June 10, 2005
Some Anglicans oppose
church move condemning same-sex, common-law unions
"The Anglican church
has always been for me a place that affirms human rights"
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
A
splinter group at St. Jude's Anglican Church in Iqaluit, pictured here during
a music concert, say their leaders' views don't reflect the "wider"
population of the North. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
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Anglican church leaders
in the North are turning their backs on many Inuit by adopting a statement opposing
same-sex unions and common-law marriage, according to critics in the church.
The leaders' recent stance
against homosexuality, common-law marriage and abortion has created at least
one splinter group within their congregation at St. Jude's Cathedral in Iqaluit.
Maureen Doherty, a long-time
Anglican living in Iqaluit, said the leaders are breaking with northerners'
long-standing tradition of tolerance. Instead, she said the leaders are encouraging
homophobia in the church.
"I find it absolutely
disheartening," Doherty said in an interview last week. "The Anglican
church has always been for me a place that affirms human rights and acceptance
and has been pro-active in building community. I see this as being in direct
opposition to those values."
Doherty and several other
church members failed last month to convince their leaders to abandon a campaign
to condemn same-sex marriage.
Delegates from churches
of the Anglican Diocese of the Arctic supported a motion against homosexuality
during their synod meeting in a college gymnasium in Iqaluit last week. The
pan-northern meeting occurs once every three years.
The diocese is the largest
religious organization in the North, and includes an estimated 30,000 people
from Nunavut, Nunavik and the Northwest Territories.
All 70 delegates at the
synod backed a motion to adopt the Montreal Declaration as their own. Their
churches - as well as new staff joining the church - will now be expected to
accept the conservative religious statement of beliefs, composed in Montreal
in 1994.
Before the vote, about
a dozen Anglicans in Iqaluit sent a dissenting letter to Bishop Andrew Attagotaluk,
the diocese's top leader.
The letter calls on the
synod to reject the Montreal Declaration, adding that they were troubled by
"the hurtful and discriminatory language" used by the executive leaders
pushing for the vote.
Marion Willms, an Iqaluit
resident who drafted the letter, said she wanted to discuss the issues with
the delegates, but felt moderate Anglicans were shut out of the debate.
"I'm struggling with
the Anglican church here," said Willms. "For me, it's not a comfortable
place to be.
"Anglicans pride themselves
on taking the middle ground, and supporting each other, and listening to each
other. That's where I want to be."
Willms said delegates should
have held wider consultations on the charter. She claims the document doesn't
reflect the life of Inuit who are in common-law relationships, or raising children
on their own.
"It assumes family
is mother, father and children," Willms said. "That's not reflecting
the reality of 2005. That definition of family is very narrow and is not reflective
of the wider Anglican body."
Willms suspects that the
diocese felt pressured to move towards stances taken by fundamentalist churches
in the North, which have been growing in popularity.
Nunavut's gay community
representatives have taken a reserved stance.
Stephanie Hawkins, president
of the Iqaluit Pride and Friends of Pride association, said they're "not
enthusiastic" about the decision, but respect the church's right to their
own religious beliefs.
"It's a two-way street,"
Hawkins said. "We'll accept that it's your faith and that your interpretation
doesn't reflect all Canadians. And we can co-exist."
Anglicans who signed the
protest letter plan to support the gay community at their upcoming annual picnic
in Sylvia Grinnell Park in Iqaluit.
Doherty, who's father is
an Anglican minister in Toronto, quipped that even her religion's messiah would
be there.
"If I think of 'what
would Jesus do?', I think Jesus Christ would probably come out and break bread
at the Pride picnic on June 12," Doherty said.
"He included everyone
and that is my understanding of the Christian faith."
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