Localized version for 中文High family + community cost查看英文版

Nigeria

Religiously divided — roughly Muslim-majority north (~50%) and Christian-majority south (~46%), with massive Pentecostal/charismatic megachurch culture in the south and conservative Sunni traditions in the north including some sharia states.

Localized version for English

Nigeria is one of the most religiously intense countries in the world. The Christian south is dominated by enormous Pentecostal-charismatic megachurches — Redeemed, Winners, Mountain of Fire, Synagogue — with a level of weekly engagement, financial expectation, and lifestyle prescription that is hard to picture from outside. The Muslim north is heavily Sunni, with twelve states operating sharia in some form, and a strong Sufi tradition layered through it. Both sides of the country treat religion as load-bearing infrastructure for identity, marriage, business, and politics.

Leaving in either direction is costly. Ex-Christian Pentecostals in the south often describe losing their entire social network, family backing, and (for many) economic ecosystem, since so much of small-business Nigeria is networked through the church. Ex-Muslim Nigerians from the north, especially in the sharia states, can face real legal risk and family rupture, and the safest exit usually involves leaving for the south, for Lagos, or for the diaspora.

For Nigerian readers in either situation, the pillar pages on Pentecostalism and on Islam will be more relevant than most. The pages on family shunning and on finding friends matter especially because the religious community in Nigeria is doing so much social and economic work that the absence of it is sharper than in lower-intensity religious contexts.

Nigeria — Elder X | Rage 2 Rebuild