Religion in Switzerland

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File:Zürich - St Peter-Fraumünster - Urania Sternwarte IMG 7470.JPG
Typical large clocks characterising the towers of Swiss Protestant churches; here the towers of St. Peter and Fraumünster in Zürich.

Religion in Switzerland is predominantly Christianity. According to the national survey of the Swiss Federal Statistical Office,Template:Efn in 2023, Christians accounted for 56% of the resident population (aged fifteen years and older), of whom 30.7% were Catholics, 19.5% were Swiss Protestants, and 5.8% were followers of other Christian denominations (about half Orthodox and half other Protestants).[1] The proportion of Christians has declined significantly since 1980, when they constituted about 94% of the population; during the same timespan, unaffiliated Swiss residents have grown from about 4% to 31% of the population, and people professing non-Christian religions have grown from about 1% to 7.2% of the population.[2] In 2020, according to church registers, 35.2% of the resident population were registered members of the country's Catholic Church, while 23.3% were registered members of the Protestant Church of Switzerland.[3]Template:Efn

Christianity was adopted by the Gaulish (mostly Helvetii) and Germanic (mostly Alemanni) ancestors of the modern Swiss, respectively, between the 4th- and 5th-century late Roman domination the former, and between the 6th- and 7th-century Frankish domination the latter, abandoning their indigenous Gallo-Roman and Germanic paganisms. The Old Swiss Confederacy which began to emerge in the 13th century remained entirely Catholic until the 16th century, when it became one of the centres of the Protestant Reformation and a majority of the Swiss joined the Protestant movement of Calvinism.Template:Sfnm Conflicts, and even civil wars, between Protestants and Catholics persisted until the Sonderbund War in 1847, after which freedom of conscience was established by law — only for Christians.Template:Sfnm Legal discrimination against Jews and some restrictions against the Catholic Church persisted, respectively, until the late 19th century the former and the end of the 20th century the latter.Template:Sfn In the early 20th century, Switzerland had an absolute majority of Protestants (about 60%) and a large population of Catholics (about 40%); since the late 20th century and throughout the 21st century, the religious composition of the country has changed significantly, with a rise of the irreligious population, a sharp decline of Protestantism to about two tenths of the population, and a less sharp decline of Catholicism to about three tenths of the population.[2]

Switzerland has no state religion, though most of its cantons (except for Geneva and Neuchâtel) recognise official churches (Landeskirchen), in all cases Catholic and Swiss Protestant, and in some cantons also the Old Catholic Church and Jewish congregations.Template:Sfn These churches are financed by taxation of their adherents.[4][5]

Demographics

Census statistics, 1900–2020

Religious affiliations in Switzerland, census/structural survey 1900–2022*[2]
Census data Structural surveyTemplate:Efn[6]
Religion 1900Template:Sfn 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2022
Christianity 99.4 98.7 98.4 98.3 98.0 97.8 98.8 97.5 93.7 89.2 80.5 71.8 61.2 58.2
Catholicism 41.6 42.5 40.9 41.0 40.4 41.5 45.4 46.7 46.2 46.2 42.3 38.4 33.8 32.1
Swiss Protestantism 57.8 56.2 57.5 57.3 57.6 56.3 52.7 48.8 45.3 39.6 33.9 27.8 21.8 20.5
—Other Christians 0.7 2.0 2.2 3.4 4.3 5.6 5.6 5.6
Islam 0.2 0.7 1.6 3.6 4.9 5.4 5.9
Judaism 0.5 0.5 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2
Other religion 0.6 0.9 1.1 1.2 1.5 1.7 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.7 1.2 1.2 1.3
No religion 0.5 1.2 3.9 7.5 11.4 20.6 30.9 33.5
Not stated 0.2 0.4 1.2 1.1 3.6 1.1 1.1 0.9
Population 3,315,443 3,753,293 3,880,320 4,066,400 4,265,703 4,714,992 5,429,061 4,575,416 4,950,821 5,495,018 5,868,572 6,587,556 7,187,715
*1900–1960: total population (of any age) counted. 1970–2000: total population (age 15+) counted. Starting from 2010: extrapolated to the total population (age 15+).

Line chart of the trends, 1900–2020

Census/structural survey's statistics 1900–2020:[2] Template:Graph:Chart

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Religion by cantons

File:20th Century Geography of Religions in Switzerland.jpg
Religions in Switzerland by geographic areas in the early 20th century. Page from a school atlas in the collection of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland.
File:Karte Religionen der Schweiz 2016.01.01.png
Religions in Switzerland by municipality in 2016.

