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Religion in Mauritius
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- Hinduism (47.9%)
- Christianity (32.3%)
- Islam (18.2%)
- Other (1.00%)
- None (0.60%)

Mauritius is a religiously diverse nation, with Hinduism being the most widely professed faith.[2] According to the 2022 census conducted by Statistics Mauritius, 47.87% of the Mauritian population follows Hinduism. Sizeable populations of the adherents of Christianity, Islam and other religions are also present.[1][2]
People of Indian descent (Indo-Mauritian) follow mostly Hinduism.
The Franco-Mauritians, Creoles and Sino-Mauritians follow Christianity. A minority of Sino-Mauritians also follow Buddhism and other Chinese-related religions.
Census results
[edit]| Hinduism | Christianity | Islam | No Religion | Other/NA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011[2] | |||||
| 2022[1] | |||||
| Change | −0.6% | −0.4% | +0.9% | −0.1% | +0.2% |
Legal status
[edit]The constitution prohibits discrimination on religious grounds and provides for freedom to practice or change one's religion. The government provides money to the Catholic Church, Church of England, Presbyterian Church of Mauritius, Seventh-day Adventists, Hindus, and Muslims according to their numbers in the census in addition to tax-exempt status. Other religious groups can register and be tax-exempt but receive no subsidy.[3] Religious public holidays are the Hindu festivals of Maha Shivaratree, Ougadi, Thaipoosam Cavadee, Ganesh Chaturthi, and Diwali; the Christian festivals of Assumption and Christmas; and the Muslim festival of Eid al-Fitr.[4]
Dharmic religions
[edit]Hinduism
[edit]
Hinduism originally came to Mauritius mainly through Indians who worked as indentured labourers on the island following the abolition of slavery.[5] Today, Hinduism is a major religion in Mauritius, representing 48.54% of the total population of the country according to the 2011 census carried out by Statistics Mauritius.[2][6][7] This makes Mauritius the country having the highest percentage of Hindus in Africa and third highest percentage of Hindus in the world after Nepal and India, respectively.
One of the biggest festivals on the island is Maha Shivaratri, or the 'Great Night of Siva'. During this annual Hindu celebration, which takes place in the months of February and March, four to nine days of ceremony and fasting lead up to an all-night vigil of Siva worship and Ganesha worship.[citation needed]
-
Temple at Ganga Talao's Grand Bassin
Buddhism
[edit]About 0.4% of the population of Mauritius adheres to Buddhism.[2] It is practiced by a significant minority of Sino-Mauritians.
Abrahamic religions
[edit]Christianity
[edit]Christianity came to Mauritius with the first inhabitants, the Dutch. However, the Dutch abandoned the island in 1710.[8] The French brought Christianity again when they arrived in 1715. From 1723, there was a law whereby all slaves coming to the island must be baptised Catholic.[9] This law does not seem to have been strictly adhered to.[9] After they had taken Mauritius from the French during the Napoleonic Wars, the British tried to turn Mauritius Protestant during the 1840s and 1850s.[9]
Franco-Mauritians, usually having the same religion and denomination as the Creoles, have sometimes emphasised their differences from the Creoles by practising more traditionally, for instance celebrating Mass in Latin.[10] By 2011 Christianity was practiced by 31.7% of the total population.[2]
2011 census results for Christianity
[edit]Catholics made up 83% of Mauritius's Christians (26% of the total population or 324,811 people) in 2011. The other recognized and subsidized religions included the Church of England which on the island is the Diocese of Mauritius in the Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean which has 2,788 members according to the census; the Presbyterian Church of Mauritius with 501 members, and the Seventh-day Adventists with 4,428 members. Other Christian denominations included three Pentecostal groups Assembly of God with 8,692, Mission Salut et Guérison with 3,731, and Pentecotiste Church with 6,817. Jehovah's Witnesses had 2,173 members. About 47,774 people simply listed 'Christian' on the census. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints reports 576 members in 3 branches in 2025;[11] the 2022 census reported 10.[1]
Islam
[edit]
Islam is practiced by 17.3% of the Mauritian population.[2] Approximately 95 percent of these are Sunni Muslims,[12] having an understanding of the Urdu language. Within the Muslim community, there are three distinct ethnicities that exist, notably the Memons and the Surtees (who are rich merchants who came from Kutch and Surat province of Gujarat in India), then the "Calcuttiyas" who came to Mauritius as indentured labourers from Bihar.
Other languages include Bhojpuri, Gujarati, and Tamil.
Among the Shi'a minority, some have their origins in different parts of South Asia, while others are adherents of the Shia Ismaili sect from East Africa. The majority of Shias are Ithnā‘ashariyyah with small Ismaili sect. According to the 2011 census, there were 1265 Ahmadis.[2]
The first purpose-built mosque in Mauritius is the Camp des Lascars Mosque in around 1805. It is now officially known as the Al-Aqsa Mosque. The Jummah Mosque in Port Louis was built in the 1850s and is often described as one of the most beautiful religious building in Mauritius by the Ministry of Tourism's guide. There are many smaller mosques in the towns and villages. The highest concentration of Muslims is found in the capital Port Louis, predominantly in the Plaine Verte, Ward IV, Valle Pitot and Camp Yoloff neighborhood.
