Thursday, April 9, 2026
ADVT 
India

Kids In India Show Religious Tolerance: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Jun, 2018 11:52 AM
    Turns out, children in India have a remarkable level of acceptance of different religions' rules and practices.
     
     
    A University of California-Santa Cruz study found that both Hindu and Muslim children in India thought that Hindu children should follow Hindu norms and Muslim children should follow Muslim norms.
     
     
    "Even in a region with a long history of high religious tension, we see impressive levels of religious tolerance among children," said co-author Audun Dahl. "Children think that people in different religions should follow their own norms--and that's a starting point, a reason for optimism."
     
     
    Very little research has been done on how children reason about religious norms, despite the fact that differences between religious norms underpin conflicts around the globe, including Catholic/Protestant clashes in Europe and differences among Sunni and Shia Muslims, noted Dahl. Religious norms dictate practices from clothing and land ownership to reproduction, he said, with adult adherents frequently wanting others to adhere to their norms.
     
     
    "Children expressed preferences for their own religion, but we found no evidence of children rejecting the norms of the other religion," said Dahl, adding that such tolerance is the first step toward greater harmony.
     
     
    The study took place in Gujarat, India, a region with a history of Hindu-Muslim violence. Investigators worked with 100 children ages 9 to 15, focusing on different Hindu norms, such as the prohibition against eating beef, and Muslim norms, such as the prohibition against worshipping an idol. They also asked the children about hitting people to explore the youngsters' reasoning around moral norms.
     
     
    These findings offered hope that exposure to conflicts over religious differences, like those experienced by children in many regions of the world, need not lead children to develop negative attitudes toward the religious practices of other groups. "Rather, perhaps these levels of understanding will play a role in reducing conflict over time," said Dahl.
     
     
    The study is published in Child Development.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Man Allegedly Raped 12-Year-Old Step Daughter For A Year

    Man Allegedly Raped 12-Year-Old Step Daughter For A Year
    The accused absconded as soon as he got the information that the matter was reported to the police.

    Man Allegedly Raped 12-Year-Old Step Daughter For A Year

    Man Drags Woman By Hair, Tears Clothes And Molests Her On Mumbai Train

    Man Drags Woman By Hair, Tears Clothes And Molests Her On Mumbai Train
    The accused -- identified as a cabbie from Byculla, Rafiq Khan -- and the victim were known to each other and he molested her after an alteration over money in the train.

    Man Drags Woman By Hair, Tears Clothes And Molests Her On Mumbai Train

    China: Woman With Scissors Stuck In Head Takes Bus To Hospital

    China: Woman With Scissors Stuck In Head Takes Bus To Hospital
    Doctors said the scissors were barely 2-3 millimetres from the woman's brain

    China: Woman With Scissors Stuck In Head Takes Bus To Hospital

    Lalu Yadav's Son Tej Pratap To Marry Aishwarya Roy. PICS Here

    Lalu Yadav's Son Tej Pratap To Marry Aishwarya Roy. PICS Here
    Tej Pratap Yadav and Aishwarya Roy's engagement ceremony will be held later this month but the marriage will take place only next month.

    Lalu Yadav's Son Tej Pratap To Marry Aishwarya Roy. PICS Here

    Raped For Months, Survivor Reaches Police Station With Her Aborted Foetus

    Raped For Months, Survivor Reaches Police Station With Her Aborted Foetus
    In a spine-chilling incident, a 20-year-old woman in Madhya Pradesh's Satna district reached the police superintendent's office to file a rape complaint carrying her four-month-old foetus in a bag.

    Raped For Months, Survivor Reaches Police Station With Her Aborted Foetus

    What This Ragpicker Did For A Mumbai Local Commuter Will Melt Your Heart

    What This Ragpicker Did For A Mumbai Local Commuter Will Melt Your Heart
    Gupta was picking up empty plastic bottles and other waste on the railway tracks near Thane station when he found the purse on the track of platform number 5, right at the end where the ladies coach halts.

    What This Ragpicker Did For A Mumbai Local Commuter Will Melt Your Heart