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Dawkins sets up kids’ camp to groom atheists

By Lois Rogers
Posted: June 27, 2009.

Print: The London Times Online

GIVE Richard Dawkins a child for a week’s summer camp and he will try to give you an atheist for life.

The author of The God Delusion is helping to launch Britain’s first summer retreat for non-believers, where children will have lessons in evolution and sing along to John Lennon’s Imagine.

The five-day camp in Somerset (motto: “It’s beyond belief”) is for children aged eight to 17 and will rival traditional faith-based breaks run by the Scouts and church groups.

Budding atheists will be given lessons to arm themselves in the ways of rational scepticism. There will be sessions in moral philosophy and evolutionary biology along with more conventional pursuits such as trekking and tug-of-war. There will also be a £10 prize for the child who can disprove the existence of the mythical unicorn.

Instead of singing Kumbiya and other campfire favourites, they will sit around the embers belting out “Imagine there’s no heaven . . . and no religion too”.

Dawkins, who is subsidising the camp, said it was designed to “encourage children to think for themselves, sceptically and rationally”. All 24 places at the retreat, which runs from July 27-31, have been taken.

Afternoons will be filled with familiar camp activities such as canoeing and swimming but the mornings will be spent debunking phenomena such as crop circles and telepathy.

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Comments (5)

Religion’s protagonists happily note that 90% of the U.S. population claim to be Christian.  Hmmmm.  I would wager that were such a suumer retreat to be launched in the United States, armed Christians would . . .

posted on June 30, 2009
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Dawkins has posted a letter to the Times protesting how inaccurate and misleading this article is.

posted on June 30, 2009
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The article is a “poor” , inaccurate and “myth creating” around a known and respected scientist.
Pretty bad we allow this to happen!

Anyway, a “rational human” camp is better than “Jesus Camp” (see documentary for comparison)

posted on June 30, 2009
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CRAP article, but GREAT IDEA.  Religious nuts will always outbreed the rational, but a challenge to religious education is a good idea.

posted on July 1, 2009
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I’m all for reason and the freedom to believe or not believe whatever you like, but from what I have read so far, this camp is just a not very subtle form of indoctrination.  Liberal religion is not about belief, it’s about values.  The insistence on belief in a set of unbelievable concepts is a Christian weirdness; other religions are more about values and practice and culture.  I think it’s a pity that the debate has polarised to this extent. 

Admittedly if it was a choice between sending my kids to Dawkins’ camp or sending them to the scary Jesus camp someone mentioned above, I’d choose Dawkins’ camp every time.  Fortunately that is not the case and there is a huge spectrum for people to choose from.  (I don’t have any kids though.)

Unitarians, Quakers, Pagans, Wiccans, Heathens and other liberal religious types don’t believe in indoctrinating children, but giving them the tools and concepts to choose their own spiritual path (or not, as the case may be).

posted on July 27, 2009
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