Doughnut shop blasted for partnering with ‘homophobic’ Salvation Army
A doughnut shop has received a backlash after announcing a fundraising appeal with the āhomophobicā Salvation Army.
Holy Donut posted a holiday promotion on its Facebook page which was intended to raise money in order to provide gifts to children in need.
However, some users did not take kindly to the fact that this was in partnership with The Salvation Army.
Comments focused on how the charity has a āhistory of turning away LGBT people and supporting anti-LGBT lawsā and engages in āactive homophobia.ā
This comes as the charity announced it is addressing its negative image in the LGBT+ community ā though many remain unconvinced.
On a Facebook post, which has since been removed, Holy Donut announced plans to lead a fundraiser to support local children by way of The Salvation Army.
Five children were named in the post with the intention of asking customers to contribute to the familyās needs.
The shop would reward customers with free doughnuts and t-shirts.
Hundreds of comments soon followed, with many users voicing their displeasure at the partnership.
āPeople are going to boycott The Holy Donut because of YOUR choices. Do you see what weāre getting at?ā one Facebook user said.
āYouāre supporting an establishment that doesnāt support your customers, so your customers will stop supporting you,ā they added.
Another said: āThey proselytise to the people in their programmes, they reject LGBT people from their shelters.
āThey have tried to scrub their image, but still discriminate.ā
This reaction echoes a campaign last year to boycott the ābigotedā Salvation Army.
Some users also took to rating the shop 1 star on their Facebook Page.
āNot only are your donuts sub-par, but youāre homophobic and transphobic business practices have really been showing your true colours,ā a user said.
Another said: āSadly, we wonāt be returning to the Holy Donut. Considering the recent debacle and their deleting of pro-LGBT comments, whilst allowing viciously anti-gay comments to say.ā
Holy Donut staff were allegedly unaware of the charityās homophobic past.
In a post, also since deleted, Holy Donut defended itself, writing: āIt would never have crossed our mind to even look into that.
āWe do not support the Salvation Army or consider them our āpartnerā for this project, they simply linked us to a needy family.
āPeople have suggested that we āpretendā not to know of the Salvation Armyās reputation. We have nothing to gain here, we just wanted to help a family in need.
āIt seems we have offended people which obviously we regret and that was not our intention in a holiday gift drive.ā
This backlash comes as the Salvation Army dismissed claims that it has a poor record on LGBT rights as a āmythā.
Such āmythsā include a continued ban on gay people from serving as members unless they remain celibate.
And in 2014, a transgender woman was refused shelter by The Salvation Army as she hadnāt had surgery, leaving her homeless.