Robert Green Ingersoll Day
The Ingersoll Day is to celebrate the life and works of one of the most popular freethinkers in US history. Heard by more Americans than any human being before the advent of motion pictures and radio, Robert Ingersoll was the most successful orator in nineteenth century America.
Autumnal Equinox Northern Hemisphere
The Autumnal Equinox is one of the two days in the calendar year when day and night hours are almost equal to one another; it is also the first day of Autumn, or Fall, in the Gregorian calendar.
Banned Book Week
The Banned Book Week is celebrating the freedom to read. It was started by the American Library Association in 1981 in response to a growing number of attempts to ban books in public libraries across the country.
Spring Equinox Southern Hemisphere
The Spring (Vernal) Equinox is one of the days in the calendar year when day and night hours are almost equal to one another; it is also the first of Spring in the Gregorian calendar.
Freethought Month
Declaring October the Month of Freethought was inspired by the work done in Texas to commemorate the many German Freethinkers that emigrated to this Area, and several others across the US, during the 19th Century.
Freethought Day
Freethought “Coming Out” Day is an annual day of celebration which gives those Freethinkers who have been unable to proudly declare themselves a platform from which to do so.
Church/State Separation Week
“The Freedom From Religion Foundation” and the “American Atheists” have Declared, and TRNI has adopted, the week during Thanksgiving holiday a national event for the Separation of Church and State.
International Human Rights Day
International Human Rights Day is celebrated as a way to promote, defend, and remember the basic human rights every person in every country has as a result of being born into this world.
Summer Solstice Southern Hemisphere
The Summer Solstice has been celebrated in some way or another for thousands of years. During the month of June various religions celebrate seasonal holy days that are in some way linked to the Summer Solstice. The Winter Solstice, or the day with the least daylight, occurs in December in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern […]
Winter Solstice Northern Hemisphere
The Winter Solstice has been celebrated in some way or another for thousands of years. In the Northern Hemisphere, the winter solstice is often connected with various religious holy days.
Human Light Celebration
Human Light is a celebration of humanist values: tolerance, compassion, empathy, honesty, free inquiry, reason and rationality, and more.