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    1. dat_9600gt_user on

      >**A new survey suggests that over half of Poles do not want (Catholic) religious classes in schools.**

      >A new [report](https://www.wprost.pl/religia/11796258/religia-w-polskich-szkolach-jest-nowy-sondaz.html), commissioned from SW for the Wprost weekly, has found that a majority of Polish people do not wish to see religion taught in schools. 

      >Almost 52% are against religion in schools, and a further 16.2% are “indifferent”, leaving only 32% actively in favour. 

      >Among women, the figures are even more critical of the current situation, with only 27.4% in favour of religion in schools. 

      >As Radio Poland [reported](https://www.polskieradio.pl/395/7789/artykul/3419266,polish-youth-ditch-religion-classes-despite-bishops-appeals) earlier this week, the crisis of religion in schools is also present on the Church side – with a lack of catechism teachers. 

      >Sources: Wprost, Radio Poland, X

      >pt 

    2. FluffyPuffOfficial on

      The entire idea of catholic religion classes in school is insane to me and it’s 2 times a week from age of 7 till age of 18. Throughout my education I had more religion classes combined than biology or physics ones.

      As if they couldn’t host it in church on Sundays for interested.

    3. Accomplished-Gas-288 on

      Religion classes in public schools are an effect of the political transformation in 1989. The Catholic Church, for its help in anticommunist resistance, received several dividends, and this is one of them. Fortunately, the classes aren’t mandatory but this shit still has to go. If you want religion classes, go to a church. Fortunately, Poland is one of the fastest secularizing countries in the world. It’s mostly the older generations who are religious.

    4. good for them. while in older times it was the source of knowledge and the literate, today it just takes away freetime or other resourceful lessons

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