Baháʼí Faith
[edit]The Baháʼí Faith was introduced to the Mauritius by Ottilie Rhein in 1953.[13] For opening a new territory to the Faith during the Ten Year Crusade, Ottilie Rhein was designated a Knight of Bahá'u'lláh by Shoghi Effendi, the Guardian of the Baháʼí Faith. According to the 2011 government census, there were 639 Baháʼís in Mauritius.[2]
Others
[edit]Taoism and Confucianism are also practiced by small numbers of both Chinese people and Japanese people in Mauritius. Punjabis are a subgroup of Indo-Mauritians who mainly practice Sikhism. In 2011 census, there were only 43 Jews practicing Judaism in Mauritius.[2] By 2022, it was reported that there were almost 100 Jews in the country.[14]
Freedom of religion
[edit]In 2023 the country was scored 4 out of 4 for religious freedom.[3]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "2022 HOUSING AND POPULATION CENSUS" (PDF). Republic of Mauritius. May 2024. pp. 136–138. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Resident population by religion and sex" (PDF). Statistics Mauritius. pp. 68, 71. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2022. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
- ^ a b Freedom House website, retrieved 2023-08-08
- ^ "Public Holidays". Mauritius. 2016-02-04. Archived from the original on 2016-11-25. Retrieved 2016-11-25.
- ^ Malik, Rajiv (2003). "The Hindus of Mauritius". Hinduism Today. Himalayan Academy. Retrieved 2007-04-25.
- ^ "Hinduism in Mauritius - as indentured servants of European settlers of the island. As of 2000, 48% of the country follows Hinduism". Mauritiusdelight.com. Retrieved 2016-06-21.
- ^ "Mauritian culture - The main religions in Mauritius". Lemeilleurdelilemaurice.com. 2012-11-16. Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2016-06-21.
- ^ Salverda, Tijo (March 2004). "Changing Definitions of Ethnic Boundaries on Mauritius" (PDF). International Institute for Asian Studies Newsletter. No. 33. p. 20. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 10, 2011. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
- ^ a b c Watson, James L. (1980). Asian and African systems of slavery. University of California Press. pp. 158–159. ISBN 978-0-520-04031-1. Retrieved 2010-01-28.
- ^ Hylland Eriksen, Thomas (1998). Common denominators: ethnicity, nation-building and compromise in Mauritius. Berg Publishers. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-85973-959-4. Retrieved 2010-01-28.
- ^ "Mauritius". Newsroom. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Retrieved 31 January 2025.
- ^ "ISLAM IN MAURITIUS | Faisal Muhammad". Academia.edu. 1970-01-01. Archived from the original on 2014-07-09. Retrieved 2016-06-21.[circular reference]
- ^ "History of Faith in Mauritius". The official website of the Baháʼís of Mauritius. Baháʼí Community of Mauritius. 2014. Retrieved April 23, 2017.
- ^ US State 2022 report
Religion in Mauritius
View on GrokipediaHistorical Development
Pre-Colonial Absence and Early European Introduction
![Saint Louis Cathedral, Port Louis][float-right] Mauritius remained uninhabited prior to European arrival, with no evidence of permanent human settlement or indigenous religious practices before the 16th century.[2] Arab seafarers may have visited the island as early as the 10th century, but it lacked any organized population or cultural artifacts indicative of religion.[3] The Dutch established the first European colony in 1638, introducing Protestant Christianity aligned with the Calvinist traditions of the Dutch East India Company.[4] This settlement, however, was limited in scale, supporting only a few hundred inhabitants focused on resource extraction like ebony and sugarcane, with religious infrastructure minimal and primarily serving colonial administrators and sailors.[4] The Dutch abandoned the island in 1710 due to economic unviability and environmental degradation, leaving negligible lasting religious imprint beyond sporadic Protestant observances.[5] French forces seized Mauritius in 1715, renaming it Isle de France and instituting Roman Catholicism as the official religion, with churches constructed to reinforce colonial authority.[2] From 1723, colonial ordinances mandated the baptism of all imported slaves—primarily from Madagascar, Mozambique, and other East African regions—into the Catholic faith, aiming to impose Christian doctrine while suppressing native animist beliefs involving ancestor veneration and spirit worship.[6] These animist practices persisted covertly among enslaved populations, occasionally syncretizing with Catholic rituals, though overt expressions faced suppression through missionary efforts and legal enforcement.[6] British conquest in 1810 restored the name Mauritius and elevated Anglicanism as the established church for the Protestant segment of the population, while tolerating the existing Catholic presence under a policy of religious duality.[7] This period maintained Christianity's monopoly, with both denominations supported by state resources and focused on the European settler and freed slave communities, excluding non-Christian faiths until the mid-19th century.[7] The Christian framework dominated societal institutions, education, and governance, shaping early colonial identity without significant challenge from alternative beliefs.[2]Indentured Labor Era and Religious Pluralization
