What makes one nation’s identity? Pew Research Center has tried to give answers to this question, taking into consideration a number of parameters.
Indonesian woman from the city of Banda Aceh has been punished with 26 lashes for alleged sex outside marriage because it is forbidden by Sharia law.
ISIS fighters have destroyed part of the Tetrapylon and the historic Roman amphitheater in the ancient city of Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The bill filed by West Tennessee Rep. Bill Sanderson, of Kenton, would require all state license plates to carry the phrase "In God We Trust."
Aceh Province stands alone in having formally established Shariah law in Indonesia, a Muslim-majority country with a relatively secular Constitution.
Sikh soldiers prevailed against a three-decade-old government ban that prevented them from serving in the US Army with their beards and turbans.
Monsignor Carlo Liberati, an Italian Archbishop, has warned everybody: “In 10 years we will all be Muslims because of our stupidity”.
The latest religious census showed that, for the first time, more Koreans consider themselves non-believers than those who say they are believers.
Even though atheism is legal in India, it doesn’t mean that being an atheist/agnostic in India is easy; actually it is still a cultural taboo.
Spain - Only 22.2 percent of 68,560 couples had a Catholic ceremony in Spain’s dwindling number of Catholic Churches in the first half of 2016.