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US venue cites Christian 'beliefs' in refusing mixed race wedding

The groom's sister then went to the venue to ask in-person why the wedding had been rejected, filming an exchange in which a woman bluntly told her: "We don't do gay weddings or mixed race."

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Washington, United States
Wed, September 4, 2019

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US venue cites Christian 'beliefs' in refusing mixed race wedding A couple kiss before their wedding on Valentine's day at the South African world heritage site and former Apartheid prison where Nelson Mandela spent 18 years of imprisonment, Robben Island, near Cape Town, on February 14, 2015. Since 2000, the former prison island and Capetonian tourist landmark has hosted a special Valentine’s Day wedding ceremony for couples from across the globe. (AFP/Jennifer Bruce)

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n event venue in the southern United States refused to host a mixed race couple's wedding, stating that the union went against its "Christian beliefs," in a viral video that has drawn a barrage of criticism.

The husband-and-wife-to-be -- he black and she white -- had been in contact with Boone's Camp Event Hall in Mississippi for several days, before receiving an email rejecting their request to hold their nuptials at the facility.

The groom's sister then went to the venue to ask in-person why the wedding had been rejected, filming an exchange in which a woman bluntly told her: "We don't do gay weddings or mixed race."

Asked why, the woman responded: "Because of our Christian race, I mean our Christian beliefs."

The episode gained traction following an article published Sunday by local news website Deep South Voice.

Following the episode, the event space's Facebook page was taken down, but not before the woman posted several excuses, stating that she had grown up in Mississippi where the unspoken rule dictated "staying with your own race."

At her husband's request, she said, she had searched the Bible for text supporting her notions on mixed race marriages.

"After searching Saturday evening, Saturday night, most of the day Sunday and sitting down with my pastor Sunday night after church I have come to the conclusion my decision which was based on what I had thought was correct to be supported by The Bible was incorrect!" she posted.

Marriage between blacks and whites was legalized in the United States in the 1967 Supreme Court decision Loving v. Virginia.

In 2016 Mississippi, which is located in the US Bible Belt, passed a "religious freedom" bill allowing businesses to refuse services based on religious beliefs about same-sex marriage or transgender people.

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