November 22nd, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Anti-gay Phelps group sneaks into Canada


(Winnipeg, Manitoba) Members of an anti-gay group which describes itself as a church managed to enter Canada overnight despite a directive to border agents to bar them.

The Canwest News Service reports that the group, members of Rev. Fred Phelps’ Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, removed all material that referred to the “church” from their vehicles and shipped them by courier to Winnipeg after the material was used to blocked them from another crossing into Manitoba on Thursday.

The group announced earlier in the week it would picket the Winnipeg funeral of a man decapitated on a Greyhound bus. Another passenger is charged with the sensational killing.

The group says by protesting the funeral of Tim McLean it will show Canadians the murder was God’s response to liberal Canadian policies toward homosexuality.

Pat Martin a New Democratic Party member of Parliament from Winnipeg asked Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day to send an alert to the border patrol to look out “for people with signs and pamphlets that fit the hateful messages that the church promotes and to keep them out of the country.”

Canadian hate laws give the government the power to deny entry to people likely to violate the law. The so-called church was listed as a hate group under the law following previous protests.

Shirley Phelps-Roper, Phelps’ daughter and a frequent spokesperson for the “church” confirmed to Canwest that a group of followers had successfully entered the country overnight.

Earlier she had warned that the group would “cross in another spot. They’ll have to strip search everyone who crosses that border or they won’t know who we are. They’ll have to see the WBC [Westboro Baptist Church] tattoo on our butts.”

In addition to the threatened protest at the McLean funeral the group had said it would demonstrate in Toronto where a satirical play titled “The Pastor Phelps Project.” is being performed. No members of the church showed up for the demonstration which had been planned for Thursday evening.

Westboro Baptist members frequently demonstrate at funerals for American servicemembers killed in Iraq. The group claims the deaths are God’s punishment on America for being too pro-gay.

Westboro’s members are made up mostly of Phelps’ relatives. Although it professes to be Baptist it is not affiliated with any national Baptist group.

Westboro operates Web sites including GodHatesFags and GodHatesAmerica and has been described as a cult.

Phelps and the church first came to national attention when he organized a protest by his followers outside the 1998 funeral for Matthew Shepherd, the gay college student who was beaten to death in Wyoming. The killing, Phelps’ protest, and the reaction of townsfolk led to the play “The Laramie Project.”

Church members routinely demonstrate at the funerals of people with AIDS and most recently at the funerals of soldiers killed in Iraq.


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  • Naz Said: November 10th, 2008 at 1:39 pm
    • I am happy that they were not able to picket at McLean’s funeral. This sends a strong message that here in CANADA we do not tolerate hate or anyone who wants to spread hateful thoughts.

  • scotlandforever Said: August 17th, 2008 at 5:13 am
    • Oh I got an Idea find a small island near Antarctic put every single one of that spiteful Family onto it and leave them to protest to anyone who cares to listen, I.e no one. Oh and forgot as well send them there in the dead heat of winter with shorts and T-shirts, then they will know what gods wrath is trust me :-)

  • Shizuma-sama Said: August 17th, 2008 at 4:45 am
    • I wonder if Fred’s son was decapitated on a bus if he would protest his own son’s funeral. I THINK NOT. With their logic, it would be an obvious sign that he was in hell and that God was doing it to punish them. After all, they’re Americans, too. So technically if God was to punish Americans, it would punish them as well. Anyway they’re radicals and once the media stops covering them, they’ll just be blinked out of history. No one will remember them, because no one even likes them. Sure some people will remember their hatred, but eventually everyone will forget and move on and just remember not to repeat history.

 
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