February 25, 2017

THE board of G W Foote and Company, publishers of the Freethinker, are delighted to learn that Barry Duke, above, who has edited the Freethinker for 20 years, is to receive a Lifetime’s Achievement Award from the National Secular Society as part of this year’s Secularist of the Year celebrations in March.

Announcing the award, NSS President Terry Sanderson said:

The National Secular Society is to award a Lifetime Achievement honour to Barry Duke, editor of two online atheist/humanist magazines – the Freethinker and The Pink Humanist – as part of this year’s Secularist of the Year celebrations on March 18, 2017.
I am very pleased that the NSS is honouring Barry in this way.
He has been a consistent voice for many years in the fight for justice and secular humanist principles. From resisting apartheid in his native South Africa to fighting for gay rights in Britain and Spain. Barry, who celebrated his 70th birthday in February, has always provided a strong rationalist voice.
We are glad that Barry is able to join us in London and look forward to being able to recognise his many and varied contributions to the cause of secularism, humanism and his spirited opposition to religious intolerance and irrationality.


The event will also include the presentation of the £5,000 Irwin Prize for Secularist of the Year, the shortlist for which is:
Professor Ted Cantle for his advocacy of integrated education and social cohesion.
Asma Jahangir (former UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion) for her principled advocacy of universal human rights and commitment to secular justice.
Prof Steve Kettell for co-ordinating the secular response to the Commission on Religion and Belief.
Houzan Mahmoud/Kurdish Culture Project for their initiative in providing a platform for Kurdish writers, feminists, artists and activists to advance gender equality, freedom and universal rights;
Scott Moore/Let Pupils Choose – a Northern Ireland humanist campaign for challenging compulsory worship and religious privilege in Northern Ireland’s schools;
• Yasmin Rehman – for her advocacy of a secularist approach to tackling hate crime and promoting the human rights of women.
The prizes will be presented by writer and commentator Yasmin Alibhai-Brown.
The Secularist of the Year lunch and awards will be held in central London on Saturday 18 March from 12 noon to 4pm. Tickets include a three course meal and welcome drink. Tickets are available here:

March 19, 2017

The Irwin Prize of £5000 for Secularist of the Year 2017 was awarded in London yesterday by the National Secular Society to Yasmin Rehman, the secular campaigner for women’s rights. 

Rehman has spent much of the past two years to get the Government to recognise the dangers faced by ex-Muslims and Ahmadi Muslims from Islamic extremists. She has used her own home as a shelter for women at risk of domestic abuse. She and her family have received death threats from Muslim extremists because of her activities.
Accepting the prize, Rehman thanked the Society for recognising her work and said she was “incredibly humbled” to be nominated among other figures who were “personal heroines.”
She said there were two women, Maryman Namazie and Gita Sahgal, whom she couldn’t have campaigned without, and that she was honoured to stand beside them.
Secularism was not opposed to faith, she said, before describing how she had been shut down as “Islamophobic” and “racist” despite being a Muslim herself. There is anti-Muslim sentiment in society, she said, but “Islamophobia” was being used to silence and curtail speech.
Rehman said she didn’t know if she could ever go back to Pakistan because of her work in the UK, while in the UK it was “impossible” to get funding her secularist work. She asked where women could possibly turn if they faced religiously-justified abuse.
Muslim women were left with nothing but religious, sharia arbitration, while faith healing was spreading, with ill women being controlled by male relatives and religious leaders and told to pray instead of seeking medical treatment.
FGM and honour-based violence were being dismissed as “cultural”, while in fact polygamist and temporary marriages were Islamic practises, she said. There is a slippery road from this to child marriage, and there should be “no space” in the UK for these practises.
“Great powers within the community” were holding women back, and low rates of Muslim female employment could not be attributed entirely to discrimination by employers.
Terry Sanderson, President of the National Secular Society, said:

I’m particularly pleased that this afternoon we have a secularist [Yasmin Alibhai-Brown] who is also a Muslim to present our prizes. She is living proof that secularism and Muslims can co-exist if given half a chance and co-founded British Muslims for Secular Democracy in 2006.

Sanderson described how secularism protected the rights of all and said it and democracy were “interdependent”.
Alibhai-Brown said:

The thing I find interesting and frightening at the moment is when I talk to young Muslims is how little they understand what secularism means.

She said the Society’s most important work was in explaining what secularism meant for young people, particularly Muslims, and demonstrate that secularism was not atheism.
She warned of the growth of Muslim “exceptionalism” and that:

Universalism needs to be promoted.

