On Saturday, Feb. 19, hundreds of Peruvian Catholics gathered at the
entrance to the Cathedral of Lima to pray a Rosary for Peace in response
to a “Kiss-in Against Homophobia” organized by a small group of
homosexuals and lesbians just a few yards away from the church.
This was the second time gay activists staged a “kiss-in,” after
their first protest ended with police forcibly removing them from the
steps of the cathedral on Feb. 12.
This time they came with the explicit blessing of Lima’s mayor,
Susana Villaran, who has voiced her support for homosexual unions on
numerous occasions.
Despite a heavy media campaign to promote the Feb. 19 “kiss-in,” only eight people showed up in Lima’s central square.
In response to the planned protest, some 200 Catholics showed up at
3:30 p.m. outside the cathedral and formed a human barrier for more than
three hours. The group spent the time peacefully praying the Rosary and
singing hymns.
Not surprisingly, a large contingent of reporters and cameramen
showed up to cover the protest by three gay couples and a pair of
lesbians.
Daniel Torres Cox, who came to pray the rosary, told ACI Prensa, “We
are really here to protect our faith in some way.”
He called the
homosexual protest “an attack on what we believe in, and that’s why we
are here, to simply protect that.”
Nancy Freundt of the Center for the Promotion of Natural Family
Planning said that in Peru homosexuals are not persecuted, “but they do
provoke and challenge us because they want to do away with every moral
principle, and for them the Catholic Church represents everything they
want to tear down.
“The Catholic Church isn’t a pile of bricks. The Church is all of us Catholics who live and profess our faith,” Freundt said.
The Catholics gathered outside the cathedral ended their prayers
around 6:45 p.m., after successfully preventing the homosexual couples
from approaching the cathedral.
The group of Catholics promised they
would gather again if the gay activists staged another protest.
The “Kiss-in Against Homophobia” was organized by gay activists to
protest the widespread rejection of homosexual unions in Peru.
A measure
that would have allowed such unions was shelved by the Peruvian
Congress on Feb.8 as unconstitutional.
The country’s Constitution
establishes that marriage is a union between one man and one woman.
Recent polls show that 75 percent of Peruvians oppose homosexual “marriage.”