<u>Answer</u>:
Religions had a huge impact on the European societies. The major religions that have dominated European culture are Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. Today the most dominant is Christianity which is followed by around 73% of the total Europe’s population. In Europe, Christianity has always been the dominant religion, i.e. 72.8% of EU population.
They believe in God. Catholics believe in concepts of hell, heaven and witchcraft more than the Orthodox Christians. In all European countries except Italy, non-practicing Christians, i.e. who go to Church lesser number of times in a year, outnumber church-attending Christians, i.e. the ones who attend daily or weekly.
The Senate must approve them.
Forming of plantations and organizations to assist on another was one way that free African Americans tried to look for a chance in the new nation.
The free black community helped in building institutions like schools, mutual aid societies, black churches, and fraternal organization. The role of the free black to the abolitionist movement was extremely significant.
Answer:
I am going to go with the 2nd answer choice.
Given here are the ethnic origins of Canadian residents (citizens, landed immigrants, and non-citizen temporary residents) as recorded by them on their 2006 census form. The relevant census question asked for "the ethnic or cultural origins" of the respondent's ancestors and not the respondents themselves.
As data were collected by self-declaration, labels may not necessarily describe the true ancestry of respondents.[1] Also note that many respondents acknowledged multiple ancestries. These people were added to the "multiple origin" total for each origin listed. These include responses as varied as a respondent who listed eight different origins and a respondent who answered "French Canadian" (leading to him/her being counted once for "French" and once for "Canadian"). As with all self-reported data, understanding of the question may have varied from respondent to respondent.