Matthew Shepard finally laid to rest 20 years after he was killed for being gay
Matthew Shepard will finally be laid to rest Friday at the Washington National Cathedral, more than 20 years after being killed by two men because he was gay.
"We're comforted to know he will be among other Americans who have done so much for our country," his parents said in a statement earlier this month. "This is incredibly meaningful for our family and for everyone who has known him."
The service was to be presided over by the Right Rev. V. Gene Robinson, the first openly gay priest to be consecrated a bishop in the Episcopal Church.
The National Cathedral in Northwest Washington, D.C., has been a longtime supporter of the full inclusion of LGBT people in church and "considers LGBT equality the great civil rights issue of church in the 21st century," its website says. It hosted its first same-sex wedding in 2010.
It's a fitting resting place for Shepard, whose death galvanized the LGBTQ civil rights movement and whose legacy led to the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, also named for a black man killed by three white supremacists in Texas.
Shepard was a 21-year-old college student at the University of Wyoming in October 1998 when he was robbed, beaten and tied to a fence and left for dead by two men he met in a bar.
He died six days later, on October 12, 1998, at a hospital in Colorado.
The two men were convicted of kidnapping and murder in the attack, which police said was initially a robbery. But, they said, Shepard was targeted because of his sexual orientation.
Shepard's parents previously said the National Cathedral was the only place they believed his remains would be safe from desecration.
"We didn't want to leave him in Wyoming to be a point of pilgrimage that may be a nuisance to other families in a cemetery," they said earlier this month. "We didn't want to open up the option for vandalism. So we had him cremated and held onto the urn until we figured out the proper thing to do."
By Dakin Andone, CNN.The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.
The Gayly. 10/26/2018 @ 9:54 a.m. CST.