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The black, gay community may be out – but it's not proud
Mississippi wedding venue refuses interracial pair over owner's Christian faith - BBC News
By Chauncey Alcorn For Dailymail. The owners of a Mississippi wedding venue that reneged on renting to an engaged couple after finding out the groom and bride-to be were from two different races says hosting an interracial marriage would violate their Christian beliefs. Welch on Saturday posted video of her conversation with one of the alleged owners of Boone's Camp Event Hall in Booneville, Mississippi after Welch said the business changed its mind about hosting a wedding for her brother - who, like Welch, is black. Welch told Deep South Voice that her brother and his fiancee, a white woman, had been coordinating wedding plans with Boone's for about a week before the owners sent them a note saying the business had decided not to facilitate their union, 'because of the venue's beliefs'.
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A Mississippi event hall apparently refused to rent the space to an interracial couple for their wedding , citing the owners' "religious beliefs," a video posted by the groom's sister who recorded a conversation with an employee shows. LaKambria Welch, 24, drove to Boone's Camp Event Hall in Booneville, Mississippi, over Labor Day weekend to confront the owner about why her brother's request to book the venue was denied, she told Deep South Voice , which first reported the story. Welch's brother, who is black, and his white fiancee were in contact with the owner of the venue but suddenly received a message that they would not be permitted to rent the space because of the venue's "beliefs," Welch told the outlet. The couple had already booked a date to tour the space when they received the message, Welch told The Washington Post. Welch recorded her encounter with a woman at the venue, which begins as the employee says, "First of all, we don't do gay weddings or mixed race , because of our Christian race -- I mean, our Christian beliefs.