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Religion in Switzerland by canton, 2018 (absolute majorities with coloured background)Template:Efn[7][8]
Arms Canton Population (numbers) Percentages
Total Catholic Protestant Catholic Protestant Protestant +
Catholic
Unaffiliated +
other*
Coat of arms of Zürich Zürich 1,520,968 387,325 425,145 25.5 28.0 53.4 46.6
Coat of arms of Bern Bern 1,034,977 164,866 541,148 15.9 52.3 68.2 31.8
Coat of arms of Vaud Vaud 799,145 250,543 205,775 31.4 25.7 57.1 42.9
Coat of arms of Aargau Aargau 678,207 215,984 161,317 31.8 23.8 55.6 44.4
Coat of arms of St. Gallen St. Gallen 507,697 226,264 104,851 44.6 20.7 65.2 34.8
Coat of arms of Geneva Genève 499,480 219,477 62,769 43.9 12.6 56.5 43.5
Coat of arms of Luzern Luzern 409,557 245,397 41,673 59.9 10.2 70.1 29.9
Coat of arms of Ticino Ticino 353,343 235,570 5,356 66.7 1.5 68.2 31.8
Coat of arms of Valais Valais 343,955 261,963 20,042 76.2 5.8 82.0 18.0
Coat of arms of Fribourg Fribourg 318,714 197,559 41,534 62.0 13.0 75.0 25.0
Coat of arms of Basel-Country Basel-Landschaft 288,132 71,541 85,388 24.8 29.6 54.5 45.5
Coat of arms of Thurgau Thurgau 276,472 85,104 93,628 30.8 33.9 64.6 35.4
Coat of arms of Solothurn Solothurn 274,748 86,518 58,522 31.5 21.3 52.8 47.2
Coat of arms of Graubünden Graubünden 198,379 89,768 66,536 45.3 33.5 78.8 21.2
Coat of arms of Basel-City Basel-Stadt 194,766 24,783 26,380 12.7 13.5 26.3 73.7
Coat of arms of Neuchâtel Neuchâtel 176,850 64,258 51,378 36.3 29.1 65.4 34.6
Coat of arms of Schwyz Schwyz 159,165 95,794 18,390 60.2 11.6 71.7 28.3
Coat of arms of Zug Zug 126,837 61,999 17,070 48.9 13.5 62.3 37.7
Coat of arms of Schaffhausen Schaffhausen 81,991 17,155 29,190 20.9 35.6 56.5 43.5
Coat of arms of Jura Jura 73,419 55,000 7,023 74.9 9.6 84.5 15.5
Coat of arms of Appenzell Ausserrhoden Coat of arms of Appenzell Innerrhoden Appenzell Ausserrhoden &
InnerrhodenTemplate:Efn
71,379 27,942 23,513 39.1 32.9 72.1 27.9
Coat of arms of Nidwalden Nidwalden 43,223 28,363 4,336 65.6 10.0 75.6 24.3
Coat of arms of Glarus Glarus 40,403 13,383 13,768 33.1 34.1 67.2 32.8
Coat of arms of Obwalden Obwalden 37,841 26,944 2,937 71.2 7.8 79.0 21.0
Coat of arms of Uri Uri 36,433 28,582 1,691 78.5 4.6 83.1 16.9
Coat of arms of Switzerland Switzerland 8,546,081 3,182,082 2,109,360 37.2 24.7 61.9 38.1

* Includes other Christians, Muslims and other religions.

Religion by ethnic origin, sex, age, and education

According to the Swiss Federal Statistical Office, based on cumulative data collected between 2013 and 2017, there were significant differences in the religious affiliations of the five most common ethno-national groups in Switzerland: Swiss nationals were mostly Christians (73%), evenly divided between Catholics (37%), Swiss Protestants (31%) and other Christians (5%); the vast majority of Italian and Portuguese nationals living in Switzerland were Catholics (77% and 74%, respectively); half of German nationals in Switzerland were unaffiliated, while Christians were minority accounting for 47%; and Frenchmen in Switzerland were mostly unaffiliated (55%), while only 38% of them were Christians.[9]

