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Student group calls for Humanist chaplaincy

By Katherine Sawyer

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Published: Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Updated: Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Goddard Chapel

Elaine Kim / Tufts Daily

Tufts Freethought Society is looking to bring a Humanist chaplain to Tufts to provide non-religious students with guidance and help create a sense of community.

The Tufts Freethought Society (TFS) is spearheading a push to bring a Humanist chaplain to Tufts in an effort to cater to the sizeable population of Tufts students who do not affiliate themselves with a religion.

The initiative is based on TFS’ belief that a growing body of non-religious students lack a necessary spiritual guide.

There is an “unfulfilled need at Tufts for a non-religious community that addresses the spiritual needs of secular students,” said freshman Yulia Korovikov, TFS’s public relations executive.

TFS has a growing contingency of its own, made up of over 150 members, approximately 20 of whom meet each week, according to Korovikov.

The society hopes to enlighten the Tufts community about Humanism. Many individuals who do not identify with a particular religion come to see their own beliefs as Humanist upon learning about the philosophy, Korovikov said.

“Many non-religious individuals come to identify with Humanism once they discover it, so our first goal is to provide people with information about Humanism,” she said.

Humanism is a non-theistic philosophy centered predominantly on human rights issues and morality.

According to Korovikov, in the Enrolling Student Survey of the Class of 2012, 33.3 percent of respondents marked “none” when specifying religion. 59.5 percent of now-sophomores responded.

These students had a plurality in the class; close to 19 percent identified as Jewish, 18 percent as Catholic and a little over 2 percent each identified as Protestant and Muslim.

While Jewish, Catholic, Protestant and Muslim students all have a respective chaplaincy, students who do not align with a particular religion are not represented through a chaplaincy at Tufts.

“Many other religious groups at Tufts have an anchor, a chaplain, who acts as the fountainhead of their community … but it can be difficult to feel fully accepted in the group and seek out spiritual or life advice from leaders who hold very fixed and different religious beliefs,” Korovikov said. “A Humanist chaplain would create a community that specifically supports the largest religious identification on campus: the nonreligious community.”

Greg Epstein, the Humanist chaplain at Harvard University, said that a Humanist chaplaincy fulfills a specific need on college campuses.

"There’s something unique about a humanist chaplaincy, something special about it,” Epstein told the Daily. “It’s a unique acknowledgement that you can have a community, the same support and guidance without the traditional belief in God and the traditional religious aspects.”

Epstein pioneered the Humanist movement both at Harvard and at large through his newly released book “Good without God: What a Billion Nonreligious People Do Believe.” He said that a Humanist chaplaincy is “something very real, very practical and very much needed.”

In an effort to promote the Humanist belief that secularism does not negatively impact an individual’s ability to do good, TFS is launching a campaign this week to help other groups on campus improve the success of their philanthropic efforts.

Korovikov added that TFS pledges to commit time and manpower to a minimum of one good cause on campus each week. Each member of the organization will dedicate at least one hour a week to help a charity organization with the aim of increasing the effectiveness and success of different groups’ causes.

Epstein believes that bringing a Humanist chaplain to Tufts would enact large-scale positive change on campus.

“Looking back, people would say that Tufts made a wise decision, made a good decision and made a decision that improved things for everyone,” he said.

TFS similarly hopes that gaining a Humanist chaplain at Tufts would be beneficial for its effect on students and the message it would send about the university. “It would establish Tufts as the only university in the Boston metro area, other than Harvard, to have a Humanist chaplaincy” Korovikov said. “This move will bolster Tufts’ position as a premier, groundbreaking and forward thinking institution.”

Comments

7 comments
Robert
Thu Nov 12 2009 00:06
Tufts’ secular population may not be "spiritual" by some people's definition, but they are just as much, or even more, engaged in trying to understand the meaning of the universe and life. Just because they are not doing it from a supernaturalist position, doesn't mean they should be denied the opportunity to talk to someone about such issues.
Lenn
Wed Nov 11 2009 21:32
Except for the Head Chaplain, O'Leary, none of the other Chaplains are paid by Tufts.
ss
Wed Nov 11 2009 19:20
My roommate is a TFS member and he said that the Daily forgot to mention (if they knew, unsure) that the position would be paid for NOT by Tufts. Outside funding would be found so it would have no financial drawbacks on Tufts at all.

And for the record, TFS is a TCU recognized student group under Council IV (Religious Organizations).

rs
Wed Nov 11 2009 06:13
are you kidding me...seniors can't get classes they need to graduate, but sure - go hire another useless staff member
Tycho
Tue Nov 10 2009 19:00
90% of the benefit of being secular is that you don't have to report to some self-appointed spiritual guide. Why wreck that?
Candide
Tue Nov 10 2009 16:41
"Epstein believes that bringing a Humanist chaplain to Tufts would enact large-scale positive change on campus.

'Looking back, people would say that Tufts made a wise decision, made a good decision and made a decision that improved things for everyone,' he said."

When did the Daily's journalism sink so low as to incorporate such totally unsubstantiated quotes? What does a "large-scale positive change on campus" entail? Care to elaborate? What does a Humanist chaplain even do? Does he have to be approved by some international Humanist governing body? Does he report to the Humanist pope? I really would have liked to see some quotes from the other chaplains on this bizarre proposal.

In addition, I fail to see how simply writing "none" in response to a question about religion on a student survey automatically means the student would benefit from a Humanist chaplain. There are plenty of people who don't identify with a particular theistic religion who likewise don't identify with Humanism.

I'm all for charity and doing good, and I too am skeptical of many aspects of organized religion, but the only thing "unique about a humanist chaplaincy" is that it's an oxymoron. Nonreligious people do not need a "spiritual guide."

Rather than "bolster Tufts' position as a premier, groundbreaking and forward thinking [sic] institution," the appointment of a Humanist chaplain will only bolster Tufts' reputation as one of the most needlessly PC institutions around.

KV
Tue Nov 10 2009 15:06
Amazing!

"The initiative is based on TFS' belief that a growing body of non-religious students lack a necessary spiritual guide."

Why do non religious students need a spiritual guide?

If TFS wanted a spiritual guide, why not register as a religious student organization?
If TFS wants a mentor, ask a faculty member in the Psychology or Philosophy department.

Tufts should not go down the road of being for chaplains for every group that wants one.
Tufts is already tone of the highest price schools around. Stop hiring more staff positions.







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