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No best answer has yet been selected by pitstopbunny. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Christian holidays of Christmas and (Orthodox) Easter are celebrated (they are official, non-working, holidays). Unlike some other Eastern Orthodox Churches, the Romanian Orthodox Church celebrates Christmas on 25 December; however, they follow the usual Eastern Orthodox practice for the date of Easter.
luckystrike may be more up to date than I, but I would say that a higher % of the population. From the 2002 Census:
Romanian Orthodox - 86.8%
Roman Catholic - 4.5%
Protestant - 3.7%
Pentecostal - 1.5%
Greek-Catholic Uniate - 0.9%
In Dobrogea, the region lying on the shore of the Black Sea, there is a small Muslim minority (of Turkish and Tatar ethnicity), a remnant of the Ottoman rule and migrations from Crimea, respectively.
It is interesting, to me anyway, that the Romanian Orthodox Church follows a slightly different calendar - the same as the Greek Orthodox, if I am not mistaken.
More on that:
http://www.goarch.org/en/ourfaith/articles/article7070.asp
You can view through a webcam St Peter & St Paul Arhiepiscopia Tomisului 24-hours a day here:
http://www.arhiepiscopiatomisului.ro/audiovideo/video.html
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