Difference between revisions of "Kevin Annett"

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On May 29, 2011, Annett was denied entry into England at Stansted airport, and briefly held in an immigration prison before being deported. The only explanation offered was that giving public lectures was not an appropriate activity for visitors to UK. He had been scheduled to speak at a public rally in London against child trafficking by church and state.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20120330155749/http://www.hiddenfromhistory.org/RecentUpdatesampArticles/May302011UrgentAlertKevinAnnettJailed/tabid/152/Default.aspx Hidden from History]</ref>
 
On May 29, 2011, Annett was denied entry into England at Stansted airport, and briefly held in an immigration prison before being deported. The only explanation offered was that giving public lectures was not an appropriate activity for visitors to UK. He had been scheduled to speak at a public rally in London against child trafficking by church and state.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20120330155749/http://www.hiddenfromhistory.org/RecentUpdatesampArticles/May302011UrgentAlertKevinAnnettJailed/tabid/152/Default.aspx Hidden from History]</ref>
  
==Continued activism==
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==The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State==
Kevin Annett continues his activism
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{FA|The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State}}
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Kevin Annett continues his activism, founding [[The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State]] on June 15, 2010. This is a network of activists who have given up on the legal systems of nation states and constituted their own. After a "Tribunal of Conscience" in Brussels in the fall of 2012, they reviewed the availabl evidence before indicting all 30 defendants on February 25, 2013 for perpetrating or concealing the [[Candian genocide]]. These defendants included then [[Joseph Ratzinger]] (formerly Pope Benedict XVI), [[Tarcisio Bertone]] former Cardinal, [[Elizabeth Windsor]] "Queen of England" and Canadian Prime Minister [[Stephen Harper]].
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
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==See Also==
 
==See Also==
 
*[[File:Genocide.pdf]] - Hidden History: The Canadian Holocaust
 
*[[File:Genocide.pdf]] - Hidden History: The Canadian Holocaust

Revision as of 18:03, 31 May 2014

Person.png Kevin Annett   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(whistleblower, activist, writer)
KevinAnnett.jpg
Born1956
ExposedCanadian genocide
Owner ofKevin Annett/Website
Founder ofInternational Common Law Court of Justice, Kevin Annett/Website
SubpageKevin Annett/Website
When he reported that the church he was a minister of was involved in genocide, Rev. Kevin Annett was told to shut up. He didn't. He wrote books and made a movie about it. His Wikipedia page has been removed more than once as "non-notable" because he has bee blacklisted by corporate media.

Kevin D. Annett (aka. Kevin McNamee-Annett, and Eagle Strong Voice) is a Canadian writer and former minister of the United Church of Canada. He has authored three books about Canadian aboriginals - Love and Death in the Valley, Hidden from History: The Canadian Holocaust and Unrepentant: Disrobing the Emperor. His Ph.D thesis on the topic of the Canadian genocide was blocked by the establishment so he used it as source material for a video instead, publishing Unrepentant in 2007 and posting it on the WWW and achieving over 500,000 hits within a year[1].

His treatment at the hands of the Canadian Establishment over his persistent, selfless advocacy for the indigenous populations of Canada, is an object lesson in the gross self-serving dishonesties, corruption and hypocrisies of power.

Education and ministry

In the 1980s, Kevin graduated from the University of British Columbia with a Bachelor's degree in anthropology and a Master's degree in political science. In 1990, he graduated from the Vancouver School of Theology with a Master of Divinity, and was subsequently ordained by British Columbia Conference of the United Church of Canada. In 1990-1991 he served in churches in rural Manitoba, and in 1991-1992 served at the Fred Victor Mission in Toronto, an outreach street-ministry of The United Church of Canada. He was appointed minister to St. Andrew's United Church in Port Alberni, British Columbia in 1992.

Port Alberni ministry

From early in his ministry Kevin was puzzled by the total absence of indigenous people from his church. He determined both to discover why this should be and to be as pro-active in his contacts with his indigenous parishioners, as with his traditional aging white flock. Unknown to Kevin at the time, he had embarked on a deeply traumatic Road to Damascus-type journey which, at its nadir, was to see his marriage and family torn apart, render him destitute and earmark him as a reviled outcast from his own 'Establishment' society. During his first year in Port Alberni, he "learned quickly who was the worst child sex offender in town, mostly from his victims or their families. The bastard was an elder at the nearby Anglican church. He was also the head of the local Rotary Club and led their charitable fund raising campaign every year. He was the buddy of the Mayor and a 'good Christian'".[2]

Residential school work and writings

Annett has written three books on the subject of residential school abuse in Canada. The first, Hidden from History: The Canadian Holocaust, was published in two editions: 2001 and 2005. It was substantially updated in a revised 3rd edition in September 2011 and retitled Hidden No Longer. [3] [4]The second, Love and Death in the Valley, was published in 2002.[5] In 2006, Kevin produced a documentary on this topic: Unrepentant: Kevin Annett and Canada's Genocide which won the 2006 award for 'Best Director' at the New York International Independent Film & Video Festival [6]. It provided the title for his third book "Unrepentant: Disrobing the Emperor" published in January 2011 [7]

Denied entry into England 2011

On May 29, 2011, Annett was denied entry into England at Stansted airport, and briefly held in an immigration prison before being deported. The only explanation offered was that giving public lectures was not an appropriate activity for visitors to UK. He had been scheduled to speak at a public rally in London against child trafficking by church and state.[8]

The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State

{FA|The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State}} Kevin Annett continues his activism, founding The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State on June 15, 2010. This is a network of activists who have given up on the legal systems of nation states and constituted their own. After a "Tribunal of Conscience" in Brussels in the fall of 2012, they reviewed the availabl evidence before indicting all 30 defendants on February 25, 2013 for perpetrating or concealing the Candian genocide. These defendants included then Joseph Ratzinger (formerly Pope Benedict XVI), Tarcisio Bertone former Cardinal, Elizabeth Windsor "Queen of England" and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

 

Documents by Kevin Annett

TitleDocument typePublication dateSubject(s)Description
Document:Chronology of Attacks on Kevin Annetttimeline18 September 2010Kevin Annett
Document:In a British Deportation Prisonaccount2 June 2011Kevin Annett#Denied entry into England 2011Denied entry into England 2011 to speak at the annual "Against Child Abuse" rally in London's Trafalgar Square, Kevin Annett tells his story.
Document:Reset This!article1 April 2015GlobalisationA diatribe against "The system" and those who believe mankind has any future in some kind of 'financially reset' version of it.
File:Hidden-No-Longer.pdfBookSeptember 2010Canada/Genocide

 

Related Documents

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:A Day in the Life of a Banned Canadianarticle17 February 2012'Sarah J Miller'A sympathetic (and anonymous) interview with Kevin Annett.
Document:Chronology of Attacks on Kevin Annetttimeline18 September 2010Kevin Annett
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