Times Colonist

Film speaks for young, gay Mormons

Rock singer and documentar­y maker support ‘voiceless’

- BRADY McCOMBS and RYAN PEARSON

PARK CITY, Utah

The Mormon frontman of the rock band Imagine Dragons hopes the Sundance Film Festival documentar­y that follows his journey to becoming an advocate for LGBT Mormon youth triggers real change by his religion’s leaders and puts an end to what he calls “shaming” of gay and lesbian kids in the religion.

Singer Dan Reynolds said he and director Don Argott made the film Believer to put “a face to the faceless and a voice to the voiceless.” His goal is to show leaders from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints that opposition to same-sex relationsh­ips is damaging the self-worth of gay, lesbian and transgende­r kids.

“These kids are being told their most innate sense of being is sinful,” said Reynolds, a Mormon from Las Vegas. “Shaming is so destructiv­e.”

The film received a standing ovation at its première in Park City last Sunday. It will air on HBO in the summer.

The Utah-based Mormon religion of 16 million members worldwide is holding firm to doctrinal opposition of gay marriage and homosexual activity while trying to foster an empathetic stance toward LGBT people and end bullying.

Last year, church leaders updated a website created in 2012 to let members know that attraction to people of the same sex is not a sin or a measure of their faithfulne­ss and may never go away. But the church reminded members that being in an intimate same-sex relationsh­ip is a sin because it violates fundamenta­l doctrinal beliefs that will not change.

In the film, Argott follows Reynolds and former Mormon Tyler Glenn, a gay lead singer of Neon Trees, as they plan the LoveLoud Festival, a concert in Utah last summer headlined by Imagine Dragons that raised funds for organizati­ons supporting at-risk LGBT youth.

The Mormon church supported the festival, praising organizers for bringing “people together to address teen safety and to express respect and love for all of God’s children.”

Church spokesman Eric Hawkins said in a statement Tuesday that the religion’s support of the festival was part of a message that’s not new for the religion.

“We have repeatedly denounced cruelty, rejection, bullying and the mistreatme­nt of others,” Hawkins said. “We lobbied in support of Utah’s strong anti-discrimina­tion laws. We want our LGBT brothers and sisters to know that there is a place for them and their contributi­ons in the church. There is more to do and we remain fully committed to these efforts moving forward.”

Reynolds, 30, said this week that “platitudes” from church officials about love for LGBT Mormons and telling them “there’s a place for them” isn’t enough.

He has talked with church leaders about the issue and hopes to continue doing so, but said the church’s “platitudes are empty words” until and unless it changes its doctrine to accommodat­e gay marriage and homosexual sex.

The Mormon church has shown no indication it will consider changing the belief. Members believe church doctrine can only be altered through revelation­s from God.

Asked by reporters last week about how church will deal with LGBT issues, new church president Russell M. Nelson and one of his top counsellor­s said they are trying to balance the “love of the Lord and the law of the Lord.”

Nelson previously defended the church’s 2015 decision to adopt new rules banning children living with gay parents from being baptized until age 18 and clarifying that people in same-sex relationsh­ips are considered apostates, meaning they can be kicked out of the religion.

Reynolds said rising suicide rates in Utah were a big reason behind his decision to make the film, which follows his life for a year as he and Glenn decide to create the LoveLoud Festival.

The number of yearly suicides for youth ages 10-17 in Utah has spiked to alarming levels in the past five years, more than double the average from the previous decade. LGBT advocacy groups say it could be linked to the struggle by gay and lesbian Mormon teens to feel accepted. As many of two-thirds of Utah’s three million residents are Mormons.

State and federal health investigat­ors say more needs to be done assess the role sexual orientatio­n plays in the rise of teen suicides, but the informatio­n available shows that only a fraction of the cases were definitely linked to the youth’s sexual orientatio­n.

Reynolds, who is married to a woman and has three daughters, said he has been aware of the issue since he grew up with LGBT Mormon friends. The film was a way for him to end his silence on an important topic, he said.

“This isn’t just pointing a finger at Mormonism, it’s pointing a finger at all of us,” Reynolds said.

 ??  ?? Don Argott, left, the director of Believer, and Imagine Dragons’ Dan Reynolds at the Sundance Film Festival last Sunday.
Don Argott, left, the director of Believer, and Imagine Dragons’ Dan Reynolds at the Sundance Film Festival last Sunday.

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