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Advocatus Diaboli
by Tom Flynn
The following article is from the
Secular Humanist Bulletin,
Volume 12, Number 2.
The contact information for Camp Quest found below is out of date. Please
see the Camp
Quest Web Page for updated information.
Happy Campers
REQUIRED TRUTH-IN-EDITORIALIZING DISCLOSURE: I am childfree by
choice. Long ago, even before I became a secular humanist, I contemplated
our overpopulated world and decided that for a few generations reproduction
ought to be (to paraphrase words President Clinton wouldn't utter for a
couple of decades) "safe, legal, and rare." Next, I resolved to set a good
example. In the years since, I've lost count of how many times fellow
atheists have come up to me and said, "Tom, every night I drop to my knees
and thank God you don't have kids." On a more serious note, I am sometimes
deeply puzzled why so many of my fellow humanists rushed to marry, buy
homes, fill them up with children, then grumble about how "somebody ought to
do something about the population problem."
END OF REQUIRED DISCLOSURE. Having demonstrated my complete lack of
qualifications to offer opinions regarding children and their upbringing, I
now offer several hundred words of parenting advice.
With all these secular humanists bringing kids into the world, it was
high time somebody did something about it. As we report elsewhere in this
issue,
Free Inquiry Group (FIG), Inc.
(Cincinnati, Ohio, and northern Kentucky), has risen to the challenge. From
August 11-17, FIG will sponsor Camp Quest, the first secular humanist summer
camp. At this writing, FIG has assembled what promises to be a comprehensive
all-American summer camp experience. FIG retained (actually, liberated from
the Baptists) a fully-equipped campsite in Bullittsburg, Kentucky, just ten
minutes from the Greater Cincinnati Airport. It's lined up experienced
counselors and created a balanced program that blends traditional outdoor
activities with stimulating exposures to entomology, botany, astronomy,
magic, and more. Oh yes, now and then there will be age-appropriate
discussions about humanist issues. (The organizers assure me it won't
resemble a weeklong seminar in any way; what fun would that be?)
In other words, Camp Quest promises to be really cool. If I weren't an
inveterate city boy who still thinks milk comes from cartons, I'd want to go
myself. If you're one of those secular humanists who ignored my advice and
had children between ages eight and twelve, inclusive — or if you ignored my
advice a long time ago and now your children have children in that age
bracket — even if you simply know someone else's humanist kids — Camp Quest
is an opportunity not to be missed. If you or said child(ren) happen not to
live near Cincinnati, it's worth packing the small fry onto an airplane. The
FIG folk offer free supervised airport pickup and return.
Of course, nothing good in humanism is ever achieved without carping, and
the carping about Camp Quest has already begun. I've seen an advance copy of
a column scheduled to appear in another local group's newsletter (never mind
which one) which excoriates the very idea of a secular humanist summer camp.
The writer worries that a humanist camp would be some narrow, doctrinaire,
withdrawing kind of place where humanist kids would go to hide from the
world. You know, the atheist equivalent of a Bible camp. Even worse, the
writer charges, sending children to a humanist camp amounts to
"indoctrination" that threatens their development as free thinkers.
I'm sure we'll see more camping carping. But for once, I'm with the
moderates: Lighten up, folks! Here's why I think Camp Quest could be an
enormously fulfilling experience for a humanist child.
- Unlike religious children, who exist in enormous numbers and often are
sent to camp to be locked away from the influence of anyone outside their
own denominational community, most children of secular humanists have few
peers who share their outlooks. Whether a child is being raised as a
committed humanist or simply religion-free, friends and playmates
unshackled to some traditional church or creed may be few and far between.
A week-long camp that concentrates thirty to a hundred humanist children
together isn't a withdrawal from the real world and its diversity. It's
simply a chance (perhaps the only chance the child will have until
adulthood) to realize that there really are a lot of unbelievers out there
- they're just spread thin.
- Raising a child to be a "free thinker" doesn't mean never giving the
youngster a sales pitch about humanism, agnosticism, or atheism. It means
exposing the child to information about a spectrum of belief and disbelief
systems, then encouraging the child to decide. A humanist parent who
punishes a child for flirting with theism is being a bully. But in a
culture where religion is overwhelmingly the norm, where media are
saturated with messages that reinforce Eisenhower's quip, "I don't care
what a man believes in as long as he believes in something,"*
how does a humanist parent imagine that children will encounter the
humanist message, or the rationalist critique of traditional religion, in
order to include them among their future options? Contrary to the claims
of the Religious Right, the larger culture doesn't teach anything about
secular humanism. It offers scarcely a hint that a fulfilling life is
possible without first having bound oneself to some metaphysical delusion
or other. Your children won't have a chance to consider the humanist
option unless you present it to them. There's nothing wrong with a little
advocacy, either. That's not enslaving the kids, it's simply a small
effort to counteract all the pro-religious messages they're getting from
our god-intoxicated society so that one day they can make an authentic
decision between belief and unbelief.
Along that line, one of the best ways to make sure a child whose
spiritual (or otherwise) orientation you care about gets thoroughly exposed
to humanism in action may be a week at Camp Quest. Edwin Kagin, Elizabeth
Oldiges, Vern Uchtman, and others from Free Inquiry Group have displayed
commitment and tenacity far beyond the norm to bring this idea to reality. (ADDITIONAL
REQUIRED DISCLOSURE: Yes, some of that commitment and tenacity was
consumed in convincing us headquarters types that the damned camp might just
work.) I urge readers with kids to support Camp Quest.
I applaud FIG's example of not just having a good idea, but going on to
apply the time, elbow grease, and, yes, money to make it happen.
Footnote
* The sexism is all Eisenhower's
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