National Atheist Party, Black Nonbelievers, Inc. Form  Partnership



By _Michael  Gryboski_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/michael-gryboski/)  , Christian Post 
Reporter
January 24, 2013|8:56 am
Two nationwide atheist organizations have opted to  form a partnership in 
the hopes of expanding outreach to more diverse  communities.
The National Atheist Party, a political organization based in Florence, 
Ky.,  announced Tuesday that it would partner with the Atlanta, Georgia-based 
Black  Nonbelievers, Inc. Troy Boyle, president of the  National Atheist 
Party, said in a statement released Tuesday that the  partnership was made in 
the hopes of increasing the scope of outreach. 
"The National Atheist Party is proud to announce our partnership with Black 
 Nonbelievers. We are very excited and pleased to expand our outreach into  
diverse communities, and this partnership is a welcome step in that 
direction,"  said Boyle. 
Boyle, who also serves as a blogger with Black Nonbelievers, told The  
Christian Post about the background on the decision to form an official  
partnership. "I think that networking and cross posting and being involved in 
as  
many groups as possible is always beneficial for any organization. Soon after 
I  began posting and commenting in Black Nonbelievers Facebook page, 
several of  their members joined the National Atheist Party," said Boyle. 
"Our Treasurer, Bernie 'Flash' Kellish, approached those members in 
December  and suggested the partnership, as a way of bringing our organizations 
closer  together and pooling resources." 
Boyle also told CP that he believed that "secularism and diversity are the  
greatest strengths of this nation."  
"Secularism guarantees _religious  freedom_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/religious-freedom/)  and diversity allows 
a synergy of perspective. I 
think that theism  AND _atheism_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/atheism/)  both benefit  from secularism," 
said Boyle. "By partnering with Black 
Nonbelievers, the NAP  can hopefully share in that diversity of experience." 
According to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center's Forum on  
Religion & Public Life in 2007, African Americans "are markedly more  religious 
on a variety of measures than the U.S. population as a whole." 
The statistics from the survey noted that African-Americans were more 
likely  to be religiously affiliated than the general population (87 percent 
vs. 
83  percent) and that African-Americans were far more likely to consider 
religion to  be "very important in their life" (79 percent vs. 56 percent) than 
the general  population. 
Also, according to a 2004 University of _California_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/region/california/) , Berkeley  Survey 
Documentation and Analysis 
report, only 9 percent of blacks surveyed said  they never attend a religious 
service. By contrast, 53 percent of those surveyed  reported attending 
religious services either once a month, a couple times a  month, nearly every 
week, or every week. Sixteen percent reported attending more  than once a week.

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