WARNING: Portions of the following video have been digitally altered because of graphic content, but viewer discretion still is strongly advised:
NEW YORK – Chanting, “Get your rosaries out of our ovaries,” a mob of pro-abortion feminists – many of whom were topless with Nazi swastikas on their chests and foreheads – attacked and sexually molested a group of Roman Catholic men who were praying as they stood outside a cathedral in Argentina to protect it from threats of vandalism.
Video by the Catholic news service Lifesitenews.com of the incident Sunday in San Juan shows the protesting women spitting on the rosary-praying men, pushing their breasts into the faces of the men and spray-painting them.
The savage protest was the culmination of an afternoon demonstration in which an estimated 17,000 militant feminists and their supporters marched through the streets chanting and carrying protest banners and signs as part of the 23rd National Meeting of Women held in the city Nov. 23-25.
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David Kupelian, author of “The Marketing of Evil” and “How Evil Works” and managing editor of WND, noted that the "display of demonic fury outside a Catholic church in Argentina, though shocking, is nothing new."
He recalled that the U.S. has seen similar "demonstrations," including the 1989 attack on New York City’s famed St. Patrick’s Cathedral in which hundreds of "gay" activists stormed the church and terrorized its parishioners during Mass.
"However, the homosexual activist movement in the U.S. has generally adopted a more media-savvy strategy for mainstreaming their sexual behavior and advancing their agenda," Kupelian said.
“Unfortunately, when a society demonizes Christian values and glorifies perversion, both culturally and with the force of law, this is what you get.”
On Sunday, failing to break through the barrier of praying men, the feminists burned an effigy of Pope Francis while chanting, “If the pope were a woman, abortion would be legal.”
During the demonstration, some 700 parishioners remained inside the cathedral, accompanied by the bishop of San Juan, Alfonso Delgado.
Along with "abortion rights," the protesting feminists called for support of lesbianism, economic and social justice, and more funding for "women’s health."
In 2010, Argentina was the first country in the predominantly Roman Catholic region of Latin America to legalize same-sex marriage.
Jorge Mario Bergoglio, a Jesuit priest, was archbishop of Buenos Aires before being elected pope in March and taking the name of St. Francis of Assisi.