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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<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>