The abolition of slavery, effective in Mauritius on 1 February 1835 following the British Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, resulted in an acute labor shortage on sugar plantations, which constituted the backbone of the colonial economy.[8] To address this, British authorities initiated the importation of indentured laborers from India as early as 1834, formalizing a system that continued until 1910.[9] Between 1826 and 1910, an estimated 462,801 indentured workers arrived, the majority from 1834 onward, driven purely by economic imperatives to sustain plantation output rather than any intentional promotion of cultural or religious diversity.[10] Of these immigrants, approximately 85% were Hindu, primarily from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, who transplanted core religious practices including temple worship and caste hierarchies into Mauritian society.[11] These laborers established rudimentary temples on plantations, often using local materials, and organized social life around varna and jati distinctions, with Brahmin priests occasionally accompanying groups to officiate rituals and reinforce purity norms.[12] Caste-based endogamy and occupational segregation persisted in ethnic enclaves, providing communal cohesion amid harsh indenture conditions, though geographic dispersal on estates began eroding strict hierarchies over time.[13] A smaller but significant subset, comprising about 15-16% of Indian arrivals or roughly 68,700 individuals by 1910, were Muslim, overwhelmingly Sunni in orientation, with origins spanning northern Urdu-speaking regions and some Tamil-influenced southern groups.[10] These workers formed prayer congregations and built early mosques, adapting North Indian architectural styles while incorporating influences from Gujarati trading networks that predated mass indenture.[14] Religious observance, including Friday prayers and festivals like Muharram, solidified Muslim ethnic enclaves distinct from Hindu ones, fostering intra-community ties without initial proselytization efforts. Concurrently, modest Chinese immigration, numbering over 5,000 by the mid-19th century from the 1820s through 1900—mainly Hakka laborers recruited for diverse roles—introduced syncretic elements of Buddhism, Confucianism, and ancestral folk practices.[15] These migrants established clan associations that doubled as ritual spaces for offerings and festivals, embedding Chinese religious pluralism within mercantile and artisanal niches, though on a scale far smaller than Indian inflows and largely confined to urban Port Louis.[16] This labor-driven influx, unguided by colonial religious policy, entrenched Mauritius's foundational ethnic-religious mosaic, with affiliations aligning closely to ancestral origins rather than intermingling.Post-Independence Consolidation and Recognition
Upon achieving independence on March 12, 1968, Mauritius adopted a constitution that enshrined freedom of conscience and religious belief under Article 11, prohibiting state interference in religious practice while permitting voluntary religious instruction in schools.[17] Parliamentary decrees formalized recognition of the six primary religious groups established before independence—Hindus, Roman Catholics, Muslims, Anglicans, Presbyterians, and Seventh-day Adventists—granting them state subsidies proportional to adherent numbers for institutional maintenance.[18] This framework stabilized pluralism by institutionalizing existing communities without designating a state religion, fostering coexistence amid ethnic ties to faiths.[1] In the 1970s and 1980s, rapid urbanization spurred expansions of religious infrastructure, including new temples, mosques, and churches in growing urban centers like Port Louis and surrounding suburbs, accommodating population shifts from rural areas. Concurrently, the Hindu majority elevated festivals such as Maha Shivaratri—observed annually as a public holiday with mass pilgrimages to Grand Bassin (Ganga Talao)—into national cultural events, symbolizing collective identity while integrating non-Hindu participation in broader celebrations. These developments coincided with sustained economic expansion, averaging over 5% annual GDP growth from 1970 onward through diversification into textiles, tourism, and finance, which diffused potential intergroup tensions by elevating living standards and reducing zero-sum resource competition.[19][20] By the 2020s, the framework expanded to recognize a seventh group, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, via parliamentary decree, while unregistered faiths operate as NGOs without subsidies, maintaining stability despite ongoing ethnic segmentation in religious adherence.[21] This evolution reflects incremental adaptation rather than overhaul, with economic resilience—positioning Mauritius as Africa's highest-ranked for peace since the 1990s—continuing to underpin low conflict incidence by prioritizing inclusive growth over communal favoritism.[22][23]Demographic Profile
Latest Census Data and Historical Comparisons
The 2022 census by Statistics Mauritius reported the religious affiliations of the population as follows: 47.9% Hindu, 32.3% Christian (approximately 80% of whom are Catholic), 18.2% Muslim, and 1% comprising other religions or no affiliation.[21] This marks a marginal decline from the 2011 census, which recorded 48.5% Hindu, 32.7% Christian, 17.3% Muslim, and under 2% other or none.[1]| Year | Hindu (%) | Christian (%) | Muslim (%) | Other/None (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 50 | 32 | 17 | 1 |
| 2011 | 48.5 | 32.7 | 17.3 | <2 |
| 2022 | 47.9 | 32.3 | 18.2 | 1 |