Ex-gay ban prompts review calls

Ex-gay ban prompts review calls

The Anti-Violence Project (AVP) of Victoria has called on the Stonnington Council and the City of Greater Dandenong to review its policies for hiring council-owned facilities following the last-minute cancellation of an ex-gay speaking event last week.

Following community outrage and questioning by the Star Observer last Friday, both councils decided to ban use of council buildings for an event featuring self-described ex-gay Adam Hood from the US who was due to speak to a Melbourne audience to encourage gay men to convert to heterosexuality.

AVP convenor Greg Adkins said he will seek a meeting with both councils about how the content of the event wasn’t considered until the last minute and said the AVP has also written to the Department of Immigration and Citizenship calling for a review of entry visa policies.

“We’ve written to the federal Government today, asking them to take this on board and review the entry processes for people who are coming here to preach homophobia and violence against gays and lesbians,” Adkins told the Star Observer.

“He shouldn’t have been granted a visa to come in the country in the first place. At the end of the day, if he was coming in and attacking the Jewish community or Islamic community or revising history on the Holocaust, they wouldn’t have let him in the country.”

Adkins said the message that gay people can convert to heterosexuality or are an “abomination” in the eyes of God is dangerous for those struggling with their sexuality.

“It has a huge impact on the health and safety of same-sex attracted young people and in fact it’s affecting young heterosexual people killing themselves when they get bullied or harassed for being gay when they’re not gay,” Adkins said.

“So homophobia kills and at the end of the day no freedom of speech allows people to use language that in effect kills other people in society.”

Hood was due to speak at council venues in Prahran and Noble Park and a Catholic school in Caboolture in Queensland as a guest of the Noble Park-based Miracle Christian Centre.

St Columban’s College in Caboolture was the first to ban the event, saying it was not “in line with the college’s Christian values”.

The Miracle Christian Centre told News Ltd it was simply exercising its right to free speech and said it would now be forced to hold the events underground.

The Star Observer understands there were also fears, driven by a Facebook group, that violence could occur if the meetings were to take place in Victoria.

Leading Australian ex-gay movement authority Anthony Venn-Brown praised the decision of the councils and the Catholic school to halt the event.

“I think we’ve sent a really clear message that this sort of message is totally unacceptable in Australian society,” Venn-Brown told the Star Observer.

“[Ex-gay ministries] might see these people for 12 months, six months or a couple of years, but when they leave they have an enormous sense of failure, grief, loss and many of them have been traumatised as well.”

Venn-Brown said his own experiences prove how difficult trying to live a lie is.

“An example of how deep the trauma is, I went to see the movie Save Me, about an ex-gay program,” he said.
“I went through that in 1971. At the end of the movie, I burst into tears and sobbed uncontrollably for 10 minutes, 37 years after the event, as I’d seen all the things on the screen of what I went through — that shows how deep it can be.”

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6 responses to “Ex-gay ban prompts review calls”

  1. Long before any of this, there were my parents who ran their own ministry against homosexuality; NOW if they were doing God’s work, why did God give them a big luscious fairy for a son, who unravelled their little ministry as quickly as he could manage. (my high school project)

    The truth is we should have free speech, but hateful people should be bitch slapped for preaching the lies of their (lower protestant) church, and calling it God’s love; seriously if lying to everyone is love, then I would shut down their ministry, and quickly.

  2. MD

    I do not get into a public hall and call what you and your wife do as sick and Evil. I do not talk about your sperm. I do not incite violence against you and your wife. I do not say the Bible is against your love and you are an abomination.

    Perhaps you can go talk to the lesbian cows that help make our milk, or some Uniting Church gay groups, or my even my local Bishop as he even supports Same-Sex Marriage.

    But calling what people do Evil and an abomination is inciting violence. The cowardly words of hate are simply seen for what they are. Hiding behind the Bible is no excuse to vilify and hate people. Do we call people of a different skin colour Evil?

    Scientist can genetically replicate homosexual mice and fruit flies. So do not be a princess and tell us your bullshit excuse that this is “another point of view”. Using the language of hate to talk about the way I make love to my parnter is a disgust to all good people, and frankly none of your bloody business. Adam has been judged by a whole bunch of people who were not gay, and they did everything in their power to stop him from using public facilities to promote hate.

    Adam is using hate to attack people for existing. The hate lobby that you are part of is beyond reality if they think hate preaching is now acceptable.

  3. I find it phenomenal how anyone can try to equate Adam’s preaching the gospel with preaching violence. This is yet another example of the homosexual lobby trying to force their agendas upon every single person in the country and preventing any other viewpoints apart from their own being shared.

    If they had only taken the time to listen they would know that the last thing that any person would take away from hearing Adam preach is to inflict violence. If anything they would be willing to accept violence inflicted upon themselves simply in order to share the truth of salvation, even to those who hate to hear it, out of a self-sacrificial attitude of love.