Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Let Hate Go, Says The Mother Of Montreal Massacre Shooter Marc Lepine

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Dec, 2015 11:26 AM
    WHITEHORSE — Twenty-six years after her son murdered 14 women in Montreal, Monique Lepine still doesn't know why. 
     
    "Maybe he felt unloved, left aside," she said of her son Marc Lepine, while speaking this week at the 12 Days To End Violence Against Women campaign in Whitehorse.
     
    During her 90-minute, key-note talk at the Kwanlin Dun Cultural Centre, the 78-year-old woman reflected in a soft-and-calm voice on the abuse she and her children had suffered at the hands of her former husband.
     
    "If you didn't solve your emotional problems when it was the time, eventually you're growing, you're an adult, but emotionally, you're still at the age of your wound."
     
    On Dec. 6, 1989, Marc Lepine, 25, armed with a 223-calibre Sturm-Ruger rifle, separated the men from the women in a classroom at Montreal's Ecole Polytechnique.
     
    He spoke about his hatred for feminists and went on a shooting rampage, killing 14 women and wounding nine others.
     
    He then shot himself.
     
    Monique Lepine relived that day, repeating for the crowd a story about how she prayed when she heard about the shootings, only to find out the gunman was her son. 
     
    "My son killed himself, but I was the one left with all the consequences," she said.
     
    Seven years after the massacre, her 29-year-old daughter killed herself in a drug overdose, she said, noting her daughter suffered guilt about not having the chance to reconcile with her brother.
     
    Lepine said the following day she realized she had lost what she had dedicated her life to: her children.
     
    "I felt like I was dying of pain and sadness," she said.
     
    Lepine said she reflected for 17 years after the shooting on the abuse she and her children had suffered at the hands of her former husband.
     
    She said her spouse never paid child support, and never contacted her, even after learning his son was responsible for the Montreal massacre.
     
    Lepine has previously said that her son was beaten severely by his father.
     
    She said she was just starting to feel better when a deadly shooting struck Montreal's Dawson College in 2006 and the pain returned.
     
    Lepine said she decided to speak up, appearing on Quebec's TVA and writing a book, "To Live."
     
    "It took me a long time to make peace with myself because I thought I was the one responsible because everybody was saying that," she said.
     
    She has since met and cried with a family of one of her son's victims.
     
    "We were both in pain. We both had lost somebody we loved."
     
    She underscored the importance of talking about emotions.
     
    "All this hate we keep inside, if we don’t let it go, or ask forgiveness of the people we hurt, it will build up and lead to violent behaviour."
     
    When asked how to help men who commit violent acts against women, Lepine said she didn’t know.
     
    "I don’t have all the answers," she said, noting that men can have more trouble talking about their emotions. (Whitehorse Star)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ban On Willing Sex Between Underage Teens And Adults Ruled Constitutional

    Ban On Willing Sex Between Underage Teens And Adults Ruled Constitutional
    TORONTO — A cornerstone law aimed at protecting teens from sexual exploitation by adults is constitutional, even if the sex is clearly consensual, Ontario's top court has ruled.

    Ban On Willing Sex Between Underage Teens And Adults Ruled Constitutional

    B.C.'s Child Poverty Rate Tops Federal Average, Prompts Demand For Improvement

    B.C.'s Child Poverty Rate Tops Federal Average, Prompts Demand For Improvement
    A coalition of 95 British Columbia groups says the provincial government is failing to help its youngest and poorest citizens.

    B.C.'s Child Poverty Rate Tops Federal Average, Prompts Demand For Improvement

    UBC Response Makes 'mockery' Of Gravity Of Sexual Assault: Women's Group

    UBC Response Makes 'mockery' Of Gravity Of Sexual Assault: Women's Group
    Universities become part of the problem if they fail to support women who come to them with reports of sexual assault, says the head of a Vancouver women's group.

    UBC Response Makes 'mockery' Of Gravity Of Sexual Assault: Women's Group

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules
    An employer's cash shortage is no reason to short-change a wrongfully dismissed employee, Ontario's top court ruled Monday.

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules

    Calgary Man Says Giant Wave Knocked Over Tofino Whale-Watching Boat That Claimed Six Lives

    Dwayne Mazereeuw knew lives were in peril after a giant wave hit the Leviathan 11 and tossed him, his wife and 25 others into the chilling, rolling waters off the west coast of Vancouver Island.

    Calgary Man Says Giant Wave Knocked Over Tofino Whale-Watching Boat That Claimed Six Lives

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault
    Fifty-three-year-old Michael Dodd has been charged with sexual assault and sexual interference of a person under the age of 16.

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault