Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

First Pride March In Steinbach, Man., Draws Thousands

The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2016 11:17 AM
    STEINBACH, Man. — A former member of a religious colony told the first Pride parade ever held in this small Manitoba city how important it is for gay people to speak up and share their stories.
     
    "I expose my life so that others can know that they are not alone … they too deserve a happy, fulfilling life," said Tyrone Hofer before a cheering crowd.
     
    Hofer, a former member of a conservative colony of Hutterian Brethren, said he wished he'd had someone to talk to as he was growing up and struggling with his sexual identity. That's why, he said, he and other openly gay Hutterites are now speaking publicly.
     
    "Instead of asking yourself, 'what would Jesus do?,' ask yourself, 'what did Jesus do?' " he said.
     
    RCMP estimated 3,000 people attended the Pride march, far higher than the anticipated 1,000. Police had to open a second street to accommodate everyone.
     
    The city's population is roughly 14,000.
     
    Attendees were a mix of locals, those who made the 60-kilometre drive from Winnipeg and others who had come from as far as Ottawa and Toronto.
     
    There were no overt signs of religious or anti-gay protest.
     
    Marchers — who included members of the military as well as red serge-clad Mounties — gathered in a local park before walking a short distance to city hall to hear strong and sometimes emotional messages of support for local LGBTQ people.
     
    Some spoke openly of the pain and isolation they felt in a small-c conservative area often dubbed Manitoba's Bible Belt.
     
     
    Hofer left his southern Manitoba colony five years ago because he was gay.
     
    "For gays … it was extremely difficult," he said. "What I found most challenging was listening to what people were saying about gay people — about me.
     
    "The worst part was not being able to speak out and defend myself. I had to absorb those verbal insults and find ways to deal with them on my own. I started to hate myself for being gay," Hofer said.
     
    He said he prayed to God to "be fixed."
     
    After coming out publicly a year ago, Hofer said he found "overwhelming" support among friends, but little to none among family and fellow Hutterites.
     
    Michelle McHale, one of the organizers of Saturday's parade, became active when her child was bullied because of McHale's same-sex partner.
     
    McHale fought unsuccessfully to broaden some area school division's policies, which state that same-sex relationships cannot be discussed in classrooms prior to high school, even if students ask questions.
     
    She has filed a human rights complaint over the issue.
     
    But McHale said the larger than-expected turnout sends the message to politicians that "change needs to happen.
     
    "For people to come out in this many numbers — it can' t be ignored. "
     
    Conservative MP Ted Falk declined to attend the event citing a conflict with his "values of faith, family and community." Steinbach's mayor and legislature representative also did not attend, citing prior commitments.
     
    Saint Boniface-Saint Vital Liberal MP Dan Vandal read out a statement of support for the Pride effort penned by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
     
    Rich diversity is "at the core of our national identity," Trudeau's statement said.
     
    "We must continue to support those who have experienced discrimination, and remember that we cannot let up on the fight against bigotry."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mike Duffy Says He Resisted Harper PMO Scenario For Repaying Expenses

    Mike Duffy Says He Resisted Harper PMO Scenario For Repaying Expenses
    OTTAWA — Sen. Mike Duffy says he resisted "at every opportunity" a scenario laid out for him by the former Prime Minister's Office to tell the public he had made a mistake and was repaying his Senate expenses.

    Mike Duffy Says He Resisted Harper PMO Scenario For Repaying Expenses

    Kathleen Wynne To Apologize For 1912 Regulation Banning French In Ontario Primary Schools

    TORONTO — Premier Kathleen Wynne is willing to apologize to Ontario Francophones for a 1912 regulation that prohibited teachers in elementary schools from speaking with students in French.

    Kathleen Wynne To Apologize For 1912 Regulation Banning French In Ontario Primary Schools

    BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil

    BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil
    TORONTO — A report by the Bank of Montreal suggests Canadian drivers aren't reaping the full benefit of lower oil prices when it comes to prices at the pump.

    BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil

    A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals

    A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals
     Harjit Sajjan, Canada's new defence minister, is uniquely qualified to know how Ottawa's abstract policy decisions can be bent, twisted and mangled in the far-flung corners of the globe — sometimes to the detriment of those in uniform.

    A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals

    Arvind Kejriwal Calls PM Modi a ‘Coward, Psychopath,’ After CBI Raid; BJP Hits Back

    Arvind Kejriwal Calls PM Modi a ‘Coward, Psychopath,’ After CBI Raid; BJP Hits Back
    Kejriwal said the CBI team was looking for a report of the inquiry commission that had probed, on his instructions, the affairs of the DDCA which he alleged was a den of corruption.

    Arvind Kejriwal Calls PM Modi a ‘Coward, Psychopath,’ After CBI Raid; BJP Hits Back

    BC Hydro Substation Fire Sending Black Smoke Into Air In Richmond, B.C.

    BC Hydro Substation Fire Sending Black Smoke Into Air In Richmond, B.C.
    Police say that air quality may be affected, in the area of No. 4 Rd. and River Rd.

    BC Hydro Substation Fire Sending Black Smoke Into Air In Richmond, B.C.