By Lisabet Sarai
[I had a great guest lined up for today, but somehow the gods of the Internet had different ideas. I kept sending him emails. He didn't receive them. He figured that I'd found someone else. Etc. Anyway, I'm reposting, a bit revised, some content published on my own blog a few Junes ago. Seems appropriate.]
Almost anyone who hangs out on romance
lists or visits romance blogs knows that June is “GLBT Pride Month”.
But I wonder how many people know why the parades all happen in June.
I'll admit that I didn't, not until yesterday when I started reading
about the Stonewall riots. I'd heard of them, but I didn't know the
details, and I didn't realize the connection with contemporary pride
celebrations.
Forty-one years ago
today, in the early hours of the morning, the New York City police
raided a illegal, Mafia-owned bar on Christopher Street called the
Stonewall Inn. The organized crime connections and unlicensed liquor
were not the primary reason for this raid. Rather, this was a sadly
typical crackdown on the homosexual community in Greenwich Village, for
whom the Stonewall was something of a haven. The police burst in and
started arresting the Stonewall's patrons, which included many
transvestites, both male and female. This also wasn't unusual. At that
time, it was literally against the law for men to wear female clothing
or vice versa. Homosexuals could be arrested on a range of charges from
soliciting to public indecency.
Although the extreme persecution of the
McCarthy era had eased somewhat, homosexuality was classified as a
psychiatric disorder and gays and lesbians were generally considered to
be in the same class as rapists and child molesters. If you were gay,
your only recourse was to lay low, keep your preferences a secret, and
hope that you'd be ignored.
On the
night of June 28, 1969, however, something unusual did happen. The
ruckus caused by the raid drew a crowd of several hundred bystanders,
many of whom were themselves gay or were sympathizers. When the police
began to rough up the Stonewall's patrons, they fought back, supported
by the onlookers. The scene degenerated into a pitched battle. The
police called for reinforcements. The gay crowd refused to be
intimidated. They led the police a merry chase through the crooked,
narrow streets of the West Village.
You can find a detailed discussion of Stonewall and its aftermath in Wikipedia.
Many people view the Stonewall uprising as the birth of the gay pride
movement. Stonewall was to gay rights what Rosa Parks' refusal to sit at
the back of the bus was for civil rights. After Stonewall, homosexuals
stopped trying to blend in. They began to raise their voices against
discrimination and for equal rights.
That
struggle is, of course, far from over. It's sad to see how, more than
forty years later, individuals who are attracted to their own gender are
still attacked, both physically and psychologically, still denied the
right to marry in many areas, still barred from some careers if they are
open about their orientation. It's easy to get discouraged. On the
other hand, society has come a long way since Stonewall. Every year,
gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered people become braver and
more vocal. More proud.
In June 1999