People and Culture
The people and culture in Qarsherskiy will shock you
Qarsherskiy is a literal Melting Pot of culture and different types of people. Of the 2,485 people who call Qarsherskiy home are Native Americans, Blacks, Whites, Hispanics, Arabs and Asians can be found and that is not such a big shock but wait until you find out that native Greenlandic as well as Icelandic people traveled south to find a subtropical, more warm place to live! There are also many Native Americans and Syrian refugees here. There is even a small community in the mountains where white people speak Hawaiian and go skiing. Many different cultures mix here. Locals will talk about how they can drive for 3 hours and end up in a subtropical climate just at the bottom of the Appalachian mountains on the coast when the peaks are very snowy in winter! Pacific Islanders and Hawaiians can also be found throughout the micronation.
Map showing the religious groups that are most common in different areas of the Islamic Sultanate of Qarsherskiy.
Islamic Sultanate of Qarsherskiy’s various religious minorities and groups
While Muslims of various sects of Islam make up nearly 81% of the Islamic Sultanate of Qarsherskiy’s population and Zaydi Muslims control Qarsherskiy’s government and law, the Islamic Sultanate of Qarsherskiy has many religious minorities. Christians make up around 10.2% of the Islamic Sultanate of Qarsherskiy with Eastern Orthodox Christians being the majority in many small areas of the sultanate. Jews are a very small minority making up 3.2% of the population of Qarsherskiy and not being the majority in any area as of 2023. Zoroastrians make up 2.3% of Qarsherskiy’s population and are the majority in the Zoroastrian Province of Qarsherskiy. Pagans, Atheists, and people practicing Folk Religions and Native American religions make up 0.5% of Qarsherskiy’s population each. People who follow the Druze and Sikh religions in the Islamic Sultanate of Qarsherskiy are a small number and are mostly concentrated in Astara province, known as Astarastan E Shah locally.