Now on bbc news, hardtalk. Holding up placards outside the funerals of dead american soldiers. Celebrating schoolroom massacres. Westboro Baptist Church has been described as the most obnoxious, hate filled group in america. Megan phelps roper was part of that group. She was born into the church. She carried those hate filled placards from the age of five years old. But as an adult, firing off tweets against online critics, megan began to doubt. Eventually, she left the church altogether, but she paid a high price. The church was founded by her grandfather. She was shunned by those she loved the most. Can she still really regard the people who taught her to hate, to desire more death, that the world was going to hell, as her beloved, wonderful mum and dad . Megan phelps roper, welcome to hardtalk. From the age of five, in 1991, you were involved in your familys demonstrations, later taking part in pickets of the funerals of dead soldiers in the united states. Can you just give us a sense of what these events meant to you . Describe kind of a typical day of protest for you . We organised our entire lives around this what westboro calls its picketing ministry. So, we saw it as the fulfilment of our duty to love thy neighbour, to go out and warn people of the consequences of their sins. Their sins included homosexuality, fornication, adultery, divorce and remarriage, idolatry. Basically the list of sins was endless, and the understanding that i grew up with was that everyone outside of westboro was hell bound, and that, you know, our duty was to go and preach to them. We were offering them a message of life and hope. Our understanding was that this was the only path for people to go to heaven, and to avoid the curses of god in this life. So, as you as a child, kind of describe your sense of what it was like. It was exciting getting ready for these . Yeah. I mean, again, iwas very happy, because i thought we were doing good. I thought what we were doing was we were the good guys. My understanding was that we were the good guys, everyone else was going to hell. And so, yeah, youre going out and youre standing on the picket line, and theres a lot of. I mean, often it was high energy. People coming out and you were discussing these ideas that are you know, its what life is all about. And so i was very happy. Youve described in your book how you were a willing participant in the most aggressive anti gay Picketing Campaign the country had ever seen. What sort of response did you elicit from people who you were attempting to persuade, to convert . Because we talked a lot about the hatred of god, you know, people assumed that we were hateful. And they responded to us in kind, so, generally, there was a lot of hostility and antagonism. You know, people throwing things, sometimes driving their cars at us, yelling, screaming. So it was when i said high energy, i mean, it was generally very negative energy. And for us, that was proof of our righteousness, becausejesus said blessed are you when men will hate you and revile you, and say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my names sake. So for us, that was. Gramps said that we should take it as a badge of honour that people hated us. gramps, the founder of the church, the reverend fred phelps . Exactly, my grandfather. So the church is almost entirely my extended family. They threw eggs and beer and big plastic bottles filled with urine, you write. From behind my sign, i watched them approach us to hit, and threaten, and shove, and bellow, and spit, and grabforoursigns, our bodies, our hair. The police rarely seemed to help, but my parents kept us safe. Yeah, and thats. We saw because it was our duty to be out there, i never saw it as something that my parents putting us in danger. The criminals were putting us in danger. I trusted, obviously, my parents implicitly, as we all generally do when were kids. But looking back on it, your parents werent keeping you safe, were they . They were exposing you to verbal abuse and there were putting you potentially in harms way. But for them, you know, they believe that god is with them, and requiring this of them. We would be in far more danger if they didnt have us out there, doing our duty to god. And now, do you still believe that to be the case . I. 0bviously i see that they were putting us in the path of peoples hatred. But, you know, every time we would go to one of those protests, especially out of town, we contacted the police department. They were actively trying to keep us safe, and i do think that the people who are committing crimes are the ones who are actually with responsible for that. Are you still now questioning even now your decision to leave . No. It was something that i thought very it was a very considered decision when i left, and almost immediately, i started having experiences that helped me see that these things that i had been taught my entire life were entirely questionable, and the things i had taken totally for granted, the idea that other people were either evil, or delusional, ill intentioned almost immediately started meeting incredible people who were clearly trying to live life in the best way they knew how. So i do not question, at this point, my decision to leave. Im interested, though, you used in the course of that answer, our views, the familys views, the churchs views, are questionable. Thats different than saying wrong. Right, yes, absolutely. I just want to be clear, because youre on a journey, in a sense. Yes, no, understood. When i say questionable, i mean, i have come to believe that they are wrong. I believed i knew when i left there were certain things that they did that were certainly unbiblical. At this point, i still believe that. I no longer see the bible as the infallible word of god, as i once did, and i dont think that westboros understanding of the world and how it works i have completely rejected that. You describe in the book a closeness of your relationship with yourfamily, and particularly your immediate family, particularly your mum, shirley. Yes. And you say you became her right hand, you helped to organise, you were working very closely with her. Even though youve left the church, even though you now have no contact, i think, with the family, youve dedicated the book to your parents. Yeah. And people watching and listening to this interview might be surprised, to say the least, by that. Well, what i say in the dedication is i left the church, but