Major ethno-national groups in Switzerland by religion, 2013–2017 (majority in light green)[9]
Religion Swiss Italians Germans Balkans* Portuguese French Spaniards Turks
Christianity 72.9 80.9 47.0 26.0 76.7 38.5 65.8 2.1
Catholicism 36.7 76.9 22.6 5.0 73.9 33.5 62.8 0.3
Swiss Protestantism 31.2 0.6 20.3 0.1 0.4 2.3 0.6 0.2
–Other Christians 5.0 3.4 4.1 20.9 2.4 2.7 2.4 1.6
Islam 2.4 1.2 1.4 61.1 0.3 2.7 0.6 72.9
Judaism 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.9 0.1 0.1
Other religion 0.9 0.4 0.2 0.5 0.4 1.1 0.4 1.2
No religion 22.4 16.1 50.0 10.8 20.3 54.6 31.1 22.3
Not stated 1.2 1.4 0.7 1.5 2.4 2.4 1.8 1.4
*Includes people with origins from Albania, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Kosovo.
Religion in Switzerland by origin, sex, age and education, 2018 (majority in coloured background)[10]Template:Efn
Sociodemographic characteristics Christianity Catholic Swiss Protestant Other Christian Islam Other religion No religion Not stated
rowspan=9 Template:Vert header
Female 66 36 24 6 5 2 26 1
Male 62 35 22 5 6 1 30 1
Age 15-24 (youth) 62 34 21 7 8 2 27 1
Age 25-64 (middle-aged) 60 34 20 6 6 2 31 1
Age 65+ (elderly) 79 40 35 4 1 1 17 2
Compulsory education 64 41 17 6 12 3 20 1
High school degree 69 36 27 6 4 1 26 1
University degree 58 31 22 5 3 2 36 1
rowspan=9 Template:Vert header
Female 71 36 30 5 2 1 24 2
Male 67 34 28 5 3 1 28 1
Age 15-24 (youth) 66 35 25 6 5 1 27 1
Age 25-64 (middle-aged) 65 34 26 5 3 1 29 2
Age 65+ (elderly) 81 38 38 5 0 1 17 1
Compulsory education 71 40 26 5 5 2 20 2
High school degree 71 35 31 5 2 1 25 1
University degree 64 32 28 4 2 1 32 1
rowspan=9 Template:Vert header
Female 50 35 5 10 14 3 31 2
Male 47 35 4 8 14 3 35 1
Age 15-24 (youth) 48 34 3 11 21 3 27 1
Age 25-64 (middle-aged) 46 33 4 9 13 3 36 2
Age 65+ (elderly) 69 54 7 8 9 2 18 2
Compulsory education 53 42 2 9 22 4 20 1
High school degree 51 37 5 9 14 2 32 1
University degree 42 27 7 8 5 3 49 1

Practice and attendance

The proportion of Swiss people believing in a single god fell from 46% to 38% between 2014 and 2024, according to the Federal Statistical Office. This decline is particularly marked among those aged 65 and over, with a decrease of 14 percentage points in ten years. Religion remains an important role for 56% of Swiss people in difficult times and for 52% in cases of illness. More than a quarter of those who have left their religion cite loss of faith or disagreement with their religious community. By 2024, half of the Swiss population never attended a religious event in the past 12 months preceding the survey.[11]

Religions

Christianity

Script error: No such module "labelled list hatnote". According to the national structural survey of 2020, Christianity was the religion of 61.2% of the population, of whom 33.8% were Catholics, 21.8% were Swiss Protestants - almost all adherents of Calvinism -, and 5.6% were adherents of other Christian denominations - including Orthodox Christians, Lutherans, nondenominational Evangelicals, Jehovah's Witnesses, and other Christian movements.[2] Christianity has declined significantly since the 1970s, at first in the urban centres and later also in the rural countrysides.Template:Sfn

Other religions

Script error: No such module "labelled list hatnote". Islam is the second largest religion in Switzerland after Christianity,Template:Sfn adhered to by 5.4% of the population in 2020.[2] Swiss Muslims are mostly of foreign origin (mostly of Arab ancestry those in the Gallo-Romance regions, and mostly of Balkan, Turkish and Iranian ancestry those in the Germanic regions), although there is an increasing number of native Swiss converts.[12] Religious Jews represented 0.2% of the Swiss population in 2020.[2] Other religions present in the country include Hinduism and Buddhism, practised by both local Swiss who have nurtured interest in Eastern doctrines and by immigrants from Asia.[12] There is a Taoist temple, Ming Shan (明山, "Mountain of Light"), located in Bullet, Vaud, and built according to the rules of feng shui; it is the headquarters of the Swiss Taoist Association and the main centre in Europe of the Taoist tradition of Wujimen (无极门, "Gate of Infinity"),Template:Efn which originated on the Min Mountains of Sichuan, China.[13] In the country there are also various new religious movements, among which one of the most influential has been the Theosophy-derived Anthroposophy; the Anthroposophical Society was established by the Austrian occultist Rudolf Steiner in the 1920s and 1930s in Dornach, Solothurn, and it is known for its promotion of the well-reputed Waldorf schools.Template:Sfn

