About what I would have expected  --except for responses to a  question
about "religious freedom." The overall favorable rating is in sharp  
contrast to
the teachings of the Koran  Maybe the best conclusion is also one  that
I am well aware of, the fact that only small minorities of Muslims 
have actually read the Koran. 
 
Anyway, a worthwhile study.
 
B R
 
--------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
Five takeaways from Pew’s comprehensive study on  Islam
Dan Merica ("CNN," April 30, 2013) 
Washington – A Pew Research Center study released Tuesday takes an in-depth 
 look at Islam, including how Muslims around the world view extremism, 
sharia law  and the meeting of religion and politics. 
The study is a four-year effort by Pew, which conducted 38,000 face-to-face 
 interview in 80-plus languages for the survey. In total, 39 countries and  
territories were included, all of which had over 10 million Muslims living  
there. 
Here are the report’s five major takeaways: 
1.) Differences between U.S. and international Muslims are vast 
While Muslims in the United States share a belief system with Muslims 
abroad,  the Pew survey released Tuesday and a Pew survey on American Muslims 
from 2011  reveals wide differences between the two groups. 
An overwhelming number of Muslims outside the United States told Pew that  “
Islam is the only religion that leads to eternal life in heaven.” 
Ninety-six  percent of Egyptians and Jordanians, 95% of Iraqis and 94% of 
Moroccan 
Muslims  responded that “Islam alone” leads to heaven. 
When all Muslims outside the United States were considered, only 18% said  
many religions can lead to heaven. In the United States, that number is 56%, 
 according to the 2011 survey. 
Additionally, U.S. Muslims were more likely to have friends who were not  
Muslim. 
“About half of U.S. Muslims say that all (7%) or most (41%) of their close  
friends are followers of Islam, and half say that some (36%) or hardly any 
(14%)  of their close friends are Muslim,” the survey reports. 
By contrast, an average of 95% of Muslims outside the United States said  “
most or all of their friends are Muslims.” 
2.) Sharia law favored, especially by more devout Muslims 
A whopping 99% of Muslims in Afghanistan told Pew that they favor sharia 
law  – a Muslim code that dictates everything from dietary laws to morals – 
as the  official law of the land. 
Though Afghanistan is by far the most supportive of sharia, majorities in  
countries like Iraq (91%), Palestinian territories (89%) and Malaysia (86%)  
favor applying sharia to everyone in their respective countries. Support 
for  this viewpoint was particularly strong in Southeast Asia, South Asia, 
Middle  East-North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa. 
Analysis of the survey results by Pew found “most Muslims believe sharia is 
 the revealed word of God rather than a body of law developed by men based 
on the  word of God.” 
Those who approve sharia becoming the law of the land generally pray more  
than their Muslim brethren. 
Muslims who pray several times a day in Russia, for example, are over twice 
 as likely to favor implementing Islamic law as the law of the land. The 
same  split between those who pray several times a day and those who pray less 
often  can be seen in Lebanon, the Palestinian territories, Tunisia and 
Turkey. 
3.) Most Muslims believe religion, politics should be intertwined 
A majority of Muslims surveyed in Southeast Asia, South Asia and the Middle 
 East-North Africa told Pew that religious leaders in their respective 
countries  should have political influence. 
Much like favoring sharia law, religious devotion played an important role 
in  these beliefs. 
"Devout Muslims tend to be more supportive of religious leaders playing a  
role in politics,” the survey reads. “In a number of countries, 
particularly in  the Middle East and North Africa but also in Southern and 
Eastern 
Europe,  Muslims who pray several times a day are more likely than those who 
pray less  frequently to say religious leaders should have at least some 
influence on  political matters." 
4.) Around the world, Muslims heralded religious freedom 
Despite views that Islam should influence politics and law, an overwhelming 
 number of Muslims told Pew that religious freedom was a good thing. 
Ninety-seven percent of Muslims in South Asia, 95% in Eastern Europe, 94% 
in  sub-Saharan Africa and 85% in the Middle East and North Africa responded  
positively to religious freedom, according to the poll. 
“Overall, Muslims broadly support the idea of religious freedom,” the 
study  states. “Among Muslims who say people of different religions are very 
free to  practice their faith, three-quarters or more in each country say this 
is a good  thing.” 
5.) Islamic extremism widely rejected, but still a concern 
Carrying out violent acts in the name of Islam is strongly rejected by  
Muslims around the world, according to the survey. 
While a majority of Muslims, according to Pew, in all countries surveyed 
said  “suicide bombing in defense of Islam” was rarely or never justified, “
there are  some countries in which substantial minorities think violence 
against civilians  is at least sometimes justified.” 
For example, in the Palestinian territories, 40% of Muslims said suicide  
bombing was often or sometime justified. In Afghanistan that number was 39% 
and  in Egypt that number was 29%. 
Despite most country’s disapproval of violence in the name of Islam,  
religious extremism – and in particular Muslim extremism – is a concern for a  
majority of Muslims in the world, according to the survey. 
“At least half of Muslims in 22 of the 36 countries where the question was  
asked say they are at least somewhat concerned about religious extremist 
groups  in their country,” the report reads. “In most countries, Muslims are 
much more  worried about Islamic extremists than Christian extremists.” 
Concern over Muslims extremism was at it highest in Indonesia, Iraq and  
Guinea Bissau, where over 45% of Muslims said they were either very or 
somewhat  concerned about violence in the name of Islam.  
____________________________________

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