In February, when Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signed an anti-gay bill that imposed harsh prison terms for acts of homosexuality, most Americans were probably clueless about the billās ties to U.S. conservative Christians.
In the documentary God Loves Ugandaāwhich airs Monday on PBSāAcademy Award-winning director Roger Ross Williams shines a light on the U.S. evangelical movement in Africa and how its homophobic rhetoric is fueling a backlash against gays, sometimes with deadly consequences.
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Homosexuality was already illegal in Uganda. In fact, according to Amnesty International (pdf), 38 of 54 African countries have anti-gay laws on the books, mostly the result of colonial rule. But lawmakers in Uganda sought to strengthen those lawsāat one point a bill was drafted to include the death penaltyāto prevent Westerners from promoting homosexuality to Ugandan children, a notion thatās constantly reinforced by evangelical leaders such as Scott Lively, a key player in the anti-gay evangelical movement in Africa. (His other major claim to fame is being the author of a widely discredited book that argues that gays were behind the Holocaust.)
In the film, Williams follows young missionaries from the International House of Prayer, or IHOP, the Kansas City, Mo.-based church founded by Mike Bickle, who once famously said that Oprah Winfrey was the āforerunnerā to the anti-Christ. Weāre introduced to several of IHOPās senior leaders, including Lou Engle, who is well-known for holding anti-gay rallies in the U.S. and Africa.
Williams, who grew up in the church in Pennsylvania and happens to be gay, got the idea to do the film after reading a report that charged that U.S. evangelicals are using African church leaders to peddle anti-gay hatred throughout the continent. (Nigeria also signed a strict anti-gay bill in January.)
On his first research trip to Uganda, Williams met David Kato, the Ugandan LGBT activist who would be bludgeoned to death with a hammer months after he was outed by a Ugandan newspaper that ran photos of several other supposed gay people with a banner urging readers to āhang them.ā
āHe [Kato] told me this is a story that hasnāt been told and he kind of anointed me to go off and make the film,ā Williams said.
Officials claim Katoās death was the result of a robbery, but his supporters believe he was targeted. His funeral, and the anti-gay protesters who show up to disrupt the service, are featured in the film.
Williams, who won an Oscar for his 2010 documentary short Music by Prudence, making him the first African American to win for directing and producing a film, took a moment to talk to The Root about the lasting impact American evangelicals may have on Uganda and Africa.
The Root: How were you able to convince IHOP to give you so much access for the documentary?
Roger Ross Williams: When I approached IHOP, I said I wanted to talk about the anti-homosexual bill, the influence of American evangelicals and they immediately said, āYouāre part of the gay agenda; why should we do this?ā I said, Iām not part of the gay agenda. I may be gay, but Iām a filmmaker and Iām going to let you speak for yourself and if you believe what you believe in, if you believe this is biblical truth, then you need to stand up for your beliefs. And they totally agreed with that.Ā
TR: Why is Uganda so important to evangelical groups like IHOP?
RRW: Because Uganda was the perfect storm, because Uganda had [one of] the highest HIV/AIDS rates in Africa [in the early ā80s], because Uganda was devastated by [then-President Idi] Amin and civil war and it was a vulnerable population. The Pentecostal movement was underground because Idi Amin outlawed it. When Amin fell [in 1979], and Bickle and these guys were there, [the Ugandans] welcomed them because they brought in money and resources. [The evangelicals] have invested incredible resources in that country and they realized they could create their nirvana; they could create their perfect Christian nation.Ā
TR: It seems as though this bill has helped fuel an escalation in anti-gay violence in Uganda. Is there something cultural in play?
RRW: Thereās two reasons: One is that what Scott Lively and what the Americans said is, that homosexuals are there to recruit children and, as Scott Lively says in the film, their ultimate goal is to wipe out society. Culturally, when someone comes in and threatens your tribe and your family, you kill them, you go to war, and thatās what they see this asāthis force from the West is coming in to destroy their families and destroy their society.
The other thing is itās political. Ugandans are frustrated. They have a corrupt government and they use it as a way to take out their frustrations. It’s scapegoating. Itās what happens in any genocideāpeople dehumanize and demonize a certain group and they take out all their frustration on that group of people. And thatās what’s weāre seeing happening in Uganda right now.
TR: What effect will the law have on HIV/AIDS in Uganda?
RRW: Devastating. The Ugandan government has already raided a clinic that provided [services to AIDS patients]. Itās devastating because what the law says is that you canāt serve that community. Itās going to be devastating.
TR: Like IHOP, there will be those who say because youāre a gay man, you do have an agenda. What do you say to that?
RRW: I donāt put words in anyoneās mouth. In the film Iām just a fly on the wall. Itās up to the viewer to decide what they think or what they feel about what anyone is doing. I donāt have any judgment myself and thatās important to me as a filmmaker.
I wanted to show kids who innocently think theyāre going to spread what they believe is biblical truth, but how that gets interpreted in Africa. And because of what they represent in Americaātheyāre white and blond, theyāre from middle America, they represent wealth and power and money and fameāthat those kids hold weight and power even over an elderly woman in a hut. These kids donāt understand the culture theyāre going into; they donāt seem to careāitās like an adventure. But itās causing lasting damage.
God Loves Uganda premieres Monday on the PBS series Independent Lens. Check local listings for times.
Genetta M. Adams is a senior editor at The Root. Follow her on Twitter.
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