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Columbus school drag storytime event canceled amid Proud Boys protest


Unidentified men armed with rifles and body armor stand on the sidewalk of East Dominion Boulevard after protesting Holi-drag, an event at the Red Oak Community School, where local drag queens read story books. The event was cancelled due to a safety concerns, the school said on social media.

The Red Oak Community School canceled its Holi-drag storytime Saturday morning following promises of protest from the Proud Boys and what school officials described as only a “casual, distant acknowledgement” of the event from Columbus police.

The Columbus Division of Police, however, said they’d been communication with organizers since they’d learned about the event weeks ago.

The event was planned for 10 a.m. Saturday at the First Unitarian Universalist Church on West Weisheimer Road in Clintonville, where the private Red Oak Community School operates. It was intended to feature three local drag performers reading stories to children performing holiday numbers, according to the school’s event website.  

The Ohio Chapter of the Proud Boys, an extremist organization whose leadership has been charged with seditious conspiracy in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, posted on the social media platform Telegram last month that it intended to attend and protest the storytime event.  

“It’s going to be wild,” the group said in its posting.  

In a video statement Saturday morning, organizers said they’d reached out to Columbus police about their concerns that the Ohio Chapter of the Proud Boys would intimidate and harass their event attendees and organizers, but that police had “offered nothing.”

“I spent a week calling our police department and leaving voicemails about the reports we had seen,” said Cheryl Ryan, Red Oak Community School Manager, in the video posted to YouTube Saturday. “After a week, I was told we could hire a special duty officer, who may or may not show up because they’re understaffed.”

A Proud Boy approaches at counter-protestor using a megaphone off of High street outside of Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church on Saturday morning after a protest against Holi-drag, an event at the Red Oak Community School, where local drag queens read story books. The event was cancelled due to a safety concerns, the school said on social media.

Ryan said members of a volunteer community safety group offered to provide support and security at the event, but ultimately, the event’s performers felt unsafe without a police presence.

“It turns out, our biggest problem wasn’t the Proud Boys after all,” Ryan said.

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In an emailed statement Saturday afternoon, a Columbus police spokesman said organizers’ comments about police involvement was incorrect. Public Information Sgt. Jeffrey Mooney said the division learned of the event through social media, immediately reached out to the school and church and met with “all parties” Nov. 18 to discuss the event and a safety plan. The school requested a special duty officer, Mooney said, but then cancelled that request the same day.



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