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Atheist Charity Giving Has Gone Up Greatly In Recent Years

Atheist Charity

First Posted: 12/22/2011 8:42 am Updated: 12/22/2011 8:42 am

By Kimberly Winston
Religion News Service

(RNS) If Dec. 10 had been an average day for Doctors Without Borders, the Swiss charity that sends medical help into crisis areas, its website would have logged 4,000 hits.

Instead, it was bombarded with more than 10 times that amount as atheists from the user-driven news site Reddit.com participated in a fundraiser that has so far raised more than $200,000.

"It's amazing, what's going on," a DWB spokeswoman told the Reuters news agency. "The amount being raised is amazing, definitely."

"Amazing" is not a word usually associated with the giving habits of those who don't believe in God. Rather, studies show they typically score in Scrooge territory. In 2003, social scientist Arthur C. Brooks found religious persons 25 percent more likely to donate money than secularists, and 23 percent more likely to volunteer.

Last year, sociologists and co-authors Robert Putnam and David Campbell found a six-in-10 chance that a person who never attends church will give money to a secular charity, while the figure for religious people is eight in 10.

Now, some nontheists -- an umbrella term that includes atheists, humanists, skeptics and other "freethinkers" -- say the trend may be changing.

"There has been an absolute sea change," said Dale McGowan, executive director of the Georgia-based Foundation Beyond Belief, one of several charities founded in the last five years by and for nonbelievers. "Giving has really become much more of a front-and-center concern for our community."

Recent activity at some charitable organizations support McGowan's statement:

Last year, Reddit atheists raised a total of $50,000 for Doctors Without Borders. This year, they've raised more than $207,000 -- exceeding their goal of $200,000.

In November, Kiva, a micro-financing organization, reported an atheist group raised the highest amount, $271,150. In third place were Kiva Christians with $146,450.

During its first year in operation, the Foundation Beyond Belief raised $83,535 in 2010. This year, that figure should hit $140,500, McGowan said.

What's behind the change? Theories range from the influx of younger nontheists with a focus on global welfare, to images of natural disasters made ubiquitous by the Internet, to the growth in population of people who say they have no religion -- 15 percent, according to the 2008 American Religious Identification Survey.

"When I came into the community (in 1999), it was a monthly meeting and a lecture," McGowan said. "It was a terribly sterile thing ... But the increase of regular folks identifying as nontheists brought with it regular concerns. They want a community, they want to talk about ethics, they want to be doing good works."

Susan Jacoby, who writes an online column on atheism for The Washington Post, said the Brooks numbers -- though questioned by some as inflated -- shocked the nonreligious into action. Many felt they were "good without God."

"But there is no denying that there is a big gap between what religious people give and what secularists give," she said. "And if part of your morality really is about taking care of your fellow man, you are going to start thinking about this."

A turning point came in late 2004, when an earthquake and subsequent tsunami devastated Indonesia and Southeast Asia, killing more than 230,000.

"Boom, the beginning of 2005 was when these organizations started," McGowan said. "Because our members called up and said, 'What can we do for these people?'"

That year saw the founding of Secular Humanist Aid and Relief Effort (SHARE) by the Council for Secular Humanism (now called Skeptics and Humanists Aid and Relief Effort, and operated by the Center for Inquiry), and Humanist Charities by the American Humanist Association.

The Richard Dawkins Foundation, founded by the prominent British atheist and evolutionary biologist, established the Non-Believers Giving Aid Disaster Relief Fund after the Haitian earthquake of January 2010.

"There has been a general awakening to the fact that nontheists of all stripes need to stand up and show the positive values we have," said Roy Speckhardt, executive director of AHA. "We realized the benefit of doing this in a public way, in being clear about we are people who want to care about people."

At the same time, people under 30 -- the so-called "Millennial Generation" -- have brought a different set of concerns to nontheism. The ARIS report shows that more than one in five (22 percent) of Americans between 18 and 29 identify as having no religion.

"Millennials are going to do a lot of good in the world," said Greg Epstein, the Humanist chaplain at Harvard University and the author of "Good Without God."

