Family Watch International
Family Watch International (FWI) is a fundamentalist Christian lobbying organization. Founded in 1999, the organization opposes homosexuality, legal abortion, birth control, comprehensive sex education, and other things that it regards as threats to the divinely ordained "natural family." It has a strong presence in Africa, where it promotes conservative policy and attitudes about sexuality through its United Nations (UN) consultative status.
Under the name Global Helping to Advance Women and Children it is registered as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in Gilbert, Arizona in the United States.
The Southern Poverty Law Center classifies FWI as a hate group.
The organization's president, Sharon Slater, cofounded FWI after attending the World Congress of Families in Geneva, Switzerland in 1999. The organization remains affiliated with the World Congress of Families. Martin Ssempa, a FWI volunteer coordinator and pastor in Uganda, emerged in the 2010s as a prominent supporter of a bill making homosexuality punishable by death. FWI distanced itself from Ssempa when his support for the bill became public. Slater wrote that her organization had a "complicated" position on the Ugandan anti-homosexuality bill.
In 2011 and 2012 FWI cosponsored a meeting for UN delegates called the Global Family Policy Forum. Speakers at the forum advocated for the idea of "curing" homosexuality using conversion therapy.
Strategy and Views
FWI supports the criminalization of homosexuality in Africa and in the United States. It opposes the repeal of American sodomy laws. In Nigeria, where homosexual behavior is punishable by up to 14 years in prison and by stoning in northern Nigeria, Slater opposes efforts to remove these punishments. She refers to legalizing LGBT relationships as "fictitious sexual rights."
Reverend Kapya John Kaoma considers FWI part of colonialism in Africa, through which the American Christian right works to globalize the American culture wars and to expand its power on African soil. Psychologist Warren Throckmorton writes that "the activities of FWI reveal a very uncomplicated,
Black-and-white Strategy:
Laws opposing homosexuality in any form should be retained, while those which might provide basic freedoms to gays are opposed as bad for everybody else." He observes that FWI fights ideological battles in Africa and at the UN that American religious conservatives have largely lost in their home country.
Family Watch International (FWI) is a fundamentalist Christian lobbying organization. Founded in 1999, the organization opposes homosexuality, legal abortion, birth control, comprehensive sex education, and other things that it regards as threats to the divinely ordained "natural family." It has a strong presence in Africa, where it promotes conservative policy and attitudes about sexuality through its United Nations (UN) consultative status.
Under the name Global Helping to Advance Women and Children it is registered as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in Gilbert, Arizona in the United States.
The Southern Poverty Law Center classifies FWI as a hate group.
The organization's president, Sharon Slater, cofounded FWI after attending the World Congress of Families in Geneva, Switzerland in 1999. The organization remains affiliated with the World Congress of Families. Martin Ssempa, a FWI volunteer coordinator and pastor in Uganda, emerged in the 2010s as a prominent supporter of a bill making homosexuality punishable by death. FWI distanced itself from Ssempa when his support for the bill became public. Slater wrote that her organization had a "complicated" position on the Ugandan anti-homosexuality bill.
In 2011 and 2012 FWI cosponsored a meeting for UN delegates called the Global Family Policy Forum. Speakers at the forum advocated for the idea of "curing" homosexuality using conversion therapy.
Strategy and Views
FWI supports the criminalization of homosexuality in Africa and in the United States. It opposes the repeal of American sodomy laws. In Nigeria, where homosexual behavior is punishable by up to 14 years in prison and by stoning in northern Nigeria, Slater opposes efforts to remove these punishments. She refers to legalizing LGBT relationships as "fictitious sexual rights."
Reverend Kapya John Kaoma considers FWI part of colonialism in Africa, through which the American Christian right works to globalize the American culture wars and to expand its power on African soil. Psychologist Warren Throckmorton writes that "the activities of FWI reveal a very uncomplicated,
Black-and-white Strategy:
Laws opposing homosexuality in any form should be retained, while those which might provide basic freedoms to gays are opposed as bad for everybody else." He observes that FWI fights ideological battles in Africa and at the UN that American religious conservatives have largely lost in their home country.
Proudly powered by Weebly