More posters vandalized in leadup to big weekend
PRIDE / Be sinful, don't repent
Marcus McCann / Ottawa / Friday, August 24, 2007
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Everything I've ever done,
Everything I ever do,
Every place I've ever been,
Everywhere I'm going to,
It's a sin.
-Petshop Boys, "It's A Sin"



We all like to get a bit sinful during Pride.

But a vandal, armed with a black marker, has been defacing posters advertising Saturday's dyke march and Friday's A Certain Sort party with one word in all capital letters: sin. The word "Repent" and crude crosses have also been added to some posters.

Dyke march organizer and Capital Xtra columnist Ariel Troster says the city's lezzies won't be put off by the vandal.

"The whole idea of pride is to be out there, to be sexual, to be a bit sinful," says Troster.

She adds that the queer community in Hintonburg is diverse. The defaced posters were put up near two churches, but Ottawa's gays have been able to co-exist with religious groups without mishaps.

"When I was putting up the posters, it felt really great to have some visibility in my community," she says.

"The actions of one jerk who defaced the posters will not keep us down."

This follows news earlier in the week that Capital Pride filed a police report after dozens of their posters were ripped down in Westboro. After being replaced, they were ripped down a second time within hours, leading Pride chair Gordon Boissonneault and other volunteers steaming.

Capital Xtra reported last year that gay-themed posters are regularly defaced, torn down or plastered over. The lack of sufficient space for postering is an ongoing issue with the local arts community and bylaw officers selectively enforce the laws on postering, targeting especially queer and punk-themed notices.

In 1993, The Supreme Court Of Canada ruled in Ramsden V Peterborough that postering is a protected form of expression. Given its long history in Canada and Europe as a method of political and social communication, postering is important and remains an inexpensive way to get unfiltered messages to a wide audience, the decision said.


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Reader Comments


 
Pride isn't about sin
Though I object with the defacement of the posters (enough so that I documented them with my camera and blogged about it) I take objection to your quote that Pride is a time for sinning and that expressing sexuality is a sin. I find this logic to be a strange catch-22. If you believed it was a sin, why would you celebrate that? The whole concept of sin is about policing behaviour through guilt and dogma. Instead, I chose to believe that all consensual types of sexuality are beautiful, fun and shameless and can be spiritually fulfilling and empowering. I don't personally believe in sin, and I certainly can't relate to people who believe that sex between two consenting lovers is a sinful. I would have much preferred if your article dropped its tongue-in-cheek approach and actually focussed on the fact that there are queer Christians and believers from other faiths who do not believe that their God is against them, and that there are also non-religious queers who have a shame-free relationship with their sexuality. We all have a right to coexist without being indoctrinated by someone else. The streets of Ottawa are public space and it would be nice if religious zealots and other bigots would allow the GLBTQ community and the kinky community (which do not necessarily overlap) to poster for events and express their freedom to organise and their freedom to express themselves.

I think the defacement of these posters is shameful, immature and an unfortunate expression of hostility in a city that is otherwise quite tolerant (if not hospitable) to diversity.

caro moffatt, ottawa on
08/24/07 12:35 PM EST
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But sin is delicious! (Just kidding)
Thanks Caro ... my comments were meant to be cheeky. But I totally agree. While I may joke about sin, it's the religious zealots that give others a bad name. I put up those posters near a church, specifically because I believe that queer posters and churches can and should co-exist in the same neighbourhood. Still, I did want to put it out there that Pride is about visibility -- and that means being saucy and sexual. It's something to celebrate, not to be ashamed of. They may call it sin -- I call it joy.
Ariel Troster, Ottawa Ontario
08/24/07 4:24 PM EST
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Everything fun is a sin
I think Ariel's sassy comments about sin hit the nail on the head. If an activity is fun, some ancient religious asshole has labelled it a sin. It's how religions control people, leaving activities connected to the church and that religion's "good book" as the only acceptable recreational activities. Of course free expression of sexuality is a sin in most religions - it provides a competing path to self-actualization and self-fulfillment and so has been declared verboten.

I look forward to the day when our evolving secular society doesn't give a damn about what any church says is an appropriate activity. In the meantime, why not take a playful approach and enjoy commiting sins?

Gareth Kirkby, Ottawa ON
08/24/07 4:52 PM EST
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