I'm interested in volunteering with a "habitat for humanity" type of place, or shelter for the homeless or the like, however I'd like the organization to not have any religious affiliation if possible. Anybody know of such places, around the Raleigh area?Thanks
7/7/2008 3:41:58 PM
There is the Food Bank of Central and Eastern NC located off Tarheel Drive (which is off Wolfpack Road) right off Atlantic above the Beltline. http://www.foodbankcenc.org/And my personal favorite, ReTails Thrift Shop which benefits AnimalKind and their efforts to help provide a spay/neuter for only $20 to low-income pet owners across the Triangle.http://www.animalkind.org/retails.htmlOh and try http://www.volunteermatch.org. They are probably the best database/search function provided for all non-profit agencies looking for volunteers. I've found quite a few over the years.[Edited on July 7, 2008 at 4:30 PM. Reason : volunteermatch]
7/7/2008 4:28:24 PM
No faith affiliation at all or is interfaith OK?
7/7/2008 4:30:19 PM
7/7/2008 7:35:49 PM
7/7/2008 7:37:57 PM
Habitat might as well be non-christian. they dont shove their faith in anyones face.I mean, they're partnered a big project with Planned Parenthood for chrissakes. (http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/may/08052308.html)so yeah, okay, they're christian, but they're about as inoffensive as any faith organization can possibly be. Ive seen secular orgs that were far more zealous in their advocacy for some political position or other.
7/7/2008 7:43:05 PM
indeed, an organization with NO religious ties at all may be difficult, furthermore, people can't project the level of connection you would find appropriate. If you're looking for something that doesn't care about your religion, promote their own, or operate under the guise of a religious group, that would be like 75% of the things out there.
7/7/2008 8:40:17 PM
i dont' know. the one time i did habitat, there was a group prayer at the beginning.
7/7/2008 9:32:46 PM
When I've been, there wasn't a prayer. It is in a different city, though. Finding another non-religious organization w/ the same goal as habitat is going to be tough. Habitat really does a lot of good...the obvious house, financial counseling, job counseling, and getting the resident into helping on thiers and other houses.
7/7/2008 9:43:18 PM
come on, didn't you know? Christians have a monopoly on helping people. Non-christians, without the threat of burning in hell, have no incentive to ever help anyone else
7/7/2008 10:03:00 PM
When i had to organize service projects for a group on campus, I have to say, I was bothered by both the religious people, and the people who didn't want to work with the religious people.Even boy scouts are religious-ish (Scout oath FTW). It's hard to get away from it.[Edited on July 7, 2008 at 10:15 PM. Reason : ]
7/7/2008 10:15:03 PM
Oh boy.While I get extremely annoyed with Bible-thumping moonbats--- who cares if a charitable organization has a religious affiliation? Many Christians, Jews, and Muslims are genuinely altruistic and have open-door policies for volunteers and don't even talk to you about their religion. I volunteered for a homeless shelter in downtown Miami that was run by a bunch of nuns through the local Catholic church. The only thing they asked us to do was to not use any foul language there and to be very patient with the people there. Pretty reasonable requests. A decent percentage of the volunteers were Jewish and some were agnostic. Although the nuns were pretty intense and kinda OCD-ish, they were very nice and never once tried to convert anyone or talk about religion.Groups that use charity as bait for religious agendas are in the minority. The ones that do that are dispicable, but they aren't as common as many think.
7/7/2008 10:29:39 PM
I am simply for helping people in need, and do not have any interest in furthering a religious group/agenda. Habitat may not be as batshit crazy as some others, but Jesus/word of God, etc. is littered in their "mission" statements. I may end up helping the habitat people none the less. I suppose this is because I'd rather help than not, even though ideally my help wouldn't benefit a religious organization. I do not mind helping a religious people, just not a religious agenda.Thanks a lot for the links, especially volunteermatch.org looks good.
7/7/2008 11:45:23 PM
You should do it through a religious organization but work against them and spread rational, non religious thoughts.
7/8/2008 12:17:56 PM
7/8/2008 12:25:16 PM
Since I have been staying here for the past two weeks, Duke University Medical Center has plenty of opportunities for involvement. They have volunteers who help people find their way around, people who volunteer through the Ronald McDonald House who staff parent and child areas, people who sit with children on the bone marrow transplant unit to give parents some time off, people who just come rock babies who are left alone, etc. The giving here at a hospital like Duke is phenomenal. However, even if you volunteer at a hospital through an organization without religious affiliation, you do deal with religion in a tangential manner because people turn towards their faith in times of need. My son has been prayed for to more gods and in more languages than I can count in my time here. A Hindu doctor came in to do an art stick and said his prayers prior to sticking my son and a Christian phlebotomist praised God when she was able to drawn blood from my son without tears. . .
7/8/2008 12:42:53 PM
im either an atheist or an agnostic depending on your definition, but if my kid were sick i'd be happy if people prayed to jesus, mohammed, and the elephant-god-thing with 100 arms.and i think religiously-oriented charities are good things. as long as they don't tie their services with religious proselytizing. and most of them don't.as far as prayer? hell, you can find public school systems sports teams that pray before games. doesn't make it right, but it's a function of the individual leaders/participants moreso than the organization.
7/8/2008 1:06:26 PM
7/8/2008 2:11:20 PM
This is why this guy pisses me offhttp://youtube.com/watch?v=VxGMqKCcN6ALet's see you go build some houses. Then we can talk about how the world can and should do without religion.
7/8/2008 3:54:36 PM
because there wouldn't be any charitable organizations without religion....
7/8/2008 7:54:41 PM
And nobody is claiming that. A majority of the ones you hear about do have religious mission statements and religious founders, and if you're avoiding those you greatly reduce your options for community service rather needlessly.
7/8/2008 8:06:24 PM