Australia In Australia, more than 70,000 people (0.37%) declared themselves members of the Jedi order in the 2001 census. The
Australian Bureau of Statistics issued an official press release in response to media interest on the subject. The ABS announced that any answers that were Jedi-related in the religion question were to be classified as "not defined" and stressed the social impact of making misleading or false statements on the census. An ABS spokesperson said that "further analysis of census responses has been undertaken since the release of census data on 17 June to separately identify the number of Jedi-related responses". The push for Australians to declare themselves as members of the Jedi order was one of the first examples of a concept going "
viral" on the internet in Australia. The website, which was set up to promote the concept, was visited over 100,000 times in five weeks and was first archived by the
Wayback Machine on 21 October 2001. The 2006 census recorded 58,053 Jedi. In the 2011 census, the numbers listing their faith as Jedi had picked up from the 2006 census to 65,000. Close to 48,000 people reported themselves as Jedi for the 2016 census. The Jedi census phenomenon attracted the attention of
sociologist of religion Adam Possamai who discusses it in his book
Religion and Popular Culture: A Hyper-Real Testament. Possamai's study placed Jediism in the context of a specific
methodological classification ('hyper-real religions') and attempted to demonstrate that hostility existed towards
new religions in Australia. In the lead-up to the 2006 census, there were reports that writing Jedi on the 2006 census could lead to a fine for providing "false or misleading" information. This is despite previous admissions by the ABS that they were "fairly relaxed" about the issue in 2001 and that nobody had been prosecuted in at least 15 years. In the lead-up to the 2016 census, there was a push from atheists warning not to use Jedi, imploring that it could be counted as being religious. The Australian Bureau of Statistics did not publish the number of people claiming Jedi as their religion in its reports on the 2016 census.
Canada In the 2001 census, 21,000 Canadians put down their religion as Jedi Knight. This fact was referenced by the prime minister's office as a rationale for making the 40-page-long census form voluntary. In the 2011 National Household Survey, the number fell to 9,000.
Croatia In the 2011 census, 303 Croats put Jedi as their religion.
Czech Republic The 2011 census preliminarily recorded 15,070 people answering the voluntary question on religion as belonging to the Jedi religion, described by the Czech Statistics Office as "the moral values of the Jedi knights". The office noted that this is an international phenomenon. As the 2011 census form did not list religions, these had to be filled out; the total number of Jedi is not artificially boosted by those who were not aware of the phenomenon before filling out the census form. On the other hand, many people encouraged others in discussions and then the media to fill in the Jedi religion prior 2011 census (as a form of protest against range, overall cost and obligatory filling of the census), which is probably the cause. The highest number of Jedi were recorded to live in
Prague. In 2021, the number of people reported to belong to the Jedi increased to over 21,000. (516 people reported being
Sith.)
Ireland In a May 2012 review of the 2011 census, the
Dáil Public Accounts Committee asked the
Central Statistics Office about the reliability of self-reported answers, citing people listing Jedi as their religion. The response was "We could probably tell you the number of people who have declared themselves as such, but we don't publish it". The 2016 census results list all religions receiving more than 30 responses, including 2,050 (0.085%) under "Jedi Knight". As of the 2022 census, there are 1,800 Jedi knights, a decrease of 250 since the 2016 census results.
Montenegro In the 2011 census in
Montenegro, a group of young men declared themselves as "Jedi" on the ethnicity question, as they believe that ethnicity should not be an issue today.
New Zealand Over 53,000 people listed themselves as Jedi in
New Zealand's 2001 census. New Zealand had the highest per capita population of reported Jedi in the world that year, with 1.5% marking "Jedi" as their religion.
Statistics New Zealand treated Jedi responses as "Answer understood, but will not be counted". There was a fall in the number of New Zealand Jedi five years later, with some 20,000 people giving this as their religion in the 2006 census. The 2011 census was postponed to 2013 due to
an earthquake in
Christchurch and the number of Jedi in New Zealand fell to 19,089. In the 2018 census, the figure increased again, to 20,409 (0.43% total responses).
