The influence of religious factors on drinking behavior among young indigenous Sami and non-Sami peers in northern Norway
Anna Rita Spein, M.D., Ph.D.
Center for Sami Health Research, Karasjok.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Tromsø, Norway.
E-mail: anna.rita.spein@uit.no
SAPMI: northern parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland & the Russian Kola Peninsula
SAPMI: northern parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland & the Russian Kola Peninsula
Estimated population size: 100 000
70% of the Sami is residing in Norway
Have their own culture and language
Norway: formal status as indigenous people
Historical: colonization of Sapmi, assimilation (Norway) and separation (Sweden) policy
Norway: 10% semi nomadic reindeer herding
Semi nomadic reindeer herding
Religion in Sami
Pre-Christian religion – shamanistic - Sami folk music or sacred drum (”runebomma”)
”Christianity of Sami” – Laestadianism: pietistic & conservative Lutherian revival movement
Founder Swedish/Sami priest Lars Levi Læstadius in the mid 1900 century
Alcohol was regarded as contrary to Christian values – a sin - and a threat to the Sami nomadic lifestyle (Kvist, 1986; Sköld & Kvist, 1988)
Hypothesis
Less drinking observed among Sami due to their strong influence of Laestadianism (Larsen, 1993)
Lower alcohol consumption level found among people 18 years and older in the Sami highland when compared to county average – higher church attendance rate – when compared to county/national levels (Saglie & Larsen, 1996)
The North Norwegian Youth Study (NNYS) – design & sample
Longitudinal, questionnaire survey: (T1) 1994/95 & (T2) 1997/98. T1 sample: totally 2950, including 375 Sami (22%)
T1: school-based study (RR: 85%)
T2: school based & postal questionnaire study (RR: 58%)
T1: 21 high schools in communities in the three northern most counties having an ethnic diverse population
Based on youth self-report, including several different issues related to both physical and mental health