never them, and i never will. Because i dont believe that my family is the problem. I believe that bad ideas, they have been persuaded by bad ideas, and that just like i was convinced, persuaded to change my heart and mind, that they can also be convinced, because again, i see them as good people who have been trapped by bad ideas. A wonderfulfather, a mother who you describe as somebody there couldnt be a greater teacher than you, i am humbled to be your daughter, you write. You had a happy childhood . Absolutely, i mean, obviously there were hard moments, as there are for all families. The fact that my family believed strongly in physical punishment as spoken of in the bible. But because i was convinced, i was persuaded of the goodness of those doctrines, i was i was happy. My conscience and my actions were in line, and ifelt like i was fulfilling a divine purpose, so, yeah, i was very happy. I suppose it is more about now what your parents protests were, and whether it is enough to say of your parents that they are basically good people. Because there comes a point, isnt there, where if good people do bad things, theyre not really good people anymore. I understand what youre saying. And so this is where the epigraph of the book is this line from the great gatsby that says, reserving judgement is a matter of infinite hope. And that is for me a posture of grace, it is the picture of grace. Its the idea of seeing people as being on a journey, and that there is hope for them to grow and evolve and change and be better, and i believe that is possible of my family. So, if you want me to say that my family are. I will absolutely say without question and without caveat that they do evil things sometimes, and that is extremely painful, to look back at my own past and know that i was doing evil things, cruel things, unmercifulthings. There are lots of children still in the westboro Baptist Church, your fellow members of the extended family, never mind others who have brought their children in since theyve joined up. Do you think the authorities, knowing what they know now, should intervene . That is a really. You know, ithink, specifically in terms of, just because of the First Amendment in the united states, i dont think they have any standing to intervene when it comes to the doctrines. I do think the physical punishment. So this is something, as i was writing the book, there was a part of me that wanted not to write about that. But, you know, i didnt want to. I feel this sense of wanting to protect my family, as i think we all generally do. But it felt important to write about it, for a number of reasons, and part of it is because i do want them to be afraid to hurt their children. That was something that was really emotional, writing about that, because as you say, there are a lot of children there. On one particularly explosive morning when i was eight or nine, me and my sister got two beatings each for fighting or for insufficient progress on our piano lessons, and they were bad. They were the sort that left big, red welts, the kind that would bloom into bruises of blue and purple and black. You also talk about how your mother was beaten so badly by her father, your gramps, at one point that she was left with lifelong injuries that she still has to deal with today. Thats child abuse, isnt it . Yeah, absolutely. And it took me a long time, because as i grew up, i kind of accepted westboros view of those beatings. You know, and again, i quote in the book all these bible passages that justify those things, specifically even the idea of beating children to the point of bruises, thats in the bible. The blueness of the wound cleanses away evil, and i absolutely do believe that is child abuse. What sort of contact have you had with your family since you left, which is what, seven years ago now . Yeah, seven years ago this week. Almost nothing. I reach out to them regularly, because when i first left, i despaired of ever having them back, and then i pretty quickly came to realise that, how dare i not have hope for them, considering my own journey . Like, if could be persuaded by kind, compassionate strangers, who listened to where i was coming from, considered my perspective, and made their case and helped change my heart and mind, i felt like i owe that to my family. These people who invested so much time and energy and resources and love in me, ifeel like i owe it to them, and i also feel like i owe it to the people that they target, because if i can help them moderate their positions and change their minds, then they will be hurting far fewer people, i hope. You talk about twitter, and this is an important part of your story. Its a huge part of my story. Because you went on twitter, meganphelps. And that is something, i suppose, social media we associate as a mechanism for polarising opinion, for encouraging people to express themselves often in very short, but very graphic ways started to open your mind. Can you explain a bit about that process . Absolutely. So i think the very first change that communication on twitter brought in me came from the fact that it was so short. So having this very you know, 140 characters i recognised really quickly that the insults that my family throw around casually, and when i got on twitter, and first there wasnt space for it, and second, when i did insult people, i could watch the conversation just completely go off the rails immediately. And i didnt want to have these playground quarrels. I was trying to have theological debates. So first, i stopped insulting people. Then, the more important parts were, twitter became an alternative source of community for me. Westboro had been my only. You know, they were the only people that i trusted, that i felt close to in any way. And so, the fact that among this deluge of hostility, the fact that there were also these very kind people asking questions, and trying to i was seeing parts of their humanity in a way that i never had before, and they were seeing mine, and it enabled this conversation that eventually led to them finding internal inconsistencies in our doctrine. The leader of the anti defamation league, jonathan greenblatt, wrote last year, social Media Companies have created, allowed and enabled extremists to move their message from the margins to the mainstream. Yet your experience of social media is more hopeful, and certainly very different. It suggests that its possible for closed minds not to necessarily