FFRF, Chicago chapter counter nativity scene with atheist display

Below: Members of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, Metropolitan Chicago Chapter, brave the elements to put up a display in Daley Plaza.

Members of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, Metropolitan Chicago Chapter, put up an atheist display in Daley Plaza.

For the second year in a row, the Freedom From Religion Foundation and its Metropolitan Chicago chapter have placed a unique winter solstice display in Daley Plaza to balance the plazaā€™s traditional life-sized nativity display.

Members of FFRFā€™s area chapter braved snow, rain, and wind on Monday to place an 8 Ā½ foot tall lighted ā€œA,ā€ standing for ā€œatheistā€ or ā€œagnosticā€ ā€” an emblem by scientist Richard Dawkins, author of The God Delusion.

Beside it is a colorful, irreverent banner depicting a different kind of nativity scene: the birth of the Bill of Rights. Looking on in adoration are constitutional framers Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams, plus the Statue of Liberty. A copy of the Bill of Rights, which was adopted on Dec. 15, 1791, is in a manger.

The message on the banner reads:

ā€œAt this season of the Winter Solstice, we celebrate the birth of the Unconquered Sun ā€” the TRUE reason for the season. As Americans, let us also honor the birth of our Bill of Rights, which reminds us there can be no freedom OF religion, without having freedom FROM religion in government.ā€

ā€œThe real reason for the season is the Winter Solstice, the darkest, shortest day of the year, a time for celebration for millennia in the Northern Hemisphere because it signified the rebirth of the sun,ā€ said Annie Laurie Gaylor, FFRF Co-President. ā€œFor a fact, the Christians stole Christmas. We donā€™t mind sharing the season with them, but we donā€™t like their pretense that it is the birthday of Jesus.ā€

A life-sized nativity scene was first placed in Daley Plaza, at Dearborn and Washington Streets in downtown Chicago, in 1985. Priests and clergy traditionally bless the crĆØche. Divisive from the outset, it was litigated by the ACLU, and a federal judge ruled in 1989 that Daley Plaza is a public forum.

FFRF has over 21,500 members, including more than 800 in Illinois.

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Freedom From Religion Foundation

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