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  2. Proselytism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proselytism

    Its followers are free to follow any among the theistic, non-theistic or other traditions within Hinduism. Followers can pick or change to any philosophy or belief they fancy and worship any personal god or goddess in a manner they deem fit, given an unspoken but loud understanding that all paths are equally valid in their purest form.

  3. Lists of religious converts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_religious_converts

    Below are lists of religious converts. The term proselyte is often used as a synonym for religious converts, although historically it first referred solely to converts to Judaism . v

  4. Religious conversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_conversion

    Conversion to Christianity is the religious conversion of a previously non-Christian person to some form of Christianity. Some Christian sects require full conversion for new members regardless of any history in other Christian sects, or from certain other sects. The exact requirements vary between different churches and denominations.

  5. List of people who made multiple religious conversions

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_who_made...

    This is a list of people noted for having converted to two or more religions or religious movements. Their original religion is mentioned first when applicable. In certain cases the individual considered themselves to be of more than one religion at a time. Nicolas Antoine – Started in Catholicism; conversions to Protestantism and Judaism.

  6. Religious assimilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_assimilation

    Some dominant cultures may exert pressures for religious assimilation so extreme as to amount, according to some researchers, to a form of religious persecution. [4] These pressures may be exerted by making other, more appealing forms of cultural assimilation, such as membership in secular social club activities, so time-consuming that they interfere seriously with attendance at minority ...

  7. Religious disaffiliation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_disaffiliation

    Religious disaffiliation is the act of leaving a faith, or a religious group or community. It is in many respects the reverse of religious conversion.Several other terms are used for this process, though each of these terms may have slightly different meanings and connotations.

  8. Forced assimilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_assimilation

    Forced assimilation is the involuntary cultural assimilation of religious or ethnic minority groups, during which they are forced by a government to adopt the language, national identity, norms, mores, customs, traditions, values, mentality, perceptions, way of life, and often the religion and ideology of an established and generally larger community belonging to a dominant culture.

  9. Forced conversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_conversion

    In March 2007, the BBC reported that people in the Mandaean ethnic and religious minority in Iraq alleged that they were being targeted by Islamist insurgents, who offered them the choice of conversion or death. [195] In 2006, two journalists of the Fox News Network were kidnapped at gunpoint in the Gaza Strip by a previously unknown militant ...