http://www.wcer.org/members/europe/Lithuania/history.htmOkay, I am interested in this particular topic because I am half Lithuanian, however I find it very fascinating that they were the last to be Christianized and in fact King Mindaugas converted only to stop the bloodshed of the crusade against them.
From my own experience my family is not very religious and my cousins in Lithuania have also stated that in general most Lithuanians aren't terribly religious and that many of our customs have more of a pagan leaning than a christian one.
http://www.balticsww.com/crisis_of_faith.htm"Lithuania was the last nation in Europe to be Christianized—1000 years after France—and this late turn to the Christian God has always been evident in the way even the Church so readily mixes Christian with pre-Christian symbols. Nevertheless, the actual resurgence of Lithuania’s old pantheistic religion has alarmed some Church leaders.
One of the biggest pagan revival movements is the so-called Romuva, which harkens back to the gods of the sun, water and forests, emphasizing man’s oneness with nature.
Asked about the Church’s concern over the pagan revival, one member of the Romuva movement pointed the finger back at the Church, accusing it of Soviet-style heavy-handedness that it once fought. "
As a result of my amateur research on this topic I have learned a fair amount about my ethnic history....perhaps some of you may find it interesting as well.