12 Jun 2015

On the Blasphemous Gay Pride Parade Held in Sao Paulo, Brazil

              By Jonathan Ekene Ifeanyi
On June 7, 2015, Sao Paulo saw its greatest ever turnout for Gay Pride as tens of thousands of revellers filled the Brazilian city’s streets in celebration of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender rights. The parade, now in its 19th year, upheld the slogan, "I was born this way, I grew up so I will always be like this: respect me," and saw 20 packed floats, dancers, costumes and performers. The event is the largest of its kind in the world, and represents great leaps forward for Brazil, a traditionally conservative and Catholic country.

Friends should recall that it was two days after this disgraceful and blasphemous parade that my facebook page was hacked and disabled. I was sent a friendship request by someone who decorated his facebook page with beautiful traditional Catholic images, which really attracted me. I accepted the request, but amazingly, when I clicked to see what my “Catholic friend” had on his timeline, all I could see were pornographic videos.  It was just then that I was hacked, and so many of my friends were “automatically” selected and tagged, with the undeletable  porno videos shared among them—and my name appearing as the one doing the sharing! (More details on this diabolical attack are currently written on my facebook timeline).  

LifeSiteNews.com reports that photos of the desecration of Christian images at the parades—an activity which is common in homosexual “pride” events throughout the world—have circulated widely in the Brazilian media and social networking sites this year. The offensive image that is receiving the most attention is that of the male to female transsexual Viviany Beleboni in this year’s Sao Paulo parade, who was portrayed as crucified on a cross semi-nude with a sign reading “Enough of Homophobia.”


Other images reportedly taken from the parades and displayed on the Facebook page of one Brazilian congressman show additional cases of desecration of Christian symbols. One photo shows two naked lesbians on a cross kissing on the lips. Another shows two people who appear to be a man and a woman sitting naked on top of piles of crucifixes, with sacred images covering their genitals.

Other images show nude men smashing sacred images on the ground, and a transsexual stripping naked in a lewd dance in front of a church.

Rogério Rosso, representing the nation’s federal district in the House of Deputies, has responded by proposing a new law prohibiting such displays and imposing a fine, and up to eight years in prison, for perpetrators. Such legislation would reverse the penalties sought by homosexuals against Christians who express their rejection of sodomy, applying them to homosexuals and others who desecrate the sacred images of a religion.

“The intention of the bill is to protect the beliefs and objects used in religious rituals by Brazilian citizens, because what has been happening in recent years during demonstrations, particularly those of LGBTs, is what we can call ‘Christophobia,’ with the practice of obscene and degrading acts which show prejudice against Catholics...,” Rosso states in the text of the bill.

Senator Magno Malta denounced the government-funded parades for going “outside the boundaries” of proper discourse, sowing “intolerance and disrespect for religious liberty.” He has asked federal prosecutors to begin a criminal investigation of the behaviour.

“This country is Christian, and now, here, I speak in the name of millions of Brazilian Christians, Catholic Christians, spiritualists, Evangelicals from throughout the country, taking a position in their name. There is a general revulsion with this nefarious, unscrupulous and abominable attitude. You have passed the limit,” Malta said on the Senate floor following the June 7 marches.

Federal Deputy Marco Feliciano also expressed outrage in a video he published after his site was hacked and disabled by homosexual activists on the day of the march. “I’m indignant at what happened in the Gay Parade in Sao Paulo, because they used symbols of my faith—which is the Christian faith—exposed publicly in an act of complete lack of respect. I’m talking about people who think that their rights are greater than my rights, who think that they can take my Christ, the cross of my Christ, or everything that has to do with my Christ, and expose it in the street, in the middle of the filth.”

Marco Feliciano also stated that he would be filing a criminal complaint against the hackers.

“The negative sentiments expressed by legislators against such displays was reflection of widespread discontent expressed in Brazilian social media networks”, reports LifeSiteNews. “Leo Moura, a famous former soccer star, wrote on his Facebook page: “How sad it is to see this image! What does Jesus have to do with this? What mockery! What lack of respect, my God!” ”

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