Dangerous Times for Doomsday Celeb
Harold Camping, the Doomsday radio preacher who sparked international
media attention by predicting the end of the world last month, has been
hospitalized after suffering a stroke at his Alameda home Thursday night.
The 89-year-old radio evangelist and president of the Oakland nonprofit Family
Radio was taken by ambulance from his house Thursday night, a neighbor said, but
his well-known, gravelly voice that led many believers to donate millions of
dollars to his cause may never be the same.
"He had a stroke, it was on his right side," said the neighbor, who declined to
give her name but said she and her husband helped and comforted Camping's wife,
Shirley, as the drama unfolded Thursday night.
Her husband spoke again with Shirley Camping on Friday. "His speech appears to
be a little bit slurred but otherwise he's OK," the neighbor said. "(Shirley)
said he was doing good ... and the only thing that's affected is his speech."
There was no answer at the door of the Camping home Saturday afternoon and all
of the curtains and blinds were drawn. A GMC pickup with a Family Radio
bumpersticker and a white Buick sat in the driveway.
Charles Menut -- the regional manager for Family Stations Inc., Family Radio's
parent company, and the station manager and chief engineer for an affiliated
station in West Orange, N.J. -- posted a Yahoo group message early Saturday
morning reporting Camping's stroke to Family Radio supporters.
"Please just pray for him and do not try to contact anyone at his home or Family
Radio," Menut wrote. "He and Shirley have enough family members to handle the
situation. I'm sure we'll be able to publicly update everyone on Monday."
Menut could not be reached at his home or office Saturday.
"We will be praying for Mr. Camping and his family," one supporter wrote in
reply to Menut's posting. "The Lord has been so merciful to allow Mr. Camping to
faithfully teach the scriptures for over 52 years. I'm sure Mr. Camping is
thinking right now that He wants God to receive all the glory the for the
ministry of Family Radio."
Camping gained notoriety in recent months as the calendar closed in on May 21,
the Saturday on which the doomsday prophet said Judgment Day would occur and
true believers would be taken to heaven.
That attempted prophecy gained the world's attention primarily because Camping
wanted it that way. Family Radio, an empire of more than 70 radio stations that
was worth $72 million in 2009, spent more than $100 million over the past seven
years publicizing the Rapture. Billboards guaranteeing the end of the world were
present throughout the world and some followers drove RVs all over the United
States to alert people.
But Camping was mocked nationally by talk-show hosts and the subject of
protests, both by believers and non-believers alike. Some Christians called
Camping a false prophet, and the American Atheists paid $27,000 for five weeks
of billboard space in San Francisco, denouncing the Rapture, along with hosting
a party that May 21 weekend.
Camping said he took his wife to a hotel during the weekend of the predicted
Rapture and that the phone in his Alameda home rang constantly and strangers
knocked on his door. It was, he said, "a very difficult time for me."
When the world did not end, Camping told reporters that the world would instead
end Oct. 21 and argued that despite no physical evidence to the contrary, his
point of view was correct. See Chick's WHO'S MISSING?
media attention by predicting the end of the world last month, has been
hospitalized after suffering a stroke at his Alameda home Thursday night.
The 89-year-old radio evangelist and president of the Oakland nonprofit Family
Radio was taken by ambulance from his house Thursday night, a neighbor said, but
his well-known, gravelly voice that led many believers to donate millions of
dollars to his cause may never be the same.
"He had a stroke, it was on his right side," said the neighbor, who declined to
give her name but said she and her husband helped and comforted Camping's wife,
Shirley, as the drama unfolded Thursday night.
Her husband spoke again with Shirley Camping on Friday. "His speech appears to
be a little bit slurred but otherwise he's OK," the neighbor said. "(Shirley)
said he was doing good ... and the only thing that's affected is his speech."
There was no answer at the door of the Camping home Saturday afternoon and all
of the curtains and blinds were drawn. A GMC pickup with a Family Radio
bumpersticker and a white Buick sat in the driveway.
Charles Menut -- the regional manager for Family Stations Inc., Family Radio's
parent company, and the station manager and chief engineer for an affiliated
station in West Orange, N.J. -- posted a Yahoo group message early Saturday
morning reporting Camping's stroke to Family Radio supporters.
"Please just pray for him and do not try to contact anyone at his home or Family
Radio," Menut wrote. "He and Shirley have enough family members to handle the
situation. I'm sure we'll be able to publicly update everyone on Monday."
Menut could not be reached at his home or office Saturday.
"We will be praying for Mr. Camping and his family," one supporter wrote in
reply to Menut's posting. "The Lord has been so merciful to allow Mr. Camping to
faithfully teach the scriptures for over 52 years. I'm sure Mr. Camping is
thinking right now that He wants God to receive all the glory the for the
ministry of Family Radio."
Camping gained notoriety in recent months as the calendar closed in on May 21,
the Saturday on which the doomsday prophet said Judgment Day would occur and
true believers would be taken to heaven.
That attempted prophecy gained the world's attention primarily because Camping
wanted it that way. Family Radio, an empire of more than 70 radio stations that
was worth $72 million in 2009, spent more than $100 million over the past seven
years publicizing the Rapture. Billboards guaranteeing the end of the world were
present throughout the world and some followers drove RVs all over the United
States to alert people.
But Camping was mocked nationally by talk-show hosts and the subject of
protests, both by believers and non-believers alike. Some Christians called
Camping a false prophet, and the American Atheists paid $27,000 for five weeks
of billboard space in San Francisco, denouncing the Rapture, along with hosting
a party that May 21 weekend.
Camping said he took his wife to a hotel during the weekend of the predicted
Rapture and that the phone in his Alameda home rang constantly and strangers
knocked on his door. It was, he said, "a very difficult time for me."
When the world did not end, Camping told reporters that the world would instead
end Oct. 21 and argued that despite no physical evidence to the contrary, his
point of view was correct. See Chick's WHO'S MISSING?
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