Serbia In the 2011 census in
Serbia, 640 people identified as Jedi.
United Kingdom England and Wales In
England and Wales, 390,127 people (almost 0.8%) stated their religion as Jedi on their 2001 census forms, surpassing
Sikhism,
Judaism and
Buddhism, and making it the fourth-largest reported religion in the country. In the
2001 census, 2.6% of the population of
Brighton claimed to be Jedi. The percentages of religious affiliations were: •
Christian: 70% •
No religion: 16% • Chose not to respond: 7.8% •
Muslim: 3.1% •
Hindu: 2.1% •
Jedi: 0.7% It was confirmed prior to the
census that citizens were not liable for a fine concerning question 10 (on religion). This was based on section 1(2) of the
Census (Amendment) Act 2000, which amended section 8 of the Census Act 2000 to state that "no person shall be liable to a penalty under subsection (1) for refusing or neglecting to state any particulars in respect of religion". The change in the law was implemented by The Census (Amendment) Order 2000 and The Census (Amendment) Regulations 2000. Jedi Knight was assigned its own code in England and Wales for census processing, numbered 896. Officials from the
Office for National Statistics pointed out that this merely means that it has been registered as a common answer to the "religion" question and that this does not confer on it the status of official recognition. John Pullinger, director of reporting and analysis for the census, noted that many people who would otherwise not have completed a census form did so solely to record themselves as Jedi, so this joke helped to improve the quality of the census. The Office for National Statistics revealed the total figure in a press release entitled "390,000 Jedi there are". In June 2005,
Jamie Reed, newly elected
Labour Member of Parliament (MP) for
Copeland in
Cumbria, declared himself to be the first Jedi Member of Parliament during his
maiden speech. The statement, made in the context of an ongoing debate regarding the
Incitement to Religious Hatred bill, was confirmed by Reed's office to be a joke instead of a serious statement of faith. During a subsequent committee debate on the bill, the
Conservative Member of Parliament for
Beaconsfield,
Dominic Grieve, proposed as "a bit of a joke" to exclude Jedi Knights from the protection of the proposed act, along with
Satanists and proponents of
animal sacrifice, illustrating the difficulty of defining religious belief in legislation. Similarly, in April 2006,
Edward Leigh, the Conservative Member of Parliament for
Gainsborough, asked whether he would be allowed to set up a Jedi knights faith school during a committee debate on the Education and Inspections Bill. On 16 November 2006, two Jedi delivered a protest letter to UN officials in recognition of the
International Day for Tolerance. The letter, written by
Simon Cohen of the Global Tolerance public relations agency, requested that it be renamed the "UN Interstellar Day of Tolerance" and cited the 2001 census showing 390,000 Jedi in England and Wales. According to 2011 census figures, the number of Jedi had fallen to 176,632, placing it in seventh place, having been overtaken by Judaism and Buddhism, but still comfortably outnumbering any other alternative or mock religions. The magazine
Metal Hammer also encouraged readers to mark "Heavy Metal" as their religion, leading to over 6,000 responses. In 2021,
Humanists UK asked nonreligious people not to protest the census religion question by writing in "Jedi" but rather to select "no religion" instead. The 2011 census recorded over 176,000 followers and the 2001 census recorded over 390,000 followers. The
2021 United Kingdom census recorded a dramatic decline in the number of Jedi Knights with fewer than 1,600 followers in England and Wales.
Scotland In
Scotland, 14,052 people stated that Jedi was their current religion (14,014 "Jedi", 24 "Jedi Order" and 14 "Sith") and 2,733 stated that it was their religion of upbringing (2,682 "Jedi", 36 "Jedi Order" and 15 "The Dark Side") in the 2001 census. The proportion of people stating their religion as Jedi in Scotland was lower than that in England and Wales, at 0.277%. In April 2009, it became known that eight police officers serving with Scotland's largest police force, Strathclyde, listed their official religion as Jedi in voluntary diversity forms. The details were obtained in a Freedom of Information request by ''
Jane's Police Review''. ==Criticism==