Accepting Different Faiths: Insights from Religious Narratives of Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities in Poland
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Aim
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Study Design
3.2. Research Team
3.3. Data Collection
3.4. Participants
4. Ethics
5. Data Analysis
6. Findings
6.1. Identification with a Religious Denomination/Religion
I practice church religion… [And what is our faith called?] Our faith is… umm… Catholic, right?(8-F45)
[Are you a Catholic?] No. A Christian, I think…(27-M49)
Definitely not one of those that come and try to convince us of their faith. Not that one.(34-F45)
The family believes, but they don’t practice their religion much. I think Dad is of the evangelical faith, and mom is Catholic. I don’t know much… Dad probably converted to that faith to be able to get married. We were probably baptized in the evangelical church, and then I think mom moved us to the Catholic one… I know that in the evangelical church there is a pastor. But I haven’t delved into what it’s all about… In the Catholic one, there is a priest. When I was younger, I used to go to church. To the Catholic one, because the evangelical one is farther away.(23-F28)
I still profess Catholicism […] because I don’t want to change my faith.(4-M35)
Yes, a Catholic believes in God. There is the Catholic faith. Like Kolbe, the one who wore that hat.(32-M47)
My faith is Christianity, Catholicism. My family is also religious, but I have one uncle who is an atheist. He is the husband of my aunt, who is also a believer but now she doesn’t go to church because of him.(1-M19)
Roman Catholic.(9-M45)
It was also interesting to note the connection between national identity and religious affiliation, which appears in the statement of one of the participants: I am Polish, so I profess the Catholic religion. It’s obvious.(16-F49)
6.2. The Model of a Good Catholic
To believe in God and go to church.(12-F31)
It means praying every day and going to church every Sunday.(34-F45)
That means going to church, attending various events like Corpus Christi, not Corpus Christi, umm… well… Pentecost, going to communion, receiving the sacrament of penance, and to…(6-F34)
A good Catholic prays, goes to church. You can also pray at home. Keeps God in their heart.(21-F31)
That you have to be a believer. And be helpful and have trust. [In whom?] In God.(10-F24)
It means to believe in God.(11-F50)
A Catholic should believe in God. That if they ask for something… I’m talking about prayer. That if they ask for something, then God, for example, after some time, longer or shorter, wants to fulfill it… When I went […] with such faith that really, the Mother of God would heal me, and indeed, I didn’t have an attack for a long time. So, faith! Faith that this person will do that. Faith is the most important thing, because without it, nothing will happen. Whether we go to communion or not, or only go to church on holidays, it doesn’t matter. Faith is the most important here.(18-F54)
A good Catholic means to pray, attend church, and participate in donations.(2-F39)
A good Catholic means to […] support other people who are in need. For example, sometimes in church there are collections for someone who is very ill. And they collect money. I don’t mind throwing in 2 zlotys for the collection or giving it in the basket. Because I know it will be used well.(19-M24)
To treat other people with kind words, not like some do. Not to curse. Not to use various things that young people do.(12-F31)
Well, simply to be kind to another person, to help. To be understanding if someone needs support. If they are sad or overwhelmed, you just need to approach that person and ask if they need someone to talk to.(16-F49)
Sometimes the issue of good deeds was not specified: To be a good Catholic means to convey your faith in everyday life through good deeds.(9-M45)
A good Catholic can share with less believing people what they themselves believe, but it cannot be false, just said out of the blue; one must prepare for such a conversation…(17-F35)
6.3. Me as a Good Catholic
I have a cross above the door in the hallway. My grandmother, when she was still alive, went to church and instilled various church-related things in me. We are a Catholic family, and we try to cultivate that somehow.(16-F49)
I have a cross from my confirmation that I wear around my neck. And one hangs by my bed […] to pray before sleeping.(12-F31)
I have a picture of an angel from my First Communion, and for me, it’s the most important keepsake. Because it’s like accepting another person into your heart. […] The symbol of the cross is for me a symbol of suffering. Because the Lord Jesus was nailed to the cross, and He suffered for us, and Mum always repeats that everyone carries their own cross.(17-F35)
I have pictures, I have a cross. I have a framed picture that I hung in my room, and the cross is in the hallway. The priest will come for the house blessing to see that we have them.(15-M48)
And I have this little cross [points to the cross]. [Why do you wear this little cross?] Because I had my confirmation. [What does it mean to you?] I don’t know, because my mom said that when I had my confirmation, I should be a wise girl.(10-F24)
