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Faith leader, anti-fascist activist want city to deny U.S. Christian singer permit to perform

Faith leader, anti-fascist activist want city to deny U.S. Christian singer permit to perform

A downtown United Church cleric and a longtime city anti-fascist activist are urging the city to deny a permit for a planned concert by American Christian singer Sean Feucht, scheduled to take place next month in Winnipeg's Central Park.
Feucht, who some have labelled a Christian nationalist, has publicly aligned himself with U.S. President Donald Trump and the Make America Great Again movement. He is known for his outspoken opposition to gender diversity, abortion rights and the LGBTTQ+ community.
'The Central Park area and community often has very vulnerable people and is a very vulnerable population, so we've worked tirelessly to try and make this area safe for all people to come together and express their beliefs and to have a sense of community that lifts them up, rather than pulling them down,' said Rev. Lesley Harrison of Knox United Church, which is located on Edmonton Street, bordering the park where the Aug. 20 show is scheduled to take place.
Feucht has had several concerts across Eastern and Atlantic Canada cancelled in recent days, including stops in Halifax, Charlottetown, Moncton, Quebec City, Gatineau, Que., and Vaughan, Ont.
The City of Montreal, meanwhile, fined a local evangelical church $2,500 for hosting Feucht last Friday after failing to secure a permit.
The 41-year-old, in a video posted to social media last week, said he's being persecuted for his Christian beliefs.
Helmut-Harry Loewen, a former German, philosophy and sociology instructor at the University of Winnipeg who also founded the Manitoba Coalition Against Racism and Apartheid and was involved in other anti-fascist projects for decades, wrote Mayor Scott Gillingham Monday, outlining his opposition to Feucht's planned concert.
He told the Free Press that Feucht is at the cutting-edge of a movement that is skilled at rebranding and repackaging hate to 21st-century, Christian audiences and those tied into popular culture.
'If Winnipeg did not ban this guy, Winnipeg would be an outlier, and it would not be very good,' Loewen said. 'Winnipeg has a reputation to maintain, and needs to stand in solidarity with its vulnerable communities.'
Gillingham, at an unrelated press conference Monday, said city staff are looking at the permit request.
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'I don't have an update at this point,' the mayor said.
'Our staff was looking at it, and they'll make a determination to issue the permit or not. I think a couple of things is that, in my understanding, from some of what I've seen, or heard had been said in the past… is not some of the things that we would value. On the other hand, we do have a Charter of Rights and Freedoms that does permit people to have their opinion, express their opinion.'
Gillingham did not know when a decision on the permit would be made.
— With files from Malak Abas
scott.billeck@freepress.mb.ca
Scott BilleckReporter
Scott Billeck is a general assignment reporter for the Free Press. A Creative Communications graduate from Red River College, Scott has more than a decade's worth of experience covering hockey, football and global pandemics. He joined the Free Press in 2024. Read more about Scott.
Every piece of reporting Scott produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
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Toronto Sun

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  • Toronto Sun

JONAH GOLDBERG: Why MAGA's ideologues can't always get what they want

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Manitoba slides down mining sector investment attractiveness list: report
Manitoba slides down mining sector investment attractiveness list: report

Winnipeg Free Press

time16 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Manitoba slides down mining sector investment attractiveness list: report

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Amy Hamm: On Feucht and Hockey Canada ruling, ignore the angry mobs
Amy Hamm: On Feucht and Hockey Canada ruling, ignore the angry mobs

National Post

timea day ago

  • National Post

Amy Hamm: On Feucht and Hockey Canada ruling, ignore the angry mobs

Article content This case does not make a strong hill for the 'believe all women' mob to die on. But then again, mobs seldom make sense. They tend to be driven by emotion, not logic. Article content A mob is, at least superficially, motivated by the desire to rectify injustices, stop wrongdoing or protect the vulnerable and innocent. But the examples provided to us by history reveal how angry mobs rarely get things right, and often fail to accomplish justice. They also, naturally, form within a specific cultural context. Article content An illustration: the Salem Witch Trials. Between 1692 and 1693 in Massachusetts, more than 200 mostly female victims were accused by the mob of being witches. Twenty were put to death. Public officials performed the bidding of persons blinded by misogynist, religiously motivated fears. Due process was non-existent, and literal braying mobs influenced judges' verdicts. Article content Today's dominant (but admittedly receding) cultural orthodoxy is one of reactionary rage against all things white, western, colonial, conservative, traditional, religious and male. Article content Article content One look at Feucht, and the exonerated Team Canada players, and it becomes clear that at the centre of both of these very public controversies are persons who can be perfectly vilified within our cultural milieu. And they all have been. Article content Whatever our collective anger is over — Trump's tariffs, a recession or violence against women — Feucht et al. comprise the perfect target for the mob's rage. Article content Politicians, journalists and judges all have a duty to examine the claims of a mob before falling for its proclaimed narrative — and, more critically, before bending to the will of any irate, pitchfork-wielding folks. Article content One of Feucht's songs contains these lyrics: 'There is a name; Who reigns without contention; Whose power can't be questioned or contained; With humble fame; He rules the earth and heavens; His glory knows no measure or refrain; And it's bursting past the border lines of space.' Article content Article content Article content

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