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More
than 15,000 Czechs follow the faith of the Star Wars movies' Jedi
knights, official census data showed today, while half of the
country's 10.5 million people declined to list any religion.
"Many people adhered to the moral values of Jedi
knights from the Star Wars saga," the Czech Statistical Office said in a
statement, noting that the invented faith also had a strong following
in countries such as New Zealand, Australia, Canada and Britain.
It said 15,070 Czechs registered as Jedi knights in
the census held in March, against 1,083,899 Roman Catholics and 707,649
people who said they believed in God but did not belong to any church.
"Fifteen thousand adherents, which is the size of a
small town, is not a negligible social phenomenon," Stanislav Drapal,
deputy head of the statistical office, told reporters.
In Prague, statisticians registered 3,977 Jedi knights, or 0.31 percent of the capital's population.
The lightsabre-wielding Jedi knights are an order of
guardians of peace for the interplanetary Galactic Republic of the cult
Star Wars series, known for their enhanced mind powers that allow them
to harness "The Force" to control objects and influence others.
Their moral code has long struck a chord among fans
of the films, some of whom over recent years have decided to live their
lives according to the Jedi philosophy, which taps elements of several
existing religions.
"We included this option (in the census form) despite
a fierce debate over whether it's serious or not. But it's not up to
statisticians to say what is or is not a religion," said Drapal.
Almost five million people left the religion column empty.
"If we add the 3.6 million citizens who said they
were not religious at all, it looks as if Czech citizens ignored the
issue or as if they really had no relationship to faith and religion,"
added Drapal.
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