History

4th–7th centuries: Gallo-Romans and Alemanni, and their Christianisation

File:HMB - Muri statuette group - Ensemble.jpg
The Muri statuette group found in Muri bei Bern, representing a Gallo-Roman pantheon: Jupiter, Juno, Minerva, Naria, Artio and a lar.

The ancestors of the modern Swiss were:

During the 8th and 9th centuries the linguistic boundary between the Gallo-Romance-speaking western regions and the central and western Alemannic-speaking regions had already formed clearly, and during the 13th and 14th centuries the Swiss Plateau became completely Alemannic-speaking.Template:Sfn Pockets of Rhaeto-Romance speakers persisted in isolated valleys of the south-eastern region of modern Switzerland.Template:Sfn

A Roman inscription with the Chi Rho symbol in Sion, dated 377, is the earliest datable record of Christianity in the territory of modern Switzerland.[14] The Gallo-Romans abandoned Gallo-Roman syncretism and adopted Christianity during the 4th and 5th centuries. The Alemanni, originally practitioners of Germanic paganism, became Christians during the 6th and 7th centuries when the area was under the Frankish Empire; the Christianisation of the Gauls was promoted at first by Roman officials and local landowners, while the later Christianisation of the Alemanii was carried out mostly by convents.[12] Theologically monotheistic, early Christianity integrated popular polytheism by turning it into the cult of Christian saints.[12]

13th–17th centuries: Catholicism and the Calvinist Reformation in old Switzerland

File:Sion Valere Castle 20070730.jpg
The 12th-century fortified Catholic Valère Basilica in Sion.
File:Le Mur des réformateurs (Genève, Suisse) (26709884149).jpg
Central group of the Reformation Wall in Geneva, commemorating the founding fathers of Calvinism: William Farel, John Calvin, Theodore Beza, and John Knox.

At the beginning of the 13th century, the Old Swiss Confederacy began to emerge within the Holy Roman Empire from a pact between the cantons of Uri, Schwyz and Unterwalden to resist the power of the House of Habsburg; the pact was soon joined by other territories and by the cities of Zürich, Bern and Basel, who wanted to remain independent from the Habsburgs and from the Dukes of Burgundy.Template:Sfn During the following centuries, the confederacy expanded to the entire territory of modern Switzerland as a network of alliances and tributary relations.Template:Sfnm The Swiss confederacy remained entirely Catholic until the 16th century,Template:Sfn although with tiny communities of Jews attested in Swiss cities since the 12th century.[12]

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In the 16th century, Switzerland was swept by the ideas of the Protestant Reformation, and it became the world centre of the Protestant movement of Calvinism, to which a majority of the Swiss converted.Template:Sfnm Anabaptism and the Radical Reformation, and in the following century Pietism, also made inroads in Switzerland.[12] The development of Protestantism was closely linked to the growth in power of the cities and their guilds of artisans and merchants. Elements of Christianity linked to agrarian life, the cult of saints and images, and monasticism, were all abolished, and religious life became centred no longer on ritual but on moral teaching drawn from the interpretation of the Bible.[12] The Alemannic cantons of Zürich, Bern, Basel and Schaffhausen were the first to officially adopt the new religion under the influence of Huldrych Zwingli, while Geneva became the centre of the movement under the sway of John Calvin, who was French in origin.Template:Sfn Geneva came to be known as the "Calvinist Rome" or the "Protestant Rome".[12] Other areas of Switzerland remained Catholic.Template:Sfn During the Counter-Reformation enacted by the Catholic Church in the Council of Trent (1545–1563) to thwart the spread of Protestant movements, Geneva and other Protestant cantons became havens of refuge for Calvinists from elsewhere, and in the 17th century Switzerland welcomed French Huguenots who fled France after the Edict of Nantes (1598), through which Henry IV had granted them freedom in France, was revoked by Louis XIV with the Edict of Fontainebleau (1685).Template:Sfn

