Our Mission
The Matthew Shepard Foundation empowers individuals to embrace human dignity and diversity through outreach, advocacy and resource programs. We strive to replace hate with understanding, compassion and acceptance.
About Us
On October 7, 1998, Matthew Shepard, a 21-year-old student at the University of Wyoming, was brutally attacked and tied to a fence in a field outside of Laramie, Wyoming. and left to die. On October 12, Matt succumbed to his wounds in a hospital in Fort Collins, Colorado.
In the aftermath of Mattβs death, Judy and Dennis Shepard started the Matthew Shepard Foundation to honour his life and aspirations. Because of the tragedy endured by the Shepards.
“The beginning principle of the Foundation was to teach parents with children who may be questioning their sexuality to love and accept them for who they are, and to not throw them away.”
Through her personal appearances across the country and around the world, Judy Shepard shares Mattβs story to highlight the importance of standing up for the LGBT community.
Since our formation, the Foundation has centred its efforts on providing a voice and support for LGBT youth with our online resource center Matthewβs Place, helped pioneer the countryβs first federal hate crimes legislation with the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, and create dialogue about hate and acceptance withinΒ communities with special support for The Laramie Project and The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later.
It is our sincerest hope that, one day, the Foundation may be able to close its doors. But the same hate and violence thatΒ sparked the Foundationβs formation still exists today, both at home and abroad. We will continue to work tirelessly to ensure safety, visibility and inclusiveness for the entire LGBT community until that ideal becomes reality.
Matthewβs Story
The story of Matthew Shepard began on December 1, 1976 when he was born to Judy and Dennis Shepard in Casper, Wyoming. He went to public school in Casper until his junior year of high school when he moved with his family to Saudi Arabia. Matt had to finish his high school education at The American School in Switzerland because there were no American high schools in Saudi Arabia at the time. In both high schools, he was elected by his peers to be a peer counselor. He was easy to talk to, made friends easily and actively fought for the acceptance of all people.
Matt had a great passion for equality. His experiences abroad fueled his love for travel and gave him the chance to make many new friends from around the world. Mattβs college career eventually took him back to Wyoming where he studied political science, foreign relations and languages at the University of Wyoming in Laramie.
The horrific events that took place shortly after midnight on October 7, 1998 would become one of the most notorious anti-gay hate crimes in American history and spawned an activist movement that, more than a decade later, would result in passage of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, a federal law against bias crimes directed at lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender people. Two men, Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson, abducted Matt and drove him to a remote area east of Laramie, Wyoming. He was tied to a split-rail fence where the two men severely assaulted him with the butt of a pistol. He was beaten and left to die in the cold of the night. Almost 18 hours later, he was found by a bicyclist who initially mistook him for a scarecrow.
Matt died on October 12 at 12:53 a.m. at Poudre Valley Hospital in Fort Collins, Colorado with his family by his side. His memorial service was attended by friends and family from around the world and garnered immense media attention that brought Mattβs story to the forefront of the fight against bigotry and hate.
The life and death of Matthew Shepard changed the way we talk about, and deal with, hate in America. Since his death, Mattβs legacy has challenged and inspired millions of individuals to erase hate in all its forms. Although Mattβs life was short, his story continues to have a great impact on young and old alike. His legacy lives on in thousands of people who actively fight to replace hate with understanding, compassion, and acceptance.
About the Film
Michele Josue, friend and filmmaker: βAs the media stripped my friend of his humanity, I made a promise to myself that when I was emotionally and artistically ready, I would share, with the world, who Matt really was β in the only way I knew how, through film.β
Judy Shepard, Mattβs mother and president of the Matthew Shepard Foundation: βI hope people will be reminded that Matt was an ordinary boy who experienced both struggles and triumphs in his life, that he was real to so many people β¦ People see parts of themselves in Matt, both good and bad, and then the message sinks in, that these victims are more than icons or figures. Theyβre people who feel love, pain, happiness and sadness. They had lives familiar to our own, but somehow some of us are allowed to live when others arenβt. When people see and hear about the real Matt, the Matt we knew, itβs my hope theyβll understand what weβre fighting so tirelessly for.β
Watch the Full length movie below
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βMatt Shepard Is a Friend of Mine,β and My Son
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