The Chaplin for the Harvard secular humanists, has attempted to join the "Boston interfaith initiative" to speak to the community about the bombings. He was told no. Secular Coalition for Massachusetts, same deal, "sorry no". Several groups, Harvard Humanists among them are holding their own vigils, due to total exclusion from any of the rest. Is this really what we should be doing? Showing bigotry like this, while giving what is apparently only "lip service" to coming together to put aside differences to mourn and grieve?
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Compassion for the grieving and charity belong to humanity, and shouldn’t be leeched to make the faithful feel more special than any other person.
As one young woman in our community said to me, “It’s hard enough to deal with senseless grief, but when people write things like 'Why do people have to be so godless to want to kill innocent people?' it makes me feel like I’m not safe either, like we’re being singled out for prejudice.”
But for goodness' sake, must the nonreligious continue to be excluded from such gatherings? I’ve seen Humanists knock on the door recently at the interfaith celebrations of political conventions, or after tragedies like Hurricane Sandy or Newtown. We wanted to help and were turned away.
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