Conflicts, and even civil wars, between Protestant and Catholic cantons and cantons' districts arose.Template:Sfnm To avoid the laceration of the system of alliances between territories, the confederacy adopted the principle of territorial exclusivity of religion (cuius regio, eius religio), thereby recognising the plurality of Christian denominations on a constitutional level, although in areas of mixed religious affiliation, including Aargau, Thurgau, the surroundings of St. Gallen, the Grisons and Geneva, armed conflicts between Catholics and Protestants continued.Template:Sfnm The complete constitutional parity of the two denominations was reached through four Landfriede (land peaces), the first in 1529 and the fourth one in 1712.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, the Swiss confederacy was recognised as fully independent from the Holy Roman Empire as part of the Peace of Westphalia in 1648.Template:Sfn It was within Protestantism that embryonic ideas of separation of spiritual life from secular life were first developed; in Switzerland, Protestant cantons became the drivers of the economic, political and social innovation of the country, while Catholic cantons would have remained agrarian and backward until the 19th century.[12]

18th–19th centuries: the Helvetic Republic, the Sonderbund War, and the 1848 Constitution

The principle of exclusivity of religion in autonomous regions remained in force until 1798; whoever did not want to be part of a territory's official religion could emigrate, but had to leave all his possessions, although a few Protestant cantons granted a merciful ius emigrandi (right of emigration).Template:Sfn The short-lived Helvetic Republic, established as a sister republic of France between 1798 and 1803, was a secular state according to the principles of the French Revolution.Template:Sfn After the end of the Helvetic Republic and the restoration of Switzerland as a confederation of states, conflicts between Catholics and Protestants arose again, although popular uprisings after 1830 led many cantons to adopt liberal constitutions which granted religious freedom.Template:Sfn In 1845, two Catholic cantons of central Switzerland, namely Fribourg and Valais, formed a separate league, the Sonderbund, which opposed Protestants and liberals.Template:Sfn As more cantons joined the Protestant and liberal faction than the Sonderbund, the general diet of the cantons asked for the dissolution of the latter.Template:Sfn A civil war, the Sonderbund War, ensued in 1847, and it resulted in the defeat of the Catholic forces and in the establishment of Switzerland as a federal republic in 1848, under the Swiss Federal Constitution.Template:Sfnm

The constitution of 1848 declared Switzerland a multilingual and multireligious country; freedom of conscience was recognised as a fundamental right, though only for Christians.Template:Sfnm However, the cantons continued to have responsibility over the detailed regulation of the relations between church and state, and this led to differing systems, ranging from total separation to official churches (Landeskirchen) with a subordinated official recognition of other churches.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Legal discrimination against non-Christians such as Jews continued, as they had neither freedom of establishment nor freedom of worship, they could live only in the two "Jewish villages" of Endingen and Lengnau, and they could bury their dead only on a designated island in the Rhine; the bans on Jewish establishment and worship were abolished with revisions of the constitution respectively in 1866 and 1874.Template:Sfn

20th–21st centuries: abrogation of remaining restrictions and religious diversification

The revision of the constitution in 1874 had introduced some restrictions against Catholic institutions: the prohibition of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), the prohibition of convents, and the prohibition of electing clerks in the highest federal authorities; these norms were abolished respectively in 1979, 1999 and 2001.Template:Sfn The ban on Jesuits was abrogated from the constitution by popular vote, from which resulted that 54.9% of the Swiss were in favour of lifting the ban.[15][16] At the same time, the 1874 revision of the constitution finally secured some fundamental secular principles: the separation of civil marriage from religious marriage and the separation of the teaching of religion from the rest of education.Template:Sfn Over the following decades, freedom of worship and secular principles, combined with free movement of the population, gradually loosened the system of territorial exclusivity of religions which was characteristic of old Switzerland.Template:Sfn However, in 1980, a popular vote to gauge the complete separation of church and state resulted in opposition to such change, with only 21.1% voting in support, so that the system of the Landeskirchen was retained.[17]