"They believe you should be vocal about who you are. This is a real change because it means they believe if you are a humanist and believe in its principles you should go out and say so."

Harvard's nontheists have spent spring breaks building houses in New Orleans, worked with homeless youth in Los Angeles and with Native American kids in South Dakota. At Thanksgiving, a feed-the-needy event sponsored by the group was among the biggest events on campus, Epstein said.

Also contributing to the change is the aging of older nontheists, who are beginning to think about legacy.

"I gave almost nothing to charity for most of my adult life," Jacoby said. That changed when her partner of 30 years died and she began to think about living out her values.

"When death is around you, it underscores that, as a secularist, you know this is all there is. You get one chance, and not to be giving when life is finite reminds you of that."

Also on HuffPost:

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By Kimberly Winston Religion News Service (RNS) If Dec. 10 had been an average day for Doctors Without Borders, the Swiss charity that sends medical help into crisis areas, its website would have ...
By Kimberly Winston Religion News Service (RNS) If Dec. 10 had been an average day for Doctors Without Borders, the Swiss charity that sends medical help into crisis areas, its website would have ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
silk olive
08:57 PM on 12/29/2011
A new tone has been set in the US and throughout the world since I think around Reagan/the early 80s. Greed is good, if you're poor it's your own fault, if someone can't afford health insurance "let them die!" scream the Ron Paul supporters...

The idea of charity and giving has I think evolved well beyond the narrow idea of atheists vs non-atheists. We're now living in a world of "Do you care if others live or die?" "Do you want to help or is it their own fault?" "Are we in this together or are we little libertarian islands that should stick to ourselves and only take care of our own?" Those of us giving (as I did at my mother's churches candlelight service recently, not because I'm religious but because the music was beautiful and the church provides something meaningful for my mom) - are doing so because philosophically we believe we need to help eachother out rather than dwell in our own myopic worlds. It is a cultural lag to believe religion has something to do with it, this is more about humanity evolving and hopefully doing so before the Earth shakes us off like parasites.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chrysostomos
Zizek built my hotrod,
07:56 AM on 01/07/2012
Well said!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Weidner
Ask me about my narcissism!
08:35 PM on 12/29/2011
I find it curious that so many question the reasons behind atheist's charity. It obviously comes from compassion and empathy. Atheists are not trying to earn brownie points for getting into heaven or reasons why they shouldn't burn in hell for ever. There is for atheists, no agenda behind it. Unilke every other religious organization. For those of you who do not understand the principles behind humanism, educate yourselves before you embarrass yourselves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chrysostomos
Zizek built my hotrod,
08:03 AM on 01/07/2012
I completely agree with you. Just want to make one small (mostly semantic qualification). Every act of charity has an agenda behind it- whether or not that agenda is one that we can get behind is another story. But realizing that everyone is motivated by some ideology or other helps us to recognize when even those people we may disagree with are making positive contributions to life on earth.
05:07 AM on 08/15/2012
Indeed. Basically it's in our DNA. It's how we evolved to survive.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cupik
FAUX-free Alaskan.
08:23 PM on 12/29/2011
I'm a militant agnostic and I've been giving money to charity for years. Didn't feel the need to broadcast it for other people to approve of. Not why I did it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VinZenTexaN
Without God, life is everything.
06:59 PM on 12/29/2011
You can be good without god. Morals don't come from religion or god since it does NOT exist
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Conuly
03:55 AM on 12/30/2011
Religion does not exist?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chrysostomos
Zizek built my hotrod,
08:04 AM on 01/07/2012
I think the "it" refers to god.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chaapai
just an earthbound misfit, I
11:48 AM on 12/29/2011
WTF is this nonsense?

kindness and decency exist in this world in spite of religion, not because of it.

We, I give to many charities and individuals. My giving doesn't come with strings. I don't do it for a reward, I do it because it's the right thing to do. I do it because my heart hurts when I see people in need. I give regardless of gender or race or "orientation".

