Catherine Fahringer
September 18, 2012
On this date in 1922, Catherine Fahringer was born in Utah to a
military family. After living in various places in the United States and
abroad, her family settled in San Antonio, Texas, when Catherine was
12. Raised as an Episcopalian, she was urged by family members to
introduce her children to religion. While living in England, where her
husband was stationed, Catherine dutifully purchased The Golden Book of Bible Stories.
Perusing it before she read the stories to her children, Catherine had
an epiphany: "I said to my husband, 'I can't teach this stuff to my
kids. I'm nicer than God" (San Antonio Express News, March 24, 1991).
Catherine found a venue for activism when she hooked up with the Freedom
From Religion Foundation in 1987. She created and hosted "Freethought
Forum," a cable TV show. Catherine became a well-known public figure in
San Antonio, monitoring and challenging numerous, egregious state/church
violations there. An officer with the national Foundation, she served
on its governing council. With wit and aplomb, Catherine protested city
prayer breakfasts, the presence of religious symbols on public property,
and kept freethought in focus with numerous op-eds, letters to the
editor and educational letters to government officials and media. In the
1990s, she even managed to persuade then-Gov. Ann Richards and city
officials to make proclamations commemorating freethought. Catherine's
media appearances included being featured on TV's Sally Jessy Raphael
Show, where she quipped about rejecting the idea of a "Big Spook in the
Sky." Catherine died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 86. Foundation
Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor said of Catherine: "We loved [her] and
miss her. She was not only one of FFRF's best activists, but she was one
of our best friends, best boosters and best advertisements for
freethought." The Foundation offers the Catherine Fahringer Youth
Activist Memorial Award in her honor. D. 2008.
“We would be 1,500 years ahead if it hadn't been for the church dragging science back by its coattails and burning our best minds at the stake.”
— Catherine Fahringer, Interview, San Antonio Express News, Portrait of an Atheist by Craig Phelon, March 24, 1991). For more about Catherine Fahringer, see Women Without Superstition
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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