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Copyright The Washington Post Company Sep 15, 2007
Every morning on his walk to work, high school teacher Graham Wright
recited a favorite Anglican prayer and asked God for strength in the
day ahead. Then two years ago, he just stopped.
Wright, 59, said he was overwhelmed by a feeling that religion had
become a negative influence in his life and the world. Although he
once considered becoming an Anglican vicar, he
suddenly found that religion represented nothing he
believed in, from Muslim extremists blowing
themselves up in God's name to Christians condemning gays, contraception
and stem cell research.
"I stopped praying because I lost my faith," said Wright, 59, a
thoughtful man with graying hair and clear blue eyes. "Now I truly
loathe any sight or sound of religion. I blush at what I used to
believe."
Wright is now an avowed atheist and part of a growing number of vocal
nonbelievers in
Europe and the United States. On both sides of the
Atlantic, membership in once-quiet groups of nonbelievers is rising,
and books attempting to debunk religion have been
surprise bestsellers, including "The God Delusion,"
by Oxford University
professor Richard
Dawkins.
New groups of nonbelievers are sprouting on college campuses,
anti-religious blogs are expanding across the Internet, and in
general, more people are publicly saying they have no
religious faith.
More than three out of four people in the world consider themselves
religious, and those with no faith are a distinct minority. But
especially in richer nations, and nowhere more than in
Europe, growing
numbers of people are actively saying they don't believe there is a
heaven or a hell or anything other than this life.
Many analysts trace the rise of what some are calling the "nonreligious
movement" to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The sight of
religious fanatics killing 3,000 people caused many to begin
questioning -- and rejecting -- all religion.
"This is overwhelmingly the topic of the moment," said Terry Sanderson,
president of the National Secular Society of Britain. "Religion in
this country was very quiet until September 11, and
now it is at the center of everything."
Since the 2001 attacks, a string of religiously inspired bomb and murder
plots has shaken
Europe. Muslim radicals killed 52 people on the London
public transit system in 2005 and 191 on
Madrid trains in
2004. People apparently aiming for a reward in heaven
were arrested in Britain last year for trying to blow
up transatlantic jetliners. And earlier this month in
Germany, authorities
arrested converts to Islam on charges that they
planned to blow up American facilities there.
Many Europeans are angry at demands to use taxpayer money to accommodate
Islam, Europe's fastest-growing religion, which now has as many as 20
million followers on the continent. Along with calls for prayer rooms
in police stations, foot baths in public places and
funding for Islamic schools and mosques, expensive
legal battles have broken out over the niqab, the
Muslim veil that covers all but the eyes, which some devout
women seek to wear in classrooms and court.
Christian fundamentalist groups who want to halt certain science
research, reverse abortion and gay rights and teach creationism
rather than evolution in schools are also angering
people, according to Sanderson and others.
"There is a feeling that religion is being forced on an unwilling
public, and now people are beginning to speak out against what they
see as rising Islamic and Christian militancy,"
Sanderson said.
Though the number of nonbelievers speaking their minds is rising,
academics say it's impossible to calculate how many people silently
share that view. Many people who do not consider themselves religious
or belong to any faith group often believe, even if
vaguely, in a supreme being or an afterlife. Others
are not sure what they believe.
The term atheist can imply aggressiveness in disbelief; many who don't
believe in God prefer to call themselves humanists, secularists,
freethinkers, rationalists or, a more recently coined term, brights.
"Where religion is weak, people don't feel a need to organize against
it," said Phil Zuckerman, an American academic who has written
extensively about atheism around the globe.
He and others said secular groups are also gaining strength in countries
where religious influence over society looms large, including
India,
Israel and
Turkey. "Any time we
see an outspoken movement against
religion, it tells us that religion has power there," Zuckerman said.
One group of nonbelievers in particular is attracting attention in
Europe: the
Council of Ex-Muslims. Founded earlier this year in
Germany,
the group now has a few hundred members and an expanding number of
chapters across the continent. "You can't tell us religion is
peaceful -- look around at the misery it is causing,"
said Maryam Namazie, leader of the group's British
chapter.
