Canadians are losing their religion at an unprecedented rate, with more than a third of the country reporting no religious affiliation in the latest census, Statistics Canada revealed Wednesday.
And while the latest tranche of data from the 2021 census shows the proportion of non-religious Canadians has more than doubled in the past 20 years — to 34.6 per cent, up from 16.5 per cent in 2001 — the share of the country who identify as Christian has shrunk.
They made up 53.3 per cent of the population in 2021, down from 67.3 per cent in 2011 and 77.1 per cent in 2001.
“It is fair to say that the two things that we are seeing — the growth in the non-religious population, along with the decline in people reporting Christian denominations — they’re linked,” said with Jarod Dobson, a senior analyst with StatCan’s diversity and socio-cultural statistics division.
The trend in Canada is in line with the United States, the agency noted.
“There are studies that have been done that show that over time, the importance of religion in people’s lives has decreased,” Dobson said.
For Tania Akon of Toronto, leaving behind her Muslim faith meant losing not only her guiding philosophy, but also her community.
“If you leave your community in a place like Toronto, you’re just a worker,” she said. “You try to find that meaning and connection and humanity (at work) … but that’s not a guarantee.”
In search of that connection, Akon turned to secular humanism, a philosophy-cum-community centred around human dignity. Some 11,390 people described themselves as humanists in the latest census.
The non-religious category includes people who identify as atheist and agnostic, as well as humanists and those with other secular perspectives.
Akon attended her first meeting of the secular community Toronto Oasis in 2017 and has since become one of its volunteer organizers.
Until the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, they met weekly at an interfaith centre, hosting speakers and musicians.
“Every Sunday morning, so it’s like a church except there’s no dogma, no doctrine,” Akon said.
They migrated to virtual meetings when the pandemic began, and haven’t switched back since.
Even so, she said, the sense of community persists.
“We’re meeting a need,” she said. “It’s being organized by people like me who have the need themselves and have tried to create something to meet a need we have.”
Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Waterloo, said there’s been a move away from in-person community-building in recent decades.
“I don’t want to say in-person community is dead — it’s definitely not. But often now, it’s switched to digital community,” she said. “It takes a certain form that’s maybe not regular, weekly activities, but is built around our busy lifestyles these days.”
Life has changed a lot since the heyday of Christianity in Canada in the 19th century, she said.
“The church was often the centre of social, political, community life, as well as a religious centre,” Wilkins-Laflamme said.
“We’re now in a society where that’s still one possibility, but there’s a lot of other possibilities for people who are seeking community.”
Even as the share of non-religious people is increasing, some non-Christian religions are growing, driven largely by immigration.
Islam is the second most commonly reported religion in Canada in 2021, with nearly five per cent of the population identifying as Muslim. That’s more than doubled since 2001, when the share was only two per cent.
Meanwhile, 2.3 per cent of the population now identifies as Hindu, compared to one per cent in 2001.
Those who are affiliated with a given religion aren’t necessarily practising members of that faith, Statistics Canada noted.
The agency said this year’s release presents the most comprehensive portrait of Canadians’ religious affiliations to date, as the census linked to a list of 200 example denominations for people to look at before writing in their religion, which encouraged people to be more specific.
For example, 1,645 people reported being Druidic on the 2021 census, while 4,475 said they were Neopagan. In surveys past, they would only have been identified as Pagan.
The Pagan umbrella, which also includes 12,625 Wiccans, now encompasses 45,325 people.
—Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press
RELATED: Record share of Canadians are immigrants or permanent residents, census shows