home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT3309>
- <title>
- Dec. 18, 1989: Canada:The Man Who Hated Women
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 18, 1989 Money Laundering
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 30
- CANADA
- The Man Who Hated Women
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A sick obsession ignites the country's worst mass killing
- </p>
- <p> It was the last hour of fall-term classes at the University
- of Montreal's engineering school, the Ecole Polytechnique.
- Students faced eleven days of exams, but at least they could
- look forward to the cheering prospect of Christmas vacation
- afterward. That tidy calendar was suddenly and tragically
- shattered last week in a hail of semiautomatic rifle fire
- ignited by a bizarre sexual hatred. When the climactic hour
- ended, Canada had suffered the worst mass murder in its history.
- </p>
- <p> The bloodshed began shortly after 5 p.m. on Wednesday, when
- Marc Lepine, 25, an unemployed electronics buff who once
- aspired to study at the engineering school, arrived at the
- hilltop campus building. Armed with a hunting knife and a
- .223-cal. Ruger rifle manufactured in the U.S., Lepine climbed
- to the second-floor corridor and shot a woman student dead.
- Then, a carefree grin on his face, he entered the
- mechanical-engineering class of Professor Yvon Bouchard, where
- a student was in the midst of presenting his term project. "I
- want the women!" cried Lepine, ordering female students to one
- side of the room and men into the hall. "We thought it was a
- joke," said Bouchard. They learned otherwise when the gunman
- pumped several rounds into the ceiling. Shouting, "You're all
- a bunch of feminists!" to his women hostages, Lepine opened
- fire, killing six on the spot.
- </p>
- <p> Proceeding on his mad mission, Lepine went down to the
- first-floor cafeteria, where he killed three more women, then
- up to the third floor, where he gunned down four others. Besides
- the 14 women killed, 13 people, four of them men, were wounded.
- Finally the attacker turned the weapon on himself, blowing away
- part of his head.
- </p>
- <p> In Lepine's pocket, police found a three-page suicide note,
- in which police said he complained that "feminists have always
- ruined his life." Born to a French-Canadian mother and an
- Algerian father who left the family when his son was seven,
- Lepine studied intermittently at junior colleges and expressed
- the hope that he would be accepted at the university. Though he
- had no history of criminal behavior or mental illness, he
- existed on the margins; a loner who enjoyed war movies, he was
- unable to sustain relationships with women and claimed to have
- been turned down by the military for being "asocial."
- </p>
- <p> Lepine purchased the rifle, a model that is popular with
- ranchers for killing coyotes, at a local gun store three weeks
- ago, after undergoing a police-file check as required by law.
- Canada regulates the sale of handguns much more strictly than
- does the U.S., but hunting guns, including semiautomatics, are
- widely obtainable. In the wake of last week's misogynic
- massacre, there were calls for tighter rules on the availability
- of combat-style weapons as well as soul-searching debates about
- the victimization of women. But the most touching commentary
- involved very few words. After a candlelight procession to the
- university, some 1,500 women and men sat silently in a Montreal
- chapel, the quiet broken only by the occasional hymn.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-