I try not to eat sausages; I try to eat fish, herring, cod, mackerel. I try to do it like everyone else.(16-F49)
I don’t eat sweets during Lent, and I have to eat only one full meal.(10-F24)
You don’t dance, you don’t have fun, and you don’t drink alcohol.(8-F45)
I go to church every Sunday. For example, when there is a rosary, I used to go. Stations of the Cross, May devotions, June devotions, everything.(13-F45)
I go to church every Sunday, usually at 4:00 PM. I pray too. Not every day, but often. To the Mother of God, to God. But I don’t kneel; I sit. Quietly. Alone, without my parents. Well, Our Father and Hail Mary. I have a picture of the Mother of God and the Pope in my room. I pray to them. I also receive communion. As for confession, I go about once a year, usually before the holidays.(20-M48)
When I am sick, I don’t go to church. Of course, I receive communion, and if I commit a serious sin, I go to confession. (…) I pray in the morning and evening. I pray lying down, quietly. Sometimes I come up with my own prayers, sometimes I use ready ones. It’s Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory Be, and We fly to Thy Protection. I even thank God for helping me. Recently, I don’t remember…(1-M19)
I know the holidays: Christmas, Easter, All Saints’ Day… I have to celebrate these holidays because they are Catholic. […] Easter is […] the celebration of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus. You go to church to bless palms and Easter dishes.(1-M19)
I go to the midnight mass on Christmas. And for Easter, I go to the Resurrection mass. At home, there’s a Christmas Eve dinner for Christmas, and on Easter, I go to bless the food in the basket, and on Sunday, we have Easter breakfast.(9-M45)
Yes, for us, there’s nothing like… How should I put it… material way, but it’s done in a pious way. Because I was raised in a Catholic family. First, there’s mass, and then the other rituals.(4-M35)
Preparations. Decorating the Christmas tree. Preparing dishes, cleaning.(12-F31)
I like celebrating Christmas the most because I get presents, and […] visit my aunt and uncle. But I don’t go to the midnight mass because I’m tired then, and when my sister goes to the midnight mass, I go to sleep. I also like decorating the tree.(10-F24)
I don’t read it. It’s a holy book. […] On Sundays, the girls come and read. A boy comes too; he reads (in church).(15-M48)
When I went to the community, I sometimes read. I read in the community and sang psalms.(16-F49)
Well, I rarely do; I have no time. […] Oh Jesus! Black magic! I have no idea. I can’t grasp it at all. I know it exists, but… I have no idea what’s in it. Well, that’s about as much as the priest reads during the sermon, but…(33-F45)
Not really. I have a problem with reading, as I said. But when someone else reads, I can remember it.(34-F45)
For some, reading the Bible was a family activity combined with reflection on its significance in a person’s life: Well, we talk about it […], but some things are hard to incorporate.(4-M35)
I know the Bible. I also read it. But it has to be in large print because I can’t see. Reading the scripture is talking to God.(2-F39)
6.4. Openness to People of Other Faiths
I know that there are other churches, religions, but I don’t really know which ones. I guess there are more gods than one.(20-M48)
I know some because the Jehovah’s Witnesses live close to me. [How do you treat them?] Well, normally. It’s just that they don’t believe in the Mother of God. And they don’t really care about the rosary at all. They say that the Mother of God had other sons.(11-F50)
Well, there are Jehovah’s Witnesses… Well, they are different. They believe differently. They believe in one God, but their faith is different.(4-M35)
Jehovah’s Witnesses? I’ve seen them. They stand on X Street. They sell books. Those are Jehovah’s Witnesses. They believe in another God. In Buddha, right? A Buddhist is of a different faith than God, right? I believe in God, and they believe in Buddha.(22-M40)
I know that there is Islam, Buddhism, Judaism. There is Hinduism and Christianity. I used to learn about this. I know Mr. X. He is a caregiver, a teacher at the Social Rehabilitation Center; he is a Buddha, but I don’t know what that means…(1-M19)
I’ve heard about other faiths; I know that in Iran or Iraq, there is a different religion. There is also Buddhism and Islam. Recently, I saw that other people pray differently. They kneel on the floor; I saw that they can also kiss the floor.(21-F31)
I would approach it equally, that everyone is equal in their faith… That they are just like us. That they believe in the Lord God. And there is one God.(5-M64)
[I treat these people] normally. If someone believes differently, I won’t judge.(7-F43)
I have a neighbor who is Orthodox. My neighbor is of a different religion, and that’s fine. She believes in a different God, but that’s not bad. It doesn’t bother me.(21-F31)
We have a friend here who is a Jehovah’s Witness, but that doesn’t bother me. We talk to her normally, joke around. It doesn’t matter at all. If someone doesn’t believe, that’s not a problem either.(19-M24)
