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  The Latvian Connection
West Coast Anti-Gay Movement on the March
By Casey Sanchez
 
 

Latvian.
A furious anti-gay movement in Latvia, marked by huge rallies in the capital city of Riga, has spilled over into the United States.

Read more on the Hatewatch Blog

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — On the first day of July, Satender Singh was gay-bashed to death. The 26-year-old Fijian of Indian descent was enjoying a holiday weekend outing at Lake Natoma with three married Indian couples around his age. Singh was delicate and dateless — two facts that did not go unnoticed by a party of Russian-speaking immigrants two picnic tables away.

According to multiple witnesses, the men began loudly harassing Singh and his friends, calling them "7-Eleven workers" and "Sodomites." The Slavic men bragged about belonging to a Russian evangelical church and told Singh that he should go to a "good church" like theirs. According to Singh's friends, the harassers sent their wives and children home, then used their cell phones to summon several more Slavic men. The members of Singh's party, which included a woman six months pregnant, became afraid and tried to leave. But the Russian-speaking men blocked them with their bodies.

Singh
Satender Singh

The pregnant woman said she didn't want to fight them.

"We don't want to fight you either," one of them replied in English. "We just want your faggot friend."

One of the Slavic men then sucker-punched Singh in the head. He fell to the ground, unconscious and bleeding. The assailants drove off in a green sedan and red sports car, hurling bottles at Singh's friends to prevent them from jotting down the license plate. Singh suffered a brain hemorrhage. By the next day, hospital tests confirmed that he was clinically brain dead. His family agreed to remove him from artificial life support July 5.

Outside Singh's hospital room, more than 100 people held a vigil. Many were Sacramento gay activists who didn't know Singh personally, but who saw his death as the tragic but inevitable result of what they describe as the growing threat of large numbers of Slavic anti-gay extremists, most of them first- or second-generation immigrants from Russia, the Ukraine and other countries of the former Soviet Union, in their city and others in the western United States.
Vusik
Andrey Vusik
In recent months, as energetic Russian-speaking "Russian Baptists" and Pentecostals in these states have organized to bring thousands to anti-gay protests, gay rights activists in Sacramento have picketed Slavic anti-gay churches, requested more police patrols in gay neighborhoods and distributed information cards warning gays and lesbians about the hostile Slavic evangelicals who they say have roughed up participants at gay pride events. Singh's death was the realization of their worst fears.

"After a couple years of fundamentalist and Slavic Christian virulent anti-gay protests at almost every Sacramento gay event in the region," said local gay rights activist Michael Gorman, "what the gay community has feared for some time has finally happened."


The Watchmen
Gay rights activists blame Singh's death on what they call "The West Coast connection" or the "U.S.-Latvia Axis of Hate," a reference to a virulent Latvian megachurch preacher who has become a central figure in the hard-line Slavic anti-gay movement in the West. And indeed, in early August, authorities announced that two Slavic men, one of whom had fled to Russia, were being charged in Singh's death, which they characterized as a hate crime.

Shevchenko
Aleksandr Shevchenko

A growing and ferocious anti-gay movement in the Sacramento Valley is centered among Russian- and Ukrainian-speaking immigrants. Many of them are members of an international extremist anti-gay movement whose adherents call themselves the Watchmen on the Walls. In Latvia, the Watchmen are popular among Christian fundamentalists and ethnic Russians, and are known for presiding over anti-gay rallies where gays and lesbians are pelted with bags of excrement. In the Western U.S., the Watchmen have a following among Russian-speaking evangelicals from the former Soviet Union. Members are increasingly active in several cities long known as gay-friendly enclaves, including Sacramento, Seattle and Portland, Ore.

Vlad Kusakin, the host of a Russian-language anti-gay radio show in Sacramento and the publisher of a Russian-language newspaper in Seattle, told The Seattle Times in January that God has "made an injection" of high numbers of anti-gay Slavic evangelicals into traditionally liberal West Coast cities. "In those places where the disease is progressing, God made a divine penicillin," Kusakin said.

 
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The Latvian Connection
Issue 127 | Fall 2007
 
EDITORIAL
Margins to the Mainstream
THE LATVIAN CONNECTION
West Coast Anti-Gay Movement on the March
THE RAVENING WOLF
Catholic-Hating Organization Reemerges
REBIRTH OF A NATION
Black Supremacist Cult Rises Again
MEMPHIS SEWAGE
In Tennessee, a Racist Radio Host Thrives
In His Own Words
THE OH-REALLY FACTOR
Fox 'Expert' Decries Bogus Lesbian Gangs
THE BIG LIE
Criminal Cases Exploited to Attack Blacks
ARMED IN ALABAMA
Militiamen Arrested With Grenade Arsenal
Armados en Alabama
THE SECRET
Brother of Neo-Nazi Leader Speaks Out
DOGFIGHT
Southern Heritage Group Split Again
WHITE SPACE
Racist Social Networking Site is Back
THE PIED PIPER
Skinhead Recruiter Faces Accusations
PUBLIC ENEMY
Utah Racist Charged in Officer’s Murder
BRIEFS
Amid Talk of Black ‘Savages,’ An Exception
Wife Accuses Georgia Judge of Neo-Nazism
Nativist Video Depicts Apparent Shooting
Un video nativista describe un supuesto tiroteo fronterizo
Would-Be Clinic Bomber Gets 40 Years
Terrorist, '14 Words' Author, Dies in Prison
Second Minuteman Group in Bitter Split
Un segundo grupo de milicianos (minutemen) se separa en medio de acusaciones
Duke Supporter Elected to Louisiana GOP
Navy Extremist Disciplined, Reassigned
The Blotter: Updates on Extremism and the Law
Overheard: Quotes From the Right
Snapshot: Vanguard News Network Arrest
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS
Polish Neo-Nazi Arrested With Plans
British Arrest Animal Rights Activists
Russian Skins Attack Rights Campaigners
Europe Outlaws Race Hate Incitement
MEDIA ON THE RIGHT
Film Delves Into Neo-Nazi Family
LEGAL BRIEF
When Are Threats Protected Speech?
THE LAST WORD
Hate Site Lauds Hitler’s 'Greatness'