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<DIV id=storyDate-Links><SPAN class=pubDate>Posted on Tue, Jun. 22, 2010</SPAN>
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<H1 id=storyTitle>Secularists spreading the word bus by bus</H1>
<H2 id=sub_headline></H2><SPAN id=byLine>By MANYA A. BRACHEAR</SPAN><BR><SPAN
id=creditline>Chicago Tribune</SPAN>
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<P>When the Indiana Atheist Bus Campaign and American Humanist Association
wanted to spark a public conversation in spring of 2009 about the origin of
religion, they plastered Chicago's buses with a provocative twist on Genesis:
"In the beginning, man created God."</P>
<P>When the Chicago Coalition of Reason wanted to proclaim that no one needs God
to be good, they posted a billboard a few months later above a LaSalle Street
sandwich shop in Chicago's Loop.</P>
<P>So when the Wisconsin-based Freedom from Religion Foundation took its
controversial slogan touting the benefits of sleeping in on Sundays to honor the
day of rest, they came to Chicago first, a city where they knew they would be
welcome.</P>
<P>"There are more freethinkers in Chicago than we have in our membership," said
Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom from Religion Foundation, the
organization that rolled out the series of ads this month on Chicago buses this
month. Freethinkers argue that beliefs should be based on rationality, not on
religious tradition or dogma.</P>
<P>"We have to reach them, provide an alternative to religion and let them know
we're here. Many of us reject the idea of blind faith," Gaylor said.</P>
<P>Historically scorned and forced to live in silence for decades, atheists,
agnostics and self-described freethinkers are basking in the glow of a
renaissance, spreading their gospel of reason in lieu of religion with
billboards, bus placards and celebrity endorsements. Advocates have found
particularly fertile ground in the diverse religious landscape of Chicago, where
the American rationalist movement took root at the turn of the 20th century but
since then ceded ground to influential religious institutions such as the Roman
Catholic Church.</P>
<P>Their messages vary. While some secularists want to promote an ethic of good
will toward men and women and show like-minded people they aren't alone, others
want to dish out what they have been taking all these years.</P>
<P>"This is a reaction to the newly emergent political power of Christians,"
said Phil Zuckerman, professor of sociology for Pitzer College in Claremont,
Calif., referring to the religious right movement of the past 30 years. "I think
secular people feel they need to respond if they want to shape their own world
and society."</P>
<P>The campaigns also signal a demographic shift, said Ariela Keysar, associate
director for the Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture at
Trinity College in Hartford, Conn.</P>
<P>"They have a growing audience," she said. "They have people who can not only
pay attention but sympathize with that message."</P>
<P>The most recent American Religious Identification Survey, conducted in 2008,
found that the "no religion" category was the only group to have grown in the
continental United States since the previous poll in 1990.</P>
<P>Nationally, the "nones," as they have been dubbed, nearly doubled, from 8
percent to 15 percent. In Illinois, the "none" population escalated from 8
percent to 13 percent. Experts say those numbers don't account for the atheists
and agnostics who still stay mum about religion.</P>
<P>In fact, non-believers have felt alienated for decades, said Hemant Mehta,
coordinator of the Chicago Coaltion of Reason, the group that sponsored a
billboard last fall that asked passers-by: "Are you good without God? Millions
are."</P>
<P>"Our goal was to say 'Hey, atheists out there already, we're here. If you
agree with us, come check us out,'" Mehta said. "Meeting people who are
like-minded can be really tough for atheists."</P>
<P>Gaylor said the stereotype of "young radical atheists" is actually a
misnomer. Old radical atheists comprised the powerful contingent in Chicago for
many years. Combined with age and the condemnation of atheism along with
communism during the Cold War era, atheists faded into obscurity.</P>
<P>Then came the religious right. Suddenly, atheists realized they had lost
their seat at a table they believe was originally set for them by the nation's
founding fathers.</P>
<P>Matt Lowry, 37, a science teacher in Vernon Hills, Ill., and the organizer
for the North Suburban Chicago Freethinkers, said he never wore his beliefs, or
lack thereof, on his sleeve. But the more it came up in conversation, the more
he realized how the collective silence has caused atheists and agnostics to be
misunderstood.</P>
<P>"Just because you're a non-believer does not mean you're kicking little old
ladies down the stairs or eating babies," Lowry said. "There's this common
misperception. For too long, the non-believing community in this country has
basically allowed religious fundamentalists to define them that way."</P>
<P>Though non-believers generally eschew dogma, they do abide by a moral code
much like the world's major religions. Zuckerman said the Golden Rule - "Do unto
others as you would have them do unto you" - is the "sum total of atheist
morality."</P>
<P>Non-believers also generally value independent thinking, freedom of thought,
freedom of speech and equality, he said.</P>
<P>It's hard to know if the confrontational way these groups present their
message is healthy for the body politic, said the Rev. Paul Rutgers,
co-executive director for the Council of Religious Leaders of Metropolitan
Chicago.</P>
<P>"Quite obviously a significant portion of the religious community is going to
be upset," Rutgers said. "We'll probably do several things, including be angry
and deeply offended. Perhaps also some who give more serious thought to their
own faith commitments. The fact of the matter is we're living in a culture that
in many ways beyond this challenges our faith commitments. So in that regard
it's a reminder that in many respects this is not a friendly
environment."</P></DIV></DIV></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>