The Society was joined at the central London lunch event by previous winners of the prize including Maryam Namazie who was the inaugural Secularist of the Year back in 2005. Peter Tatchell, who won the prize on 2012 also attended.

Maryam Namazie pictured with Barry Duke, editor of the Freethinker, who was given a Lifetime Achievement Award for his commitment to free speech, LGBT rights and equality and resistance to censorship in apartheid South Africa. Namazie contributes a regular monthly column to the Freethinker.
Turkish parliamentarian and 2014 Secularist of the Year Safak Pavey was unable to join the Society, but sent a message to attendees:

I wish I could be with you but we have the critical referendum approaching and we are very busy with the campaign. Each and every one of your shortlisted nominees is a very distinguished members of the secular society without borders.
I wholeheartedly thank all of them for their courageous and precious contributions in defence and support of secularism and congratulate this year’s Secularist while looking forward to work together for our shared cause.

Sanderson praised her for working in “increasingly dangerous” circumstances to resist the Islamisation of Turkey.
Other campaigners were thanked for their work and Sanderson singled out Dr Steven Kettell, who was shortlisted for the prize, for his “excellent response” to the Commission on Religion and Belief in Public which had advocated expanding many religious privileges.
He thanked Dr Kettell for pointing out the many injustices that CORAB’s recommendations would have introduced, in his “excellent” report.
Scott Moore, the founder of Let Schools Choose, was thanked for his campaign work.

Scott Moore with Yasmin Rehman
He said that, as an 18 year old, he had been campaigning for his entire adult life to separate religion and state, after religion was forced on him and taught as “absolute fact” during his childhood. He said the education system in Northern Ireland “robbed” pupils of their religious freedom.

All belief systems should be treated equally, but they are not.

He was applauded for his hard-fought campaign work and Sanderson said Moore gave him:

Hope for the future.

Nominee Houzan Mahmoud of the Kurdish Culture Project, spoke powerfully about the important of universal rights and freedoms.
Houzan said:

For the work in activism that I have done for nearly two decades against Islamism and Sharia Law in Kurdistan, Iraq, the UK and beyond, to be recognised by the NSS is one of the greatest honours I could be conferred.

The Society’s volunteer of the year was named, Sven Klinge, and thanked for the many occasions in which he has photographed NSS events.

April 8, 2020

I LEARNED with sadness today that Barbara Smoker, former President of the National Secular Society,  has died – two years after she published a long-overdue memoir.

She had been diagnosed as having advanced breast cancer in May 2018. This I learned from her December 2018 ‘egotistical’ year-end newsletter.

Rather than send cards for the festive season, for more 30 years Barbara would send a newsletter her many friends and contacts.  In each she would detail her extraordinary activities over the previous 12 months.

Her newsletters  were proof positive that age is no obstacle to a life devoted to promoting rationalism and freethought, for Barbara, a writer and activist on many radical issues, was still gamely engaged with various radical campaigns until well into her 90s.

In several of her missives, Barbara informed her readers that she was working on a memoir, and when I received her 2018 letter, I was overjoyed to learn that she had finally completed it, and that My Godforsaken Life: Memoir of a Maverick, had just been published.

I first met Barbara in the 1970s when I was a member of the Anti-Apartheid Movement, a gay rights activist, and a new recruit to the National Secular Society (NSS), of which she was President.

Around 20 years on, when I became the 15th editor of the Freethinker magazine, founded in 1881, Barbara took on the role of proofreader and was was also periodic contributor of some of the finest articles the magazine ever published.

When I last saw Barbara, it was at a Secularist of the Year function in London in 2017, where I dead chuffed to be presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award for my years of campaigning against racism and  homophobia. She looked marvellous, as the picture above shows. Two years later the NSS handed her a Lifetime Achievement Award.

But what I accomplished is nothing compared to Barbara’s record. Apart from her speaking engagements on radio and TV, and conducting non-religious weddings and funerals, she financed the manufacture of the first ‘Make Love, Not War’ badges that were popular in Britain during the 1960s.

Being at the forefront of radical movements for 70 years, she has combated religion, and opposed nuclear weapons and illegal wars. At the same time she was championing humanism, women’s right to choose abortion, prison reform, freedom of speech, and voluntary euthanasia.

