“…Also, it seems that refugees' religiosity is expressed in a more private manner than in their countries of origin (Deutscher Bundestag, 2017, p. 213;Nagel, 2022;Pirner, 2017;Pirner & Bradtke, 2020;Siegert, 2020). Refugees obviously use their religiosity "as a resource for coping with the challenges of migration and integration" (Müssig & Stichs, 2012;Rohde-Abuba & Konz, 2020), but they do so in a mainly non-religious or antireligious cultural context. Based on the quantitative analysis of data from the representative IAB-BAMF-SOEP panel comprising 5,668 refugees who were interviewed in 2017, Siegert (2020, p. 6) found that for 75.4 % of the Muslim respondents and 86.3 % of the Christian respondents their religion was "very important" or "important" for their well-being and satisfaction.…”