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For instance, I would love to choose Switzerland as my country, for it represents my ideals. But wouldn't it be shameful to change ur nationality?
Do you think your country is like you religion? You have the freedom to change it? Or is it like your parents? You have to love it?

2007-05-28 15:52:38 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

13 answers

You can change your citizenship, but you can never change your nationality any more than you can change your ethnicity. Oh, you can fake it. You can adopt another culture as your own, but that doesn't change your parents, your ancestry, or your blood. The New Age community is full of "Cherohonkies," White people who pretend to be Native American. There's nothing wrong with learning Native Spirituality directly from a Native American, and even being adopted into a Tribe, but be honest about it.

Your nationality is where you are born -- which you can't change. Your ethnicity is who your ancestors where -- which you can't change. Your citizenship is where you live -- you can change that, you have the right to live wherever you will to do, though it is sometimes a difficult process applying for citizenship. If your country no longer feels like home, or if your country is doing things that you disagree with you have every right to speak out. You have every right to protest, to lobby, to write to politicians, to vote, to try to change it if you can. You have every right to stay and fight for your rights. And, you have every right to leave. There is a fine line between Patriotism and blind Nationalism. A patriotic person may still question their government, disagree with it, even hate the people in power, while still loving the country and the principles on which it is founded. A Nationalistic person is a fundamentalist patriot who feels that anyone who questions or criticizes the country or the government is somehow unpatriotic.

Religion is another matter. Religion is what you think, feel, and believe. You can change that. You can think for yourself. Many people do. Some parents are upset by this, but once you leave home its time to have your own identity. There is nothing wrong with changing your religion to fit what you feel and believe. Now, again, some religions are harder to convert to than others. Some religions are tied in with ancestry and culture, and the practitioners of those religions -- such as Native American religions, Hinduism, and Judaism -- often feel that you should be born into it. People still convert.

Sorry for the long rant, I wasn't sure exactly what you were asking, so I wanted to tackle it on all angles.

2007-05-29 01:19:10 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You mostly can choose your nationality...leave the country, go to the country of your choosing, and apply for citizenship. Of course, depending on where you came from and where you're heading, that process can be enormously costly and complicated, but that's the general idea.

Anything you choose to believe (religious or not) is a matter that exists entirely within your own head. You have the opportunity (and, I'd say, the duty to yourself) to choose the processes of making that decision and the criteria by which you make judgments, and you apply the ideas that "stick." It's not dependent on where you're living or who your parents are. It's a matter of applying all the brain power you can muster to questions of importance. In contrast, no amount of thinking about the idea, or loving another country, will ever change your nationality just by itself.

2007-05-28 16:08:01 · answer #2 · answered by jtrusnik 7 · 1 0

Religion is a personal choice that you make, it's not shameful to change it. You may not be able to change physically where you are from, and if you can it should not be shameful. However your religion is in your heart and something that you can change depending on what you feel is right.

2007-05-28 15:59:28 · answer #3 · answered by Kate 3 · 1 0

to a level. Society and subculture and rules restrict or cut back possibilities for some. while you may go with to do something the outcomes are grave. to illustrate in many strict muslim international places women are no longer unfastened to have head uncovered. in our society we are norms approximately how human beings act or gown and in case you don't extra healthful the norms oftentimes you're on the outer. evaluate the variety you experience some guy in a gown or a woman in a mans extra healthful? What strategies do you have approximately them and what judgements do you're making? If somebody acts in a distinctive way we oftentimes evade them thinking they are mentally unwell or on drugs.

2016-10-09 01:00:25 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can not drop where you are from, but you can live there, adopt the people and culture as your own, and gain their citizenship. So yes, you can change it. A small part of you will always be where you started. Just like with religion.

2007-05-28 16:04:46 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I really don't think you can compare the two. Even if you wanted to be Swiss, the Swiss do not necessarily want you.

How many naturalized Americans do you think their are. Quite a few. They didn't have a problem leaving their country of origin and becoming an American.

2007-05-28 15:59:18 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You are certainly within your rights to do that. You are not compelled to be patriotic.

Switzerland is a lovely country. Basel is my favorite city there. In its Munster, I stood before the grave of Erasmus, the humanist scholar.

2007-05-28 15:57:06 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can love Switzerland all you want but relinquishing and gaining citizenship is a complicated thing.

2007-05-28 15:55:59 · answer #8 · answered by McLovin 7 · 0 0

but you weren't born in switzerland. nationality is to repersent where you where born and where you grew up. Religons just man kinds way of finding answers

2007-05-28 15:58:01 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can always move to Switzerland and try to attain citizenship there and become an expatriate.

2007-05-28 15:57:09 · answer #10 · answered by Tania La Güera 5 · 0 0

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