Bikini-clad strippers protest church in rural  Ohio
Jeannie Nuss (AP, August 27, 2010) 
Warsaw, USA - Strippers dressed in bikinis sunbathe in lawn chairs, their  
backs turned toward the gray clapboard church where men in ties and women in 
 full-length skirts flock to Sunday morning services. 
The strippers, fueled by Cheetos and nicotine, are protesting a  
fundamentalist Christian church whose Bible-brandishing congregants have  
picketed the 
club where they work. The dancers roll up with signs carrying  messages 
adapted from Scripture, such as "Do unto others as you would have done  unto 
you," to counter church members who for four years have photographed  license 
plates of patrons and asked them if their mothers and wives know their  
whereabouts. 
The dueling demonstrations play out in central Ohio, where nine miles of  
cornfields and Amish-buggy crossing signs separate The Fox Hole strip club 
from  New Beginnings Ministries. 
Club owner Tommy George met with the preacher and offered to call off his  
not-quite-nude crew from their three-month-long protest if the church 
responds  in kind. But pastor Bill Dunfee believes that a higher power has 
tasked 
him with  shutting down the strip club. 
"As a Christian community, we cannot share territory with the devil," 
Dunfee  said. "Light and darkness cannot exist together, so The Fox Hole has 
got 
to  go." 
New Beginnings is one of four churches in this one-traffic-light village of 
 900 people, 60 miles outside Columbus. There's one gas station and a 
sit-down  restaurant that serves country staples like mashed potatoes with 
gravy 
and  Salisbury steak. 
On Sunday, four of The Fox Hole's seven strippers and more than a dozen  
supporters garnered both scorn and compassion from churchgoers - and quite a 
few  honks from pickup trucks and other passing vehicles. 
One woman offered her skills as a hair dresser to the dancers: "If you or  
your kids ever need a haircut, give me a holler." Another woman from the 
church  waited on the protesters with plates of noodles and chocolate cake. 
Laura Meske - known as Lola, stage age 36 but really 42 - hid behind a sign 
 proclaiming, "Jesus loves the children of the world!" as the preacher 
extended  his hand for a shake. 
Two nights earlier, Dunfee and more than a dozen churchgoers stood outside  
the club, one of them calling out Meske's stripper name. 
"He who casts the first stone ... ," Meske said Sunday. 
The pastor cut her off and repeated, "Lola, Lord bless you." 
"Everybody has sinned, and that doesn't mean I'm not gonna get into 
heaven,"  she said, the stud piercing in her chin shimmering in the sunlight. 
"I 
believe  in Jesus. I don't believe what they preach. They preach hate." 
Debi Durr, who attends the church, disagreed. "You don't stand up there for 
 four years for hate. That's not hate. That's love," she said. Durr left 
Meske  with a copy of Jeremiah 3:13 - a Bible passage that urges sinners to 
acknowledge  their guilt. 
Inside the church, voices from the 121 congregants seemed to float to the  
cedar rafters as they sang lyrics projected on a screen. Outside, a man 
strummed  a guitar and sang, "God forbid you ever had to walk a mile in her 
shoes." 
Dunfee has offered to help the strippers pay for food, rent, utilities and  
gas if they leave The Fox Hole. But many of the women say their jobs are 
only a  stopover on the way to work in cosmetology or the medical field - a 
meal ticket  that shelters them from another stigma: welfare. 
"No little girl is growing up like, `I wanna do a pole trick,'" said Anny  
Donewald, a former stripper who lives in Grand Rapids, Mich., and ministers 
to  dancers, prostitutes and porn stars. 
She and other Christian groups that work with women in the adult  
entertainment industry have criticized Dunfee's methods of ministry as a means  
of 
putting the strippers on the defensive instead of showing support. 
"I never saw Jesus with a picket sign," Donewald said. 
Community advocacy groups, including Citizens for Community Values in  
Cincinnati, support Dunfee's protests. But the group's president, Phil Burress, 
 
said the strip club has a right to be there. 
"It's a legal business whether he likes it or I like it or not," Burress  
said. 
The club operates in a white plywood box of a building. Beer cans and a  
dollar bill peaked out from the grass like Easter eggs last Sunday. 
The Fox Hole encourages customers to check out its $30 private dance 
special,  promoting it on the kind of sign convenience stores use to advertise 
cheap milk  and cigarettes. Out back, letters on a bulletin board have faded 
away so that  "No touching" now reads "ouch." 
It's here where dancers strip down to panties and pasties for cash. Meske - 
a  tattooed mother of four - said she made $30 instead of a couple hundred 
dollars  last Friday with the protesters outside. 
"I'm not the most beautiful woman in the world," she said. "I go out there  
and I try to make my money." 
A few houses and a ribs joint called Peggy Sue's separate the club from  
another white building, a church where some of the strippers donate blood 
during  drives for the American Red Cross. 
"I got a church 900 feet down the street that causes me no problems," club  
owner George said. "And I got this moron nine miles down the street that 
causes  me more headaches." 
Rae Anderson, who heads New Castle Ministries with her husband, says her  
church believes Dunfee is doing what the Lord called him to do, but her 
parish  takes a different approach. 
"You can share the truth, but you can't make anyone believe what you  
believe."

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