linguistic, and cultural norms of the
majority” (Mahmood 2016, 32). This is especially the case in countries with nationalist
ideologies that stress homogeneity. When all members are subject to the laws of the nation
state, this curtails the communal autonomy of minorities. Community members can even
challenge rulings by their leadership by appealing to state laws, as individual Copts did
during the Ottoman era when they appealed to sharia courts to bypass the Coptic church
authorities (Mahmood 2016, 124). In several countries, personal law (including matters of
marriage, divorce, succession, inheritance, or charities) is regulated according to alleged
traditions of religious minorities. This reflects a continuation of earlier times, where state
law did not cover all realms of legal transaction and religious groups bot ruled many
aspects of their community members’ lives without interference by the state,[9] and also a
division of outer and inner public and private realms where religion, family, and sexuality
are assigned to the private inner sphere, beyond the control of the nation state.
Accordingly, “struggles over religion often unfold over the terrain of gender and
sexuality” (Mahmood 2016, 114). In other countries, mainly in Western Europe where
minority protection legislation was not enshrined, consolidation of the nation-state went
against communal autonomy of religious minorities in the name of political, legal, and
civil equality for all (Mahmood 2016, 122).
The treaty system, meant to protect religious minorities in Eastern Europe and the Middle
East, was not a success. It collapsed some fifteen years after the Paris Conference, partly
because of continuing dissatisfaction with the fact that the dominating Western powers
never implemented minority rights in their own countries. After World War II, the
international treaty regime was replaced by universal human rights. The Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, proclaimed by the United Nations General Assembly in Paris
on 10 December 1948, establishes the “freedom of thought, conscience and religion” for
“everyone” (Article 18). This wording covered a much wider range of subjects than the
then established canon of minorities' rights. When finalizing the Declaration, it was
decided to remove all references to minorities and minority rights (Lindkvist 2017, 174),
partly because one major player, the United States, was against acknowledging a minority
problem (Mahmood 2016, 58). In the end, the declaration does not once speak of
minorities.
Yet, in 1947, the year before the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was promulgated,
the United Nations had formed a 12-member Sub Commission on Prevention of
Discrimination and Protection of Minorities. Despite its name, but in line with the new
focus on individual persons rather than on groups, this Sub-Commission initially mainly
focused on issues of discrimination rather than on minority issues (Capotorti 1979, 28,
paragraph 126). One outcome of the work of this Sub-Commission, however, was the
publication of Capotorti’s influential Study on the Rights of Persons Belonging to Ethnic,
Religious, and Linguistic Minorities (Capotorti 1979) and its widely cited definition of
‘minority’ is at the beginning of this essay. In 1999, this Sub-Commission was renamed
the United Nations Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights.
This once more reflects the shift of focus from minority questions to human rights in
general.
In 1966, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (CCPR) was adopted by
the United Nations General Assembly; it came into force on 23 March 1976. This Covenant
put minorities back on the main stage, even though the emphasis continued to be on
individuals, not on groups (Ghanea 2012, 65). Article 27 reads:
In those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities exist, persons
belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the right, in community with the
other members of their group, to enjoy their own culture, to profess and practise
their own religion, or to use their own language.
Compared to the post-World War I formulations, ‘ethnic’ has replaced ‘racial,’ and
‘culture’ has emerged as a key term. Similar to the post-World War I situation, the fall of
the Iron Curtain gave minority issues a new urgency, and on 18 December 1992, the United
Nations General Assembly adopted the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to
National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities. Despite the singling out of these
types of minorities—where national is introduced as a synonym for ethnic—most articles
of this Declaration speak of minorities in general. In this way, it is clear that the rights
declared herein pertain to all minorities not only to the ones mentioned in the title. Article
2 rephrases article 27 of the CCCPR in an active manner: “shall not be denied the right” is
substituted by “have the right.” Article 1 makes it the states' duties to
protect the existence and the national or ethnic, cultural, religious and linguistic
identity of minorities within their respective territories and shall encourage
conditions for the promotion of that identity.
This wording shows that identity has now assumed a key importance; it is not the mere
existence of groups that needs to be protected but also minorities’ identities. The
statement also reflects the intersectional nature of minorities (see above) insofar as the
distinctive characteristics of few minorities can be captured by one of the categories listed
here only. It is remarkable that the text does not come up with the common restrictive
phrasing referring to “public order and public morals” that pervaded the minority
treatises and can still be found in many religious freedom guarantees in national
constitutions. The Declaration does not provide an explicit definition of what constitutes a
minority, but the implicit one is that minorities are endangered identities that are in need
of protection by states and the international community of states. Minorities are
vulnerable, but their identities are worth promoting. This identity-promotion was
enshrined in the heritage discourse, which celebrates minorities as a form of cultural
heritage. There is now a tension between protection and promotion that provides a new
dimension to the minority problem, in addition to the ones highlighted above (equality vs.
liberty, inclusion vs. independence).
Why religious minorities matter
As should be clear by now, religious minorities and the processes of minoritization from
which they cannot be understood separately, are complex subjects to define,
conceptualize, and categorize. Religious minorities and processes of minoritization are
also profoundly important subjects to focus on not just for academic research but also for
the wider society.
First of all, religious minorities are not survivors of a historical time that ended with the
birth of the nation state. On the contrary, as discussed above, labeling groups as religious
minorities is often a byproduct of the formation of nation states. Moreover, the increasing
movement of people in a globalizing world results in the proliferation of minorities across
borders, sometimes in global networks of diasporic interconnectivities, financial support,
and shared identities. It is therefore crucial to understand how religious minorities, new
and old, relate to the social settings around them and how they are “part of and co-shaped
by their wider societies” (Østebø and Pontzen 2022, 116).
