Having prayed to Buddha as a child and after spending her early teens worshipping Jesus, copywriter Hannah Jasmine Kok, 23, no longer believes in the divine.
She said she left the Buddhist faith at 13 as she could not relate to rituals she performed with her parents, and dropped out of church after three years because she "didn't think it was going anywhere".
Now an atheist, she said: "I think it is highly improbable that any god exists. There is no evidence for it."
Ms Kok is one of a growing number of young people here with no religious affiliations.
The Department of Statistics' General Household Survey 2015 report released earlier this month found that those who said they had no religious affiliation constituted 18.5 per cent of the resident population last year - up from 17 per cent in 2010. Full story...
Related posts:
She said she left the Buddhist faith at 13 as she could not relate to rituals she performed with her parents, and dropped out of church after three years because she "didn't think it was going anywhere".
Now an atheist, she said: "I think it is highly improbable that any god exists. There is no evidence for it."
Ms Kok is one of a growing number of young people here with no religious affiliations.
The Department of Statistics' General Household Survey 2015 report released earlier this month found that those who said they had no religious affiliation constituted 18.5 per cent of the resident population last year - up from 17 per cent in 2010. Full story...
Related posts:
- The long, slow death of religion...
- American devotion to religion is waning, according to new study...
- The decline of religion in the West...
- Teens are fleeing religion like never before...
- 'Jesus is a MYTH'
- Bill Burr: why I walked away from religion...
- Einstein: religion is "childish superstitions".
No comments:
Post a Comment