Asian Pacific Islander Catholics in the United States: A Preliminary Report 1

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Asian Pacific Islander Catholics in the United States: A Preliminary Report 1 January 14, 2015 Prepared by Jerry Z. Park W. Matthew Henderson Kenneth Vaughan Baylor University 2 Tricia Bruce Maryville College 3 Stephen Cherry University of Houston-Clear Lake 4 1 This report is funded in part by support from the US Catholic Conference of Bishops. We are grateful for data and reports from the Pew Research Centers, and the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate from which these findings were developed. All errors are the responsibility of the research team. 2 Jerry Z. Park is associate professor of sociology at Baylor University; W. Matthew Henderson and Kenneth Vaughan are graduate students in the department of sociology at Baylor University 3 Tricia Bruce is associate professor of sociology at Maryville College. 4 Stephen Cherry is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Houston-Clear Lake 1

Introduction Christianity throughout the world constitutes the largest body of religious peoples according to recent estimates. As of 2010, there are an estimated 2.2 billion Christians in the world, nearly one-third of the world population. At an estimated 1.1 billion, Roman Catholicism stands as the largest body of Christian believers when divided along the most traditional demarcations of Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant. The largest concentration of the world s 7 billion inhabitants is in Asia, and historically Christianity has been a minority faith community within the many nations that make up this continent (about 6 percent), and a majority faith in a very few. The 20 th and 21 st centuries, however, have born witness to a growth of Christianity throughout more countries in this region. We know this more clearly in recent years as researchers have made better efforts to collect the best estimates of the world s religious adherents. We know also that of the 214 million individuals who have emigrated from one country to another, Christians are the largest share of these sojourners (49 percent). Moreover, we now know the specific origins of religious immigrants. Migration to the United States from Asia competes with migration from Latin America, and religion plays an important part in the stories of immigrants. While Christianity, specifically Catholicism, is the dominant religion among immigrants from Latin America, it is a minority faith among immigrants from Asia. In the specific US context, the largest receiving nation of the world s migrants, Christianity remains the majority among today s new arrivals, and much like Asian immigrants around the world, the majority of US Asian immigrants are not Christian. 2

In this report, we present some of these new estimates as they relate to several important but largely overlooked populations: Catholics in Asia and the Pacific Islands, and Asian and Pacific Islander Catholic Americans. We find that the Catholic population in Asia and the Pacific Islands stretches across more than 40 nations, but the majority are located in but a handful of countries. Catholicism in Asia varies significantly from Catholicism in the Pacific Islands. The nations of the Pacific Islands are predominantly Christian, whereas only one country in Asia is predominantly Christian. In both regions, Catholicism specifically dominates only one nation. Christianity is not the dominant religion among the migrants from Asia, but a large fraction of US Asian immigrants are Catholic. Among the 16 million people who identify as Asian or Pacific Islander Americans, both immigrant and native-born, Catholicism is also a large but not a dominant fraction. Relative to other religious Asian Americans, Catholic Asian Americans are highly devout, retain their faith across generations, and marry within their faith tradition. 3

Catholicism in Asia According to analyses of numerous surveys across 26 countries in Asia, the Pew Research Centers estimate about 120 million Catholics living in Asia. This is the largest percentage of Catholics in the Asian and Pacific Island region. Only 3 percent of Asia s population identifies as Catholic. The only Asian nations or territories 5 with Catholic majorities are the Philippines (about 81 percent of the Filipino population) and Timor-Leste (98 percent). Timor-Leste s percentage of Catholics is also the highest percentage among all Asian and Pacific Islands nations. Among the Asian host nations and territories, Catholics make up a majority of Christians in Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Catholics make up a very slight majority of the Christian population in Brunei and Malaysia. Of the Asian nations and territories, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, and Mongolia have the lowest percentages of Catholics. All of these nations have Catholic populations of less than 0.1 percent. The persecution of minority Christians in several of the Asian host nations have contributed to Asian Christian immigration to the United States. 5 Territories refer to disputed territories and culturally distinct or governmentally autonomous areas that are under the governance of another nation. 4

Figure 1. Estimated Percent Catholic Per Asian Nation Bangladesh Bhutan Brunei Burma (Myanmar) Cambodia China Hong Kong India Indonesia Japan Laos Macau Malaysia Maldives Mongolia Nepal North Korea Pakistan Philippines Singapore South Korea Sri Lanka Taiwan Thailand Timor-Leste Vietnam 0.1% 0.1% 5.0% 1.3% 0.1% 0.7% 2.3% 0.9% 3.0% 0.3% 0.5% 5.3% 4.7% 0.3% 0.0% 0.8% 0.8% 0.5% 7.1% 10.9% 6.6% 1.4% 0.3% 6.4% 81.4% 98.0% 0.0% 10.0% 20.0% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% 70.0% 80.0% 90.0% 100.0% 5

While Catholicism may be a small percentage of a given country, they may still be a large proportion of the Catholics in Asia. In the following pie graph (Figure 2) we show the distribution of nationalities represented Catholic Asian. About 76 million or 63 percent of Catholics in Asia are from the Philippines. Catholics in China and India take up an additional 16 percent of the Catholics in Asia. Catholics in Indonesia, Vietnam, and South Korea comprise another 15 percent of the Catholics in Asia. The remaining 6 percent of Catholics in Asia come from 12 more Asian countries. 6

Figure 2. Estimated Ethnic Distribution of Asian Catholics (2010) Bangladesh, 0.09% Bhutan, 0.00% Burma (Myanmar), 0.51% Brunei, 0.02% Hong Kong, 0.13% Cambodia, 0.00% Philippines, 62.99% India, 8.77% South Korea, 4.37% Sri Lanka, 1.14% Vietnam, 4.64% Other, 3.52% China, 7.47% Japan, 0.33% Pakistan, 0.67% Singapore, 0.30% Taiwan, 0.27% Laos, 0.02% Macau, 0.02% Maldives, 0.00% Mongolia, 0.00% Nepal, 0.00% North Korea, 0.03% Thailand, 0.20% Indonesia, 6.00% Malaysia, 1.10% Timor-Leste, 0.91% 7

Catholicism in the Pacific Islands Of the estimated 9.9 million people in 21 major Pacific Island nations, about 2.9 million or 29 percent identify as Catholic. In the Pacific Islands, Catholicism is the dominant religion of seven nations including the Federated States of Micronesia, Guam, Kiribati, New Caledonia, the Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, and Wallis and Futuna (see Figure 3). Of the Pacific Island host nations, Wallis and Futuna has the highest percentage of Catholics at 95.2 percent. The Pacific Island nations and territories have a much higher percentage Catholic than do the Asian host nations and territories. None of the Pacific Island host nations have a non-christian majority religion. Of the Pacific Island nations and territories, Tuvalu has the lowest percentage of Catholics at 0.5 percent. 8

Figure 3. Estimated Percent Catholic Per Pacific Island Nation American Samoa Cook Islands 19.7% 23.0% Fed. States of Micronesia 52.7% Fiji 9.1% French Polynesia 39.8% Guam 75.0% Kiribati 55.0% Marshall Islands 8.4% Nauru 33.2% New Caledonia 50.8% Niue 9.9% Northern Mariana Is. 64.1% Palau 55.1% Papua New Guinea 30.0% Samoa Solomon Islands 19.6% 19.0% Tokelau 33.6% Tonga 15.9% Tuvalu 0.5% Vanuatu 13.8% Wallis and Futuna 95.2% 0.0% 10.0% 20.0% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% 70.0% 80.0% 90.0% 100.0% 9

Papua New Guinea is the largest nation by population among the Pacific Island nations. As such, the 2 million Catholics comprise 71 percent of the Catholics of the Pacific Islands (see Figure 4). The Catholics of French Polynesia, Guam, New Caledonia and the Solomon Islands constitute another 17 percent of the Pacific Island Catholics. The remaining 13 percent of Pacific Island Catholics come from 16 other countries in the Pacific region. 10

Figure 4. Estimated Ethnic Distribution of Pacific Islander Catholics (2010) Samoa, 1.38% Solomon Islands, 3.44% Tokelau, 0.02% Papua New Guinea, 70.86% Fiji, 2.75% Guam, 4.82% Vanuatu, 1.03% Tonga, 0.69% American Samoa, 0.34% French Polynesia, 3.78% Cook Islands, 0.17% Fed. States of Micronesia, 2.06% Kiribati, 1.72% Marshall Islands, 0.17% Tuvalu, 0.03% Wallis and Futuna, 0.34% Nauru, 0.17% New Caledonia, 4.47% Niue, 0.02% Northern Mariana Is., 1.38% Palau, 0.34% 11

Catholicism in Migration: From Asia to the United States Scholars have long noted that migration to the US tends to be pro-christian. Even in countries where Christianity is not the dominant religion, we find that immigrants from those countries are disproportionally Christian. In Figure 5, we showcase the comparative difference between the percentage of Catholics in specific Asian sending nations and the percentage of Catholic immigrants from those countries. With the exception of Filipino immigrants to the US, Asian immigrants are disproportionally Catholic compared to their presence in their countries of origin. For example, while less than 7 percent of Vietnam is Catholic, more than 30 percent of Vietnamese immigrants identify as Catholic. 12

Figure 5. Percent of Catholics in Sending Nations and among First Generation Asian American Ethnic Groups 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% Percent of Sending Nation Percent of American Ethnic Group 10% 0% China Philippines India Japan South Korea Vietnam All Other Asian/Pacific Islander 13

Catholicism among Asian Pacific Islanders in the US In the following we present findings using data from the Pew Research Center s Asian American Survey 2012 (PAAS). Unlike most surveys, the PAAS was translated into 7 Asian languages to identify APIs with limited English fluency. Out of 3,500 adult respondents surveyed about 700 self-identified as Catholic. This is about 20 percent of the adult API population. Demographic Characteristics The ethnic group with the largest share of Catholics among Asian Pacific Islanders is Filipino (51%) Asian Pacific Islander Catholicism is the second religion among Asian Pacific Islander Americans that is dominated by one ethnic group. Figure 6. Ethnicity by Religious Tradition Among Asian Americans 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% Chinese Filipino Indian Japanese Korean Vietnamese All Other Asian 0% Catholics Other Christians Other Religion No Religion 14