It must be even noticeably lower for ethnic Estonians as Estonia’s numbers are pumped up by the far more religious Russian minority.
I belive in the existence of Helheim.
Hell is…the community of [krone.at](https://krone.at). So hell exists…
The Baltic stoplight at play again
There is no way that belief in the existence of hell is at %90,6 in Turkey. This is not accurate.
Well, so many people experience it on Earth while alive, they shouldn’t have to worry about it again after their death.
Hell is real, it starts at 9 and ends at 5, five times a week 🤣🤣🤣
odd how it roughly lines up with the protestant-catholic split
Ireland has left the chat.
Turkish ppl believe that much in hell because
Turkey is hell on Earth
What the hell Turkey?!
Denmark just chilling..
Even our 9.4% seems unrealistically high – think the survey has been taken lightly by many respondents (public transport on a hot day amirite)
Hell is visiting southern countries and realizing there is no ryebread in the supermarket. The tap water may not be suited for drinking.
There is a constant noise of car alarms, honking, screeching brakes and screaming drivers. The street vendors use sales tactics similar to wrestlers/boxers pre fight banter.
That other 76.1% of Brits have clearly never been in Wakefield city centre on a Friday night
Hell yeah, if you read the divine comedy that’s an entertaining hell for sure
90% of Turks believe in Hell because they live in it.
9.4% Still sounds too high for Denmark. Seems very inaccurate. Wonder how and how many were asked for this survey.
We don’t believe in it. We live in it…
Hmm, so the **only** Muslim dominant population in Europe has the most believers in hell. That’s interesting.
Now you can plot over, the minimum wage of said countries and their CoL /s
Italy, we studied too much Dante, now it HAS to exist.
they belive cuz they seen it 🙂
Always you find the same pattern with these religious maps; the Protestant countries are more atheistic than the Catholic and Orthodox countries (more or less).
25 comments
Source: https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSOnline.jsp
It must be even noticeably lower for ethnic Estonians as Estonia’s numbers are pumped up by the far more religious Russian minority.
I belive in the existence of Helheim.
Hell is…the community of [krone.at](https://krone.at). So hell exists…
The Baltic stoplight at play again
There is no way that belief in the existence of hell is at %90,6 in Turkey. This is not accurate.
Well, so many people experience it on Earth while alive, they shouldn’t have to worry about it again after their death.
Hell is real, it starts at 9 and ends at 5, five times a week 🤣🤣🤣
odd how it roughly lines up with the protestant-catholic split
Ireland has left the chat.
Turkish ppl believe that much in hell because
Turkey is hell on Earth
What the hell Turkey?!
Denmark just chilling..
Even our 9.4% seems unrealistically high – think the survey has been taken lightly by many respondents (public transport on a hot day amirite)
Hell is visiting southern countries and realizing there is no ryebread in the supermarket. The tap water may not be suited for drinking.
There is a constant noise of car alarms, honking, screeching brakes and screaming drivers. The street vendors use sales tactics similar to wrestlers/boxers pre fight banter.
That other 76.1% of Brits have clearly never been in Wakefield city centre on a Friday night
Hell yeah, if you read the divine comedy that’s an entertaining hell for sure
90% of Turks believe in Hell because they live in it.
9.4% Still sounds too high for Denmark. Seems very inaccurate. Wonder how and how many were asked for this survey.
We don’t believe in it. We live in it…
Hmm, so the **only** Muslim dominant population in Europe has the most believers in hell. That’s interesting.
Now you can plot over, the minimum wage of said countries and their CoL /s
Italy, we studied too much Dante, now it HAS to exist.
they belive cuz they seen it 🙂
Always you find the same pattern with these religious maps; the Protestant countries are more atheistic than the Catholic and Orthodox countries (more or less).