I am a proud, American atheist.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chrysostomos
Zizek built my hotrod,
08:04 AM on 01/07/2012
Well said!
04:45 AM on 12/29/2011
All these statistics about giving, but they provide little details. To which charities do believers donate, and do they count tithing to a church as a donation? If tithing is counted these statistics are terribly flawed.
tcny
Fixing a hole where the rain gets in...
12:15 PM on 12/29/2011
Many "believers" will donate to charities that do a little actual good along with a lot of preaching and proselytizing and categorize that as "secular" giving as long as the few beneficiaries aren't exclusively of their religion. I know, I'm related to a bunch of them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chrysostomos
Zizek built my hotrod,
08:06 AM on 01/07/2012
Especially if things like "pray the gay away" organizations are considered charity.
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WhoIsNoOne
What I need is a Micro-Brew-o
12:21 AM on 12/28/2011
in a related study, kids who believe in Santa, get more
presents than non-believers
(obviously because of the non-believers inherent naughtiness)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Weidner
Ask me about my narcissism!
09:13 PM on 12/27/2011
I love the fact that the 2 biggest philanthropists in the history of philanthropy are both unbelievers. Warren Buffett and Bill Gates. I can hear the christians now, "but they give most of their money to Africa, and support planned parenthood." As if women and blacks were a waste of the money, so it doesn't count.
08:35 PM on 12/28/2011
Buffett’s 30% charity tax deduction offsets his entire ordinary income, and next it offsets his lower long-term capital gains income. Hence, he pays approximately 15% long term capital gains tax rates only, and – as he likes to say – it’s a lower tax rate than others in his office pay.Without that charitable tax deduction of appreciated shares wiping out his ordinary income, Buffett would pay the same tax rate as others on his wages and other ordinary income too. In that case, long-term capital gains preferential rates would only be the icing on the cake and not the whole cake

Warren Buffett only gives so he can save more by reducing his taxes. Take away any benefit from giving and you wouldnt be able to pinch a penny from that miserable geezer. Believers have always been and will always be the biggest donators to the poor because they are doing it for the right reason to take care of fellow man. NOT FOR DESPICABLE TAX BREAKS!!
04:56 AM on 12/29/2011
I am a non believer. I donate money with no signifigant tax break. I have nothing to gain as I don't believe in god or heaven. Only a non-believer can give freely with no alterial motive as we choose to give on our own, not from religious guilt.
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11:46 AM on 12/29/2011
I doubt that's why Buffett gives. Look at his lifestyle. He lives the simple life.
05:11 AM on 12/27/2011
Giving is in our nature. I've seen a lot of arguments on this post saying atheist give to prove they can be kind while religious people give just to go to heaven. I've also seen other post questioning whether religious people would give if their deity didn't tell ask them to. The answer is yes, of course they would. A person doesn't usually give because they feel like they have to, they do it out of gratitude for what they have received and see that others aren't as fortunate as they are. The only difference between everyone is stereotypes and beliefs that we build upon through life so that we can feel superior to everyone else. If you can get passed that then you will be able to see the real truth around you.
05:46 PM on 12/28/2011
Well written. Agreed.
08:42 PM on 12/28/2011
Anyone who gives with the intent to help someone is alright with me regardless of faith. Those who give for tax breaks or to promote themselves in any way should never be honored.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cupik
FAUX-free Alaskan.
08:28 PM on 12/29/2011
Unless you are those people however, you'll never really know. You are promoting yourself in a different way, but promoting none the less.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Conuly
03:57 AM on 12/30/2011
Whatever. I don't really care why people do good deeds, so long as they do them. Maybe God (if there is such a being) does, Jesus certainly spoke out against it, but in the long run, I don't care enough about you to care why you do what you do. I'm not watching sparrows fall to the ground either, I've got my own life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Randi Grogan
In the truest sense, Freedom cannot be bestowed; i
03:47 PM on 12/26/2011
Being Atheist we get a bad reputation. We're thought to be heatless, uncaring individuals. I treat others with respect, I don't demean others. My faith changed as I grew and as I got older the bible didn't seem accurate. Questioning the bible and the events made me realize, I'm not religious. But when someone hears that someone isn't religious immediately you think their scum. Being brought up in a family where my mom was a physcian and my dad and engineer, my mom being Catholic and my dad not religious but followed the Ten Commandments they allowed us to grow and to question. I was fortunate, I had a mom and dad that loved us for who we were. Allowed us to question life and become open minded citizens. More and more are questioning religion, as they should. Religion is used in politics where it shouldn't be. But the old standard "Love thy Neighbor" needs to be practiced more. The Christian Right need to go away and people need to appreciate those who don't believe in God. We tend to be the most open minded, rational people around. This notion that religion is so important, it may be to those who need that crutch.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SciFiChickie
Proud Daughter and friend of Homosexuals...
01:45 PM on 12/27/2011
Exactly most Atheist were raised with a religious background, which we questioned because of all the inconsistencies. Just like you I don't believe "The Bible" to be a factual book, more like lessons to learn how to be a decent human being... The story about "The Good Samaritan", "Let ye without sin cast the 1st stone", "judge not least ye be judged", "love thy neighbor'.