I have a friend who is a Baptist. And that doesn’t really bother me. I’m not interested; it’s her business what she believes.(23-F28)
I don’t care that people have different churches.(3-F27)
It doesn’t bother me. It’s their business, not mine. What matters is that they believe in God. It’s worse not to believe at all. They won’t be in heaven.(32-M47)
I don’t insult other religions; it’s not important to me.(1-M19)
If he accepts them himself, then I’m all for it. I’m just an ordinary person, and they are normal people too.(17-F35)
There are people of other faiths; that’s not a problem for me. If my girlfriend were of a different faith, that wouldn’t be a problem either.(24-M36)
[How would you approach these people?] With kindness. Maybe with prayer, with some faith, I don’t know.(8-F45)
Not really. It doesn’t bother me. [What if your boyfriend were, for example, a Muslim; would that bother you?] Well… maybe a little… because I wouldn’t be able to get married. And I would want to wear a white dress in church.(6-F34)
We don’t open doors for such people. (…) If he’s not a Catholic, my dad said I shouldn’t date him, I should only date a Catholic. [You mean your boyfriend needs to be Catholic?] Yes. [And if he wasn’t, how would you approach that?] I wouldn’t see him.(25-F27)
Everyone has to believe in something. Everyone, there are no people who don’t believe. Some believe, they have their faith; others have the Catholic faith. Everyone has to believe in something because what kind of people are those who don’t believe?(34-F45)
What’s important is that they believe in God. It’s worse not to believe at all. They won’t be in heaven.(32-M47)
Faith is necessary for people so that miracles can happen. I believe that as a Catholic, I want to believe in God. I should believe in God. What does it depend on? On atheism or religion… Those who are far from God provoke wars; there’s violence, conflicts, discrimination, various things…(1-M19)
There were such friends, neighbors that don’t believe in Jesus at all, they don’t believe in God! How could I treat them? If someone doesn’t believe in God, doesn’t attend church school, I don’t talk to these people. For me, someone who doesn’t believe in God, such an individual is not a human being.(14-M24)
They’re not good, because they’re… pagans.(31-M41)
Doesn’t she believe in God at all? So what is she? If I asked her, ‘What do you believe in?’ What would she say? I would probably want to convince her to believe.(22-M40)
[…] you can’t reject them. It wouldn’t make a difference to me whether someone believes in this or that; you just have to support such people. For example, if I wanted to convince someone and that person didn’t want to, I wouldn’t force them to! I wouldn’t force them, but I would talk to them normally.(18-F54)
I had an aunt and uncle in my family who didn’t believe in God, and they were together for many, many years. And they were good people. Such non-believers can also go to heaven. It’s just that they will feel differently.(19-M24)
7. Discussion
8. Reflections on the Added Value of the Research
9. Implications
10. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Identification with a Religious Denomination/Religion |
Low awareness Seeking connection to family roots High awareness and identification with a specific denomination |
The model of a good Catholic |
Religious practices—faith, prayer, and attending church Good deeds and positive traits Spreading faith |
Me as a good Catholic |
Possession of material symbols of faith affiliation |
Observance of fasting |
Participation in services, receiving sacraments, and prayer |
Celebration of holidays |
Reading the Holy Bible |
Openness to people of other faiths |
Varied awareness of the existence of people of different faiths Attitude of tolerance toward religious diversity Indifference Acceptance derived from one’s own faith Conditional acceptance Lack of acceptance toward people of other faiths “Imperative” of faith |
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Parchomiuk, M.; Ćwirynkało, K.; Żyta, A.B. Accepting Different Faiths: Insights from Religious Narratives of Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities in Poland. Societies 2024, 14, 165. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14090165
Parchomiuk M, Ćwirynkało K, Żyta AB. Accepting Different Faiths: Insights from Religious Narratives of Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities in Poland. Societies. 2024; 14(9):165. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14090165
Chicago/Turabian StyleParchomiuk, Monika, Katarzyna Ćwirynkało, and Agnieszka Beata Żyta. 2024. "Accepting Different Faiths: Insights from Religious Narratives of Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities in Poland" Societies 14, no. 9: 165. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14090165
APA StyleParchomiuk, M., Ćwirynkało, K., & Żyta, A. B. (2024). Accepting Different Faiths: Insights from Religious Narratives of Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities in Poland. Societies, 14(9), 165. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14090165