Nearly 15 percent of people worldwide
believe the world will end during their lifetime and 10 percent think the Mayan
calendar could signify it will happen in 2012, according to a new poll.The end
of the Mayan calendar, which spans about 5,125 years, on December 21, 2012 has
sparked interpretations and suggestions that it marks the end of the world.
"Whether
they think it will come to an end through the hands of God, or a natural
disaster or a political event, whatever the reason, one in seven thinks the end
of the world is coming," said Keren Gottfried, research manager at Ipsos
Global Public Affairs which conducted the poll for Reuters. "Perhaps it is
because of the media attention coming from one interpretation of the Mayan
prophecy that states the world 'ends' in our calendar year 2012,"
Gottfried said, adding that some Mayan scholars have disputed the
interpretation.
Responses
to the international poll of 16,262 people in more than 20 countries varied
widely with only six percent of French residents believing in an impending
Armageddon in their lifetime, compared to 22 percent in Turkey and the United
States and slightly less in South Africa and Argentina.But only seven percent in
Belgium and eight percent in Great Britain feared an end to the world during
their lives.
About
one in 10 people globally also said they were experiencing fear or anxiety
about the impending end of the world in 2012. The greatest numbers were in Russia
and Poland, the fewest in Great Britain.Gottfried also said that people with
lower education or household income levels, as well as those under 35 years
old, were more likely to believe in an apocalypse during their lifetime or in
2012, or have anxiety over the prospect.
"Perhaps
those who are older have lived long enough to not be as concerned with what
happens to their future," she explained. Ipsos questioned people in China,
Turkey, Russia, Mexico, South Korea, Japan, the United States, Argentina,
Hungary, Poland, Sweden, France, Spain, Belgium, Canada, Australia, Italy, South Africa, Great
Britain, Indonesia, Germany.
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