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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
World
Tristan Cork & Kirstie McCrum

Street filled with rainbow doormats after gay couple had theirs sprayed black

A street has been filled with rainbow doormats by supportive neighbours after a gay couple living there had theirs sprayed black. The colourful doormats in support of Pride are appearing on the street where Susie Day lives with her partner.

Susie and her partner moved to their new home in Bedminster in Bristol, and put the £6 Dunelm doormat down in time for this month's Pride celebrations. The doormat was soon stolen, so they went out and bought a new one.

This time, they glued it down so it couldn’t be taken. And whoever had objected to the rainbow colours on a small doormat, appears to have returned with a can of black spray paint.

Susie and her wife found their new doormat had been blacked out earlier this week. She said the realisation that someone would go to such lengths over a multi-coloured doormat was sickening.

“It felt really horrible and invasive,” she said. “It felt like we were a bit unsafe in our own home.

"We’d only recently moved here, and it felt personal. We weren’t sure if the theft was just random, but clearly someone didn’t like it and actually came back with a spray can.”

Susie asked her neighbours if they had experienced any other kind of vandalism and no one else had, which made her feel worse. But when the neighbours realised what had happened, they rallied round in support.

The rainbow doormat painted black (Susie Day)

“Everyone was really shocked and we’ve had such great messages and people coming round to say how disgusted they were someone would do this. Everyone has said that’s not what this street is like, and one of our neighbours said they were going to get a rainbow doormat themselves, and now a lot of the other neighbours are doing the same, and have ordered them.

"So from just our rainbow doormat, there’s now going to be loads. That will be a really nice thing for us, to go out and walk down the street and see that there’s this support,” she added.

Susie also tweeted pictures of what happened, and the tweet went viral. “That meant we had friends and family calling us up asking if we were ok. The vast majority of responses to that across Twitter were really good and supportive.

"Obviously when it reaches a certain level, it attracts people who are not supportive, but 99.9 per cent of people have been supportive.”

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