Funny how the people who follow it have such a hard time grasping the concepts in "The Bible"...
08:48 PM on 12/28/2011
We tend to be the most open minded, rational people around. This notion that religion is so important, it may be to those who need that crutch.

You made some sense until you ended with this cunundrum. You are in fact as close minded and hypocritical as every other atheist who pretends to repect others and then with same breath puts them down for their faith. Wake up to who you are and stop trying to convince yourself and others that you are open minded when you clearly are not.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Conuly
03:57 AM on 12/30/2011
Believe it or not, there's no law that says atheists have to respect every other person on the planet. Some people don't deserve it.
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dubbleplusgood
turned off CNN, turned on CurrentTV
09:18 AM on 12/26/2011
Ridiculous 'study'. There's no way to know who's an atheist when giving to any charity. There is no collected data therefore there's nothing to study. What may have increased are donations to non-religious associated charities but since when did they only accept donations from atheists?

Once again, ridiculous.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NunyaBus99
01:02 PM on 12/26/2011
There is really no way to know what many people are when they donate. Many people that go to church go not for the religious aspect but for the "community aspect". The study isn't ridiculous. Could there be non atheists that give? Sure. Why would someone of a religious background support a charity run by people that don't believe god exists when there are countless organizations not run by Atheists that believe in god.
05:48 PM on 12/28/2011
NunyaBus99...."Why would someone of a religious background support a charity run by people that don't believe god exists when there are countless organizati­ons not run by Atheists that believe in god."

Maybe because Doctors Without Borders helps people of all faiths where ever they are in the world....and do it at their own expense and without charging a cent? THAT is worth supporting....atheists or not.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
owlafaye
Love, laugh, be happy and free, God is dead
03:47 AM on 12/26/2011
I give to BishopsAccountability.org and also to the Animal Humane Society. Atheist groups also get my support.

The Salvation Army bell ringers get a lecture on their culpability.

The bums on the street get nothing.

The elderly in my community get free appliance repair and electrical work in addition to other assistance when I am the person to do it.

I am an atheist, and most proud of it.
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11:29 PM on 12/25/2011
I don't give anything, but I'm also broke. But I do take donations.
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f0rTyLeGz
Everything is falling.
08:09 PM on 12/25/2011
I give... but I have become very discouraged about most big charities. I give to the local animal shelter. I help the local bottle collectors. But big charities I think fail... look at Haiti.
gibraltar
Put in D to go forward to go backwards put it in R
07:27 PM on 12/25/2011
Most atheists are better christians than "Christians".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KGP
10:24 PM on 12/25/2011
Yep!
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
11:12 AM on 12/26/2011
We are naturally and also have to be cause we don't have a fantasy god to clear us of our sins like those sinning Christians.
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Conuly
11:32 AM on 12/26/2011
Yes, and as a group we're just so modest about it...!