You're kidding, right?
S.A.M. said:
How are you forced to worship?
Going back to your experience in India doesn't necessarily help. The scenario pertaining to AA is more complicated than simply starting your own Islamic-based chapter. Imagine, please, that you are ...
• ... arrested for an alleged alcohol-related offense.
• ... tried in a court and found guilty.
• ... sentenced to various measures, including alcohol rehabilitation.
With me so far? Now, then, in order to successfully complete the rehab, and thus get the state off your back, you must ...
• ... acknowledge God (step 2).
• ... surrender to God (step 3).
• ... confess to God (step 5).
• ... pray to God to remove your character defects (steps 6, 7) because you are incapable of doing anything for yourself (step 1).
• ... continually pray and meditate, beseeching of God to give you the knowledge and power to do what only God can do. (step 11).
And I left one out earlier.
More than half the steps pertain to God. You must also
pledge to evangelize your "spiritual awakening" (step 12).
Being forced to do this by a court is a bit different from choosing to attend a pooja or mass.
Its all one God to me, so I really don't get nitpicky about what people say.
The problem with this answer is a common one. We often pretend that certain things don't affect us because we have the luxury of doing so. For instance, my father. When I was younger, he was a law-and-order Reagan Republican who despised the Miranda Act because "criminals shouldn't have rights". Never mind that they weren't convicted yet.
But when it was his son's—e.g.,
my—turn, he put down the money and hired a shark. He may despise lawyers in general, but when it's close to him, he wants someone who's willing to pull every last damn trick out of the hat.
In other words, when it was mere theory, he could afford to stand on what he considered a noble position. But when it became reality, he came down off that hill and was ready to play in the dirt.
So I hope you're correct in your self-assessment. I admit I'm not sure, though, whether I hope you're made of the stuff that can accept forced religious re-education. On the one hand, I would be glad to see you cope with such absurdity. To the other, though, I don't think you should have to go through it.
And what if the government was forcing you for whatever reason to accept the authority and pray for the guidance of Satan? Or the Mother Goddess? Or the goddamn Flying Spaghetti Monster? Is God so meaningless to you that it's just a word that represents
nothing?
(Don't get me wrong; that's fine if it is, but it's an unorthodox theistic position. To the other, I don't believe you would really claim to be all that representative of theists, monotheists, or Abramists in general.)
I don't understand why atheists would want to remove God from AA for those that find it helpful to have religion as an aid rather than starting their own.
What makes you think it's about removing God from AA?
In the end, what it's about is that forcing someone to convert to a religion—any religion—in order to satisfy the state is simply wrong. And, in the United States, it's against the law.
The AA example is extrapolated from a 1997 federal court decision:
"The district court agreed with Mr. Warner's argument that these meetings involved a substantial religious element. Participants were told to "believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us," and that they must "turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understand him." In addition, the "Step" program ordered those participating to "Admit to God ... the exact nature of our wrongs," be "entirely ready to have God remove all these defects ... (and) ask Him to remove our shortcomings," and to seek "through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God, as we (understand) Him. The meetings were also punctuated with frequent prayers of a Christian nature."
Four months into the program Mr. Warner complained that, as an Atheist, he found the meetings objectionable due to their religious nature. It was then that his probation officer determined that Warner lacked sufficient commitment to the idea of learning the techniques of remaining sober, even though he apparently had not been found in violation of his probation orders to remain sober!
(Clark)
In other words, Mr. Warner had to
convert in order to successfully complete the program.
And don't give us any shit about Guantanamo, or else I'll ask if you would think it fair to only release the terror suspects after they convert to Christianity.
The AA case, as a general point in the context of this thread, offers an example of why identifying as an atheist is important. Think of it this way: Abramic religions, at least, tend to have certain community outreaches. Would a judge send a Muslim to a Christian rehab program when there was a Muslim one available? In the meantime, few if any rehab programs identify specifically as atheist, but when there are facilities available where the regimen has nothing to do with God, why send an atheist to a religious conversion program?
This example
directly answers your topic question. If you don't identify as an atheist, people will never stop trying to force you to pray, worship, believe, convert, or whatever. If a minority does not assert its rights, it will be trampled. You are part of less than 1% of the American population. You've seen how your fellow Muslims have been treated in recent years. And you've seen how people respond to those who advocate the rights and dignity of your fellows. I find it difficult to believe you're unable to see the point.
____________________
Notes:
Alcoholics Anonymous. "The Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous". AA.org. Accessed March 11, 2009. http://www.aa.org/en_pdfs/smf-121_en.pdf
Clark, Curtis E. "Atheism Is Protected As a Religion, says Court". The Academy of Metaphysical Naturalism Blog. September 15, 2008. http://freeassemblage.blogspot.com/2008/09/atheism-is-protected-by-law-austin.html