Friends and 'ex-Friends':
You'll find this little ditty of a news story very amusing. It seems some overly-zealous sister from the UK was pestering the grieving worldly ones at the local cemetary so much that they got mad and complained to the cemetary owner, who then complained to the KH overseer. The woman who was witnessed to frowned on the violation of her 'public privacy', and I for one, agree that this is over-the-top. It seems some are getting desperate for converts in these so-called last days.
What do you think? Is witnessing to mourning ones at the cemetary too much, or par for the course?
Here's the link:
Here's the text of the article:
Mourners take offence at religious recruitment
By Charles WhitneyComplaints were made this week about Jehovah's Witnesses who have been approaching mourners at Allum Lane Cemetery in Elstree.
Christine Severn, who visited the cemetery on Saturday morning, said she was annoyed when a woman and teenage girl started talking to her about her views on death.
The two people did not tell her who they were and it was not until she read a leaflet they had handed her, on arriving home, that she realised they were Jehovah's Witnesses.
Her daughter was approached in the cemetery later that day, and they both saw the Jehovah's Witnesses talking to other mourners.
Mrs Severn, from Borehamwood, said: "I feel it is a real intrusion on public privacy.
"To me the cemetery is a place I go to be surrounded by peace and remember the people I love who can no longer physically comfort me."
It is not known whether the Jehovah's Witnesses were members of Borehamwood's congregation.
Hertsmere Borough Council , which runs the cemetery, now plans to contact the movement and ask its members not to approach mourners there.
A spokeswoman said the council aimed to create a "dignified and sympathetic environment" at the cemetery, where people respected each other's privacy.
Mark Armistead, an elder at Borehamwood's Jehovah's Witness congregation, said: "There is a strong chance they might have been members of the congregation here in Borehamwood. We are obviously very sorry that the person concerned was upset. Our message is based on The Bible, and it is a message of comfort and hope."
Paul Gillies, the British Jehovah's Witness movement's spokesman, said: "Jehovah's Witnesses try to share their beliefs with people whenever they have the opportunity. We don't particularly target cemeteries as such. We talk to people wherever."
09:46 Friday 28th March 2003