Estonia is protestant
Latvia is orthodox
Lithuania is catholic
Estonia is protestant
so that's why the yugoslav wars started huh
So?
makes sense
Shitstonia
Scatvia
Lithuafrica
Who said Estonia?
funny thing it's a similar sithuation in the balkans but with catholic/muslim/ortodox
Why would there even be three different countries otherwise?
Latvia is protestant tho
latvia is not orthodox, latvia is lutheran with russian orthodox implants and a light smattering of catholic
>Latvia is orthodox
come ere you little mulatto shit I'll show you fucking orthodox
There should be just Curlandia, Livonia and Samogitia. Those are the real names anyway
I kekked, but then I saw your flag and now I'm not sure whether or not you were joking.
...
Except they'd originally been more or less the same ethnic group.
Indeed, my friend. That's exactly why.
Should they all convert to Judaism?
The world should, fren
Who would serve the Jews, then?
Germany is protestant
Russia is orthodox
Poland is catholic
Baltics are based pagans who only pretend to follow (((Abrahamism)))
This, plus Russians who live there aren't religious, they are a typical post-Soviet group.
Fucks sake.
>Baltics are based pagans who only pretend to follow (((Abrahamism)))
Proofs?
It's somewhat true, even when we were ostensibly Christian, pagan beliefs took a long time to die out. This place has never been overly religious, and when national revival sentiment took hold in the 19th century, the nationalists were quick to revive a lot of the old pagan shit and mold it into a sort of sanitized, unified ethnic mythos.
I think it's got something to do with how religious conversion took place here. Neither the subjugated peasants nor the German masters cared too much about the substance of belief, so long as the appropriate motions were carried out. They flat out took the leading god in our pagan religion and conflated him with the Christian god. It's quite evident even in the folk songs originating in ostensibly Christian times, that the peasants didn't care to make too much of a distinction between attributes of the Christian god and our own god, often mixing in plenty of references to old pagan dieties throughout the period. Everyone had to go to church, for sure, but what they actually believed is a different matter entirely.
Interesting, how come this happens in such a small place?
Isn't Arvo Pärt Orthodox?
>In the 1970s, Pärt studied medieval and Renaissance music instead of focusing on his own composition. About this same time, he converted from Lutheranism to Orthodox Christianity.[8]