Her memoir, according to publisher Thornwick Press:

Is a compelling account of her intellectual journey, her ruthless focus on ethics and principles, and her eccentric bloody-mindedness in challenging the accepted and wrong wisdom of the day.

Barbara was born into a devout Roman Catholic family. As a girl she was torn between being becoming a nun or a writer. At the age of 26, after war service in Ceylon, she renounced Christianity and joined the ranks of the secular, humanist army.



For 25 years she was President NSS and led speaking tours in the USA and India to promote atheism. She even teamed up at one point with Madalyn Murray O’Hair, the US atheist who was dubbed ‘America’s Most Hated Woman’ after she won a court case that banned prayers and Bible-readings in public school.

Barbara, centre, pictured in this vintage photo marching in London for humanism, atheism, secularism and freethought

Barbara has written books on Humanism for Inquiring Minds, voluntary euthanasia, a book of satirical verse Good God, a collection of essays, Freethoughts, and innumerable articles in journals and the press.

For many years she was editor of The Ethical Record and she appeared often on TV and radio to explain why she is an atheist and why segregation of children in religious schools should be abolished.

She was among the first to officiate at gay and lesbian marriages, and at humanist funerals.

On more than one occasion she has been arrested, and in 1989 was attacked by a mob of Muslim extremists when she held a banner for free speech in support of Salman Rushdie.

In her early years she described herself as an anarchist. Latterly she prefers the term ‘radical liberal’.

For anyone who wishes to campaign effectively against social injustice Barbara Smoker’s life has been a blueprint based on logic, ethics and bloodymindedness.

In revealing her diagnosis, Barbara said she had decided not to go through with recommended surgery.

My decision was as rational and irrevocable as the one I made on the 5th of November 1949 when I renounced religion.

She added:

In my opinion, medics give far too much priority to prolonging human life, irrespective of its quality – especially for oldies.

May 21, 2019

SAIF ul Malook, the lawyer who defended Asia Bibi who spent eight years on death row for blasphemy in Pakistan was named at the weekend as  Secularist of the Year 2019 by the UK’s National Secular Society.

Geoffrey Robertson QC, left, with Saif ul Malook. Photo courtesy of the NSS

The award presented by the human rights barrister and NSS honorary associate Geoffrey Robertson QC.

Bibi was sentenced to death by hanging for allegedly insulting the Islamic “prophet” Mohammed in November 2010. Pakistan’s Supreme Court ordered her to be freed in October 2018. It upheld her acquittal in the face of a petition urging its quashing in January.

Image via YouTube

Bibi, above, is now living in Canada, but a total of 40 people in Pakistan remain imprisoned on blasphemy charges or convictions. About half are serving life terms and half have been sentenced to death.

Malook represented the Christian woman from 2014 until the end of the legal process. He has faced death threats from Islamists in response, as have the judges who ordered her to be freed.

He is now handling another blasphemy case involving Shaghufta Kausar, who faces a possible death sentence in Pakistan over a text message that allegedly insulted Mohammed.

Malook said:

Thanks to the National Secular Society for recognising my efforts to secure the acquittal of Asia Bibi. To fight blasphemy cases in Pakistan is putting one’s own and families’ lives at risk. The moral support from organisations such as the NSS has given me the courage to take the case of Shaghufta Kausar – another Christian woman on death row on blasphemy charges.

I assure you that I plan to continue my mission in providing legal aid to all blasphemy victims even in future regardless to the threat to my life.

NSS Chief Executive Stephen Evans said:

Saif ul Malook showed courage that few of us would be capable of summoning when he decided to defend Asia Bibi. Without his willingness to risk everything to stand up for her, the death sentence she faced for so long might have been carried out.

His award should also stand as a testament to the many brave people who have defended Asia Bibi or challenged Pakistan’s cruel blasphemy laws – some of whom have paid with their lives.

And it should serve as a reminder that blasphemy laws are a theocratic outrage against freedom of expression wherever they exist. We urge the UK government to learn from the Asia Bibi case and do everything it can to hold countries which retain these laws to account for their violations of basic human rights.

Image via Wikipedia

At the presentation – part a conference titled “Reclaiming Religious freedom”, the NSS also gave a lifetime achievement award to its former President Barbara Smoker, 95, above.

The conference also saw Rachel Laser, the CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church And State, deliver a keynote address on religious freedom in America in the era of President Trump.

Guests at the event heard  speeches and discussions on religious freedom’s relationship with freedom of expression, children’s rights and religious orthodoxy.


Browse Our Archives