Studying religious minorities also means exploring social, religious, and political fault
lines in nation states, multination states, or political unions. By studying minoritization
(in religious but also other terms) as a general process or of a specific group in particular
geographical and temporal settings, one can uncover frictions, processes of domination,
subversion, and self-assertion that are pervasive throughout large scale-societies, yet less
visible the further one moves away from these fault lines. Studying religious minorities
and minoritization can therefore reveal deep-seated values, sensibilities, assumptions,
and social processes and practices that are taken for granted in terms of ‘true,’ ‘just,’
‘normal,’ ‘authentic,’ and so on. Religious minorities' ascribed, observed, or selfproclaimed otherness and the religious minoritization of groups often make these
assumed truths and their conflict with other truths explicit, such as is the case in many
conflicts surrounding multiculturalism and the preferences (for instance of dress) of
members of religious minorities in Europe (e.g. Laine, 2014, 217-27). Thus, by studying the
marked category of religious minorities one realizes unmarked categories made in society.
Studying Jews in medieval Christian Europe, to take one example, will show aspects of
medieval European society that studying medieval Christians alone would not do as easily.
There are also certain themes for which a focus on religious minorities can be particularly
relevant. In addition to the more obvious subjects such as marginalization, discrimination,
and multiculturalism, zeroing in on religious minorities can o er fresh perspectives on
subject areas that su er from assumed homogeneity and those which are embedded in
universalist claims. Examples of the first are fundamental values and assumptions of
secular nation states and national systems of civil law that without the presence of social
groups that do not share them appear ‘given’ and ‘natural.’ An example of the second are
human rights, which, although the aim has always been for all of humanity to benefit from
them, are rooted in particular Western modern individualistic values that often are in
conflict with those of (often non-Western) collectives such as religious minorities.
Moreover, social processes characteristically taking place in relation to religious
minorities such as adaptation, rejection, (self-)censoring, and opposition, may produce
new doctrinal understandings and new forms of religious practices, both in religious
majorities and religious minorities. For example, in Christian history, heresiology has
served an important role in the development of Christian doctrine, or has even been, as
Daniel Boyarin claims, the means through which Christianity became a distinct religion
(Boyarin 2004). The ‘othering’ dialectics of religious minorities and majorities arguably
constitutes an important conduit of religious formation and innovation.
Acknowledgments
This article benefited greatly from comments and criticisms from RMO Editorial Board
members (Carole Cusack, Rosalind Hackett, Titus Hjelm, and Knut A. Jacobsen) and from
members of the research group on Minority Studies at the University of Bergen. We are
also thankful to Freya Dastoor for her help with the literature review.
Footnotes
1
For a discussion about minoritization see also Laurie and Khan (2017).
2
See also Helge Årsheim writing on the Nordic countries: “By providing minorities with
di erent avenues and frames of reference for the formulation of their claims […],
lawmakers and the judiciary invite introspective debates within minority communities
regarding the self-perception of their religion” (Årsheim 2022, 376).
3
To complicate matters: Joanildo A. Burity has characterized minority claims for legal
equality also as (an attempt to) minoritizing the majority because the majority’s social
position as hegemonic is challenged. This, in return, often invokes reactions that
minoritize the minority even more (Burity, 2016: 120). Yet, whether the dehegemonization of a dominant (majority) religion is tantamount to its minoritization
while no other majority emerges, is debatable.
4
One strategy to avoid problems with terms is to propose alternatives. Weltecke (2020, 15),
for example, acknowledges that speaking of minorities can stabilize marginalization and
that the terminology is considered derogatory by stakeholders, and therefore proposes to
replace majorities/minorities by dominating vs. tolerated and non tolerated groups
(“geduldet”/“nicht geduldet”). The concept of tolerance, however, works better for
certain contexts than for others. Weltecke is a medieval historian, and her proposed
terminology can fit the historical contexts she works on. Note, however, that the quality of
being tolerated/not tolerated hardly works to characterize groups, since it neither
indicates neither the extent nor aspects in which a non-tolerated group is not tolerated,
both of which tend to vary considerably in di erent contexts and situations. Other
alternatives are “marginal,’ “fringe,’ “unconventional,’ “nontraditional”, “minor”
religions or “special groups”, all of which have advantages and shortcomings.
5
Ghanea (2012, 59) argues that “racial minorities enjoy protections that religious
minorities have almost totally been sidelined from.”
6
See White (2011, 49) for the same observation regarding French surveys of the Syrian
population.
7
]White (2011, 4) goes so far as to claim that “Minorities are integral to the development of
modern nation-states, not awkward groups that do not properly fit into them.” White
emphasizes the importance of representative government (the idea that the state claims to
represent the people), of which democracy is only one form, as ideological legitimation for
the emergence of the concept of minorities (29). Yet, the idea of ‘the people’ can be an
instance of exclusion of minorities insofar as ‘the people’ often means ‘the majority of the
population.’
8
In the last decade scholars in the field of New Religious Movements have started using the
more neutral term ‘minority religions.’ This term encompasses a wider range of groups
that do not fit (or have ceased to fit) the category of ‘new religious movements,’ such as
Latter-Day Saints or Jehovah's Witnesses. INFORM, a UK-based charity providing
information about various religions, for example, was one of the first organizations to
start using ‘minority religions’ instead of ‘New Religious Movements.’ George Chyssides
(1999) however argues that replacing ‘new religious movements’ with ‘minority religions’
raises a number of issues as the two terms do not necessarily coincide (some minority
religions are not necessarily new religious movements, for example). For a critical
discussion see Chryssides (2000). For a discussion about terminology see Barker (2004);
Bromley (2004); Melton (2004); Robbins (2005); Reader (2005).
9
Weltecke (2020, 24) puts it succinctly: “there was no equality before the law for everyone.”
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