just become more closed, but potentially to open. Absolutely. You know, i had visited twitter in 2016 for the first time, and i was talking to the woman who, when i was first on twitter, she was showing the e mails that she had written to the other twitter executives explaining why i wasnt being kicked off the platform. If she had done that, i wouldnt have had these experiences that let me see outside of westboros ideology. You know, twitter can be a tool for radicalisation, because you have extremists there trying to recruit people. Why arent were doing things like why arent we in the mainstream, people with better ideas, trying to recruit people . If we try to kick people of these platforms, isolate them, all that does is it lends them it pushes them deeper into this ideology. All they have then is this echo chamber, with no way out. Its a big dilemma, though, isnt it, for the authorities for the regulators, for the companies themselves, because on the one hand were worried about radicalisation. Weve talked about it in the concept of extremist islamist activity, but actually, you were radicalised through your childhood, and youre going through arguably a process of deradicalisation, an ongoing process. You know, people talk about twitter being a cesspool, for instance. And i my response to that is i do believe that social Media Companies, im sure there are things that they can do, but i also think that twitter is a cesspool because we make it a cesspool. We get to decide how were going to engage people. We can give in to these very human impulses to respond, you know, in outrage when we see things that are outrageous, or we can decide theres a human being on the other side of this, and this person has and this is what people did for me, right . They recognised that i had a lifetime of experiences that led me to that place, and that the way out was not to shame me, but to help me see outside of it, offer better ideas. Weve said already that the westboro Baptist Church was kind of what we might call a family business. I mean, it was founded by your grandfather, the late fred phelps, who was its pastor. Among the things he said over the years was, you cant believe the bible without believing that god hates people. Its pure nonsense to say that god loves the sinner but hates the sin. He hates the sin, he hates the sinner. What do you think when you read back and you hear the things he said and apparently believed . Yes, he definitely believed them. He believed the bible was the literal and infallible word of god, and that his understanding of it was unquestionable. And, you know, he was very smart. He was trained as a lawyer. You know, he won all kinds of awards for his civil rights work. So he was not a stupid person, and that i think led him to this toxic sense of certainty in his own righteousness. When i listen to those ideas, i understand where hes coming from. And i can quote you so many of the verses. We spent all every single day, we were reading the bible and memorising these passages, and we would stand on the picket line and we would quote them to people who also claimed to believe the bible, and they were shocked. I dont believe the bible anymore, and it seems such a heartbreaking waste of his time and energy and talents. You dont believe the bible anymore. Do you believe in god . I do not. There is so much of my upbringing, though, that i retain, these ideas that i learned from religion, ideas like grace and hope and mercy, compassion, the importance of community. Theres so much of my upbringing that i retain. You say you dont believe in the bible, you dont believe in god. You quote the bible quite a lot, so it is clearly in some ways still an inspiration for you. No, it absolutely is. When i say i dont believe in the bible, what i mean is i dont believe in the infallibility of the bible. There are many things i find in the bible that are wonderful. There absolutely is still do guide my life. Its just that i now feel free to discount and discredit the things i think are wrong. Given you think that this self styled church is wrong, given you think it is distorting religion and faith, isnt it fair to say that this is really extremism masquerading as a religion, subverting the us constitution, hijacking the us constitutional right to religious freedom in order to advance its cause . Its hard to. So, for instance, i write in the book also about the Snyder V Phelps case that went to the us supreme court. This is the case in which the father of a dead marine whose funeral had been picketed, challenged the right of westboro to do that. Yes, and while of course i believe and wish that my family would stop doing things like that, that they should not use the freedom they have been given as a cloak of maliciousness, as it says in the bible that is what i believe theyre doing there. But i also think that the fact that i think that the justices were right in making the decision that they made, that we have to have an open marketplace of ideas, that the importance of open, robust public debate, it has to be the priority. Even if it extends to the kinds of scenes that people you used to picket had to endure . Because you must have a very profoundly deep sense now of the distress that you caused. Absolutely, absolutely, and its something that i think about. You know, ithink about it frequently. It comes up in. Obviously there are a lot of things that trigger those memories, and its deeply distressing to me, the things that i did, specifically at funeral protests. And this has been part of what has been the motivation for me in doing the work that i have been doing, and trying to make amends. When i think how callous, unmerciful, how i was to so many who had just lost a son or daughter, i am ashamed, and its still really difficult to think about the harm i caused. Its overwhelming sometimes. You said those words three years ago. Is it still does it get to you . Absolutely. The thing about talking about my life at westboro, to talk about that publicly, its constantly putting me in conversation with people that i did real harm to, and its difficult to face that. But i learned this concept shortly after i left the church, tikkun olam, from judaism, which means to repair the world the idea it is incumbent upon human beings to see the brokenness in the world and to do what they can to repair it. So i do have to face that regularly, and it is painful, but i think its necessary, because i am trying to find