The building caretaker of a Presbyterian church in Cincinnati, Ohio dressed up in drag to read a book in scheduled children’s time during the Sunday, June 16 worship service.

According to The Cincinnati Enquirer , Dan Davidson dressed up as “Sparke Leigh” complete with a purple dress, makeup, high heels, and “a glitter beard” and stood at the Mount Auburn Presbyterian Church door greeting members and visitors.

Following the song “God Welcomes All” by the church choir, Davidson walked up on stage and read the book Pride: The Story of Harvey Milk and the Rainbow Flag to the audience. The story was intended for children, some of whom sat at Davidson’s feet during the reading, CBN reported.

While the story was directed towards the little children sitting at the speaker’s feet, some teenagers also joined them in the front.

“Harvey dreamed that everyone — even gay people — would have equality,” Davidson read. “He dreamed that one day, people would be able to live and love as they pleased.”

Davidson has performed as a drag queen in Seattle, Washington, before he moved to Ohio last month, according to the newspaper.

At another point during the service, a man stood up and told the audience the story of his “coming out.”

What most people won’t tell you about Harvey Milk, who the book is based off of, is that Harvey Milk was known to be in relationships with an underage boys.

So, what were some of Harvey Milk’s sexual exploits with underage men? According to The Daily Wire, Matt Barber of Liberty Counsel profiled what Milk’s own biographers admitted of his behavior as well as accounts from Harvey’s victims:

One of Milk’s victims was a 16-year-old runaway from Maryland named Jack Galen McKinley.

Randy Shilts was a San Francisco Chronicle reporter and close friend to Harvey Milk … also Harvey Milk’s biographer. In his glowing book “The Mayor of Castro Street,” he wrote of Milk’s “relationship’ with the McKinley boy: ‘… Sixteen-year-old McKinley was looking for some kind of father figure. … At 33, Milk was launching a new life, though he could hardly have imagined the unlikely direction toward which his new lover would pull him.”

Randy Thomasson, child advocate and founder of SaveCalifornia.com, is one of the nation’s foremost experts on Harvey Milk. Of the Shilts biography, Thomasson notes, “Explaining Milk’s many flings and affairs with teenagers and young men, Randy Shilts writes how Milk told one ‘lover’ why it was OK for him to also have multiple relationships simultaneously: ‘As homosexuals, we can’t depend on the heterosexual model. … We grow up with the heterosexual model, but we don’t have to follow it. We should be developing our own lifestyle. There’s no reason why you can’t love more than one person at a time.’”

The McKinley boy later committed suicide, but he is not the only victim of Harvey Milk. Gerald Dols, a Christian convert, explained in a 2008 radio interview with Concerned Women for America that Harvey Milk convinced him to run away from his family in Minnesota and join him in San Francisco when Dols was just a teenager.

According to Dols, Milk told him, “Don’t tell your parents,” and later sent him a letter with instructions. Thankfully, the letter was intercepted by Dols’ parents who then filed a complaint with the Minnesota attorney general’s office.

The incident was evidently swept under the rug.

As to the prevailing myth that Harvey Milk was gunned down because of former Supervisor Dan White’s homophobia, that narrative was shot to pieces by none other than Dan White’s former chief political advisor, Ray Sloan, an open homosexual who said that White killed Harvey Milk over a political betrayal, not bigoted animus. In fact, Sloan even admitted that the two men admired each other for a time. You can read Sloan’s five-page account of his relationship with Dan White here.

Mount Auburn Presbyterian, a member church of the PCUSA, celebrated pride month throughout June, The Enquirer reported. Gay pride flags cover the halls and rainbow candles are on the church’s stage.