She and other leaders of the council held a news conference in
The Hague
to launch the Dutch chapter on Sept. 11, the sixth anniversary
of the terrorist attacks in the United States. "We
are all atheists and nonbelievers, and our goal is
not to eradicate Islam from the face of the earth,"
but to make it a private matter that is not imposed on
others, she said.
The majority of nonbelievers say they are speaking out only because of
religious fanatics. But some atheists are also extreme, urging
people, for example, to blot out the words "In God We
Trust" from every dollar bill they carry.
Gaining political clout and access to television and radio airtime is
the goal of many of these groups. With a higher profile, they say,
they could, for instance, lobby for all religious
rooms in public hospitals to be closed, as a response
to Muslims demanding prayer rooms because Christians
have chapels.
Associations of nonbelievers are also moving to address the growing
demand in Britain,
Spain, Italy
and other European countries for nonreligious
weddings, funerals and celebrations for new babies. They
are helping arrange ceremonies that steer clear of talk of God,
heaven and miracles and celebrate, as they say, "this
one life we know."
The British Humanist
Association, which urges people who think "the
government pays too much attention to religious groups" to join them,
has seen its membership double in two years to 6,500.
A humanist group in the British Parliament that looks out for the rights
of the nonreligious now has about 120 members, up from about 25 a
year ago.
Doreen Massey, a Labor Party member of the House of Lords who belongs to
that group, said most British people don't want legislators to make
public policy decisions on issues such as abortion and other health
matters based on their religious beliefs.
But the church has disproportionate power and influence in
Parliament,
she said. For example, she said, polls show that 80 percent of
Britons want the terminally ill who are in pain to
have the right to a medically assisted death, yet
such proposals have been effectively killed by a
handful of powerful bishops.
"We can't accept that religious faiths have a monopoly on ethics,
morality and spirituality," Massey said. Now, she added, humanist and
secularist groups are becoming "more confident and more powerful" and
recognize that they represent the wishes of huge numbers of people.
While the faithful have traditionally met like-minded people at the
local church, mosque or synagogue, it has long been difficult for
those without religion to find each other. The
expansion of the Internet has made it a vital way for
nonbelievers to connect.
In retirement centers, restaurants, homes and public lectures and
debates, nonbelievers are convening to talk about how to push back
what they see as increasingly intrusive religion.
"Born Again Atheist," "Happy Heathen" and other anti-religious T-shirts
and bumper stickers are increasingly seen on the streets. Groups such
as the Skeptics in the Pub in London, which recently
met to discuss this topic, "God: The Failed
Hypothesis," are now finding that they need bigger
rooms to accommodate those who find them online.
Wright, the teacher who recently declared himself a nonbeliever, is one
of thousands of people who have joined dues-paying secular and
humanist groups in
Europe this year.
Sitting in his living room on a quiet cul-de-sac in this
English town of
30,000, Wright said he now goes online every day to keep up with the
latest atheist news.
"One has to step up and stem the rise of religious influence," said
Wright, who is thinking of becoming a celebrant at humanist funerals.
He said he recently went to the church funeral of his
brother-in-law and couldn't bear the "vacuous prayers
of the vicar," who, Wright said, "looked bored and
couldn't wait to leave."
Now, instead of each morning silently reciting a favorite nighttime
prayer, "Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord, and by thy
great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers . .
. " (from the Anglican Book of Common Prayer), he
spends the time just thinking about the day ahead.
He said his deceased mother, a Catholic, was comforted by her faith: "It
kept her going through difficult times," particularly when his father
left her when he and his sister were young.
"I really don't know how I will react if something really bad happens,"
he said. "But there is no going back. There is nothing to go back
to."
Not believing in an afterlife, he said, "makes you think you have to
make the most of this life. It's the now that matters. It also makes
you feel a greater urgency of things that matter,"
such as halting global warming, and not just
dismissing it as being "all in God's plan."
He called himself heartened that the National Secular Society, which he
recently joined, is planning to open chapters at a dozen universities
this fall. The rising presence of the nonreligious movement, he said,
is "fantastic."
"It's a bit of opposition, isn't it?" he said. "Why should these
religious groups hold so much sway?"
Credit: Washington Post Foreign Service
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