In the early 20th century, Switzerland had an absolute majority of Protestants, about 60%, and a large population of Catholics, about 40%.Template:Sfn After the World War II, the religious composition of the country began to change significantly; the immigration of workers from Italy and Spain sustained a growth of the Catholic population until 1970.Template:Sfn Geneva, once the "Protestant Rome", in 1948 became the centre of world Christian ecumenism, hosting the World Council of Churches.[12] Interest among locals brought to Switzerland Eastern religions, mostly Hinduism and Buddhism, first as intellectual systems, later established as practised religions by waves of immigration towards the end of the century.[12] The same strain of comparative synthesis of world religions which in the 19th century had given rise to Theosophy and even earlier to Freemasonry (present among the elites in Switzerland since the 18th century), in the early 20th century led to the establishment of Anthroposophy in Switzerland by the Austrian occultist Rudolf Steiner.[12] Starting in the mid-1970s, new waves of migration brought to Switzerland Orthodox Christian and Islamic populations from the Balkans, which increased in the 1990s with the welcoming of refugees fleeing the Yugoslav Wars.Template:Sfn As a consequence, Islam grew to become today the second largest religion in the country after Christianity.Template:Sfn At the same time, identification with, practice of Christianity, and membership in the traditional Christian churches, began to decline, first in the urban centres of Zürich, Basel and Geneva, and then also in the rural countrysides.Template:Sfn Since then, Protestantism has declined to about two-tenths of the population, and Catholicism to about three-tenths of the population, while the proportion of Swiss people not believing in any religion has grown about thirty times.[2]

Legislation and freedom of religion

File:Moschee Wangen bei Olten.jpg
Mosque with minaret in Wangen bei Olten, canton of Solothurn. Inaugurated in July 2009, this mosque triggered that year's popular initiative which banned the construction of any further mosque towers in Switzerland.

The Swiss federal state does not have any official religion and does not favour any religion, and on the federal level there is not any administrative office which deals specifically with religious affairs, thus on such level the church and the state are fully separated.Template:Sfn Although the preamble of the Swiss Federal Constitution begins In the name of God Almighty!, the invoked higher power is not to be intended in the Christian sense, but as the higher power of any religion.Template:Sfn According to the Constitution, the relationship between the churches and the state has to be governed by the cantons themselves, so that the twenty-six cantons have twenty-six different systems of legislation on religious affairs.Template:Sfn If a member of the Federal Council receives religious communities, this only happens in the form of a delegation of the representatives of all the country's major religious communities, so that no single religion has privileged access to the supreme federal authority.Template:Sfn The majority of politicians keep a certain distance from religious communities, and political parties of religious character established by the religious communities themselves are marginal, so that religious ideas have little importance in the contemporary Swiss political process.Template:Sfn

Law defines that Swiss public schools must be religiously neutral, and that the teaching of religious studies in public schools must not identify unilaterally with any religion or proselytise for it.Template:Sfn Moreover, religious symbols are prohibited from being displayed by public schools and public school officials, be it crucifixes in classrooms or headscarves of Muslim female teachers.Template:Sfn The state allows religious or philosophical communities to establish confessional private school, though they are still supervised by the state, which imposes certain requirements and conducts inspections; there are private Protestant, Catholic, Montessori, Waldorf (Anthroposophical), Jewish schools, and plans for Islamic schools.Template:Sfn

The Article 15 of the Constitution protects as fundamental rights of individual citizens the belief in any religion or unbelief in any religion, and the performance of religious cult activities, alone or in community with others, and it makes clear that "no one shall be forced" to believe in a religion or participate in religious activities;Template:Sfn the Article 36 also introduces a limitation to these rights if they threaten public order or if they encroach upon the basic rights of others, for example prohibiting ritual slaughter as it conflicts with Swiss animal laws and limiting certain public missionary practices.Template:Sfn The Article 261 of the Swiss Criminal Code punishes the malicious disturbance or public mocking of religious beliefs and religious practices, and the dishonouring of locations and objects of worship.Template:Sfn

While the federal state is completely neutral in matters of religion, each canton may recognise individual religious communities as juristic persons under public law due to their church sovereignty, thereby subjecting them to better conditions than unrecognised religious communities — it is the case of the Landeskirchen.Template:Sfn The use of cantonal taxes to support cantonal churches has been ruled legal by the Federal Supreme Court, even though they are collected from juristic persons (e.g. corporations) of which irreligious citizens or citizens of unrecognised religions are shareholders.Template:Sfn[18]

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Some observers have identified persisting discrimination against Jews and Muslims in Switzerland; while cases of harassment have mostly been verbal, after 2016 there were a few reports of physical assault against Jews, and Muslim cemeteries were targets of vandalism.[19] In a referendum of November 2009, 57.5% of Swiss voters approved a popular initiative which prohibited the construction of minarets as part of Swiss Islamic mosques (though the four existing minarets of mosques in Zürich, Geneva, Winterthur and Wangen bei Olten were not affected retroactively and remained in place).[20]

See also

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Notes

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References

Citations

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Sources

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