Fewer South Tyneside people identify as Christian

Fewer people in South Tyneside identify as being Christian and more people are non-religious than a decade ago, new census figures show.
Christianity on the wane in South Tyneside.Christianity on the wane in South Tyneside.
Christianity on the wane in South Tyneside.

Office for National Statistics data from the 2021 census shows 53% of people in the borough selected Christianity as their religion – down significantly from 70% in the last survey a decade before.

Some 39% selected "no religion" last year – up from 21% in 2011.

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The area follows trends across England and Wales where 46% of the population described themselves as Christian in the census, down from 59% a decade earlier and the first time the proportion has dropped below half.

The percentage of people saying they had no religion jumped from 25% in 2011 to 37% last year.

Nationally, there were increases in the proportion of people describing themselves as Muslim, with 6.5% selecting the religion last year, up from 4.9% in the previous census.

More people also identified as Hindu, increasing from 1.5% in 2011 to 1.7% in 2021.

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The figures show more people in South Tyneside identify as Muslim, with 3,736 selecting the religion last year – up from 2,854 in 2011.

Additionally, 259 residents said they were Hindu in the survey, up from 254 10 years ago.

There were also 264 Buddhists and 36 residents who selected Judaism.

Of the other options, 148 said they were pagans and 12 said they practice Heathenism.

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The Archbishop of York and Primate of England, the Most Rev Stephen Cottrell said: "It is not a great surprise that the census shows fewer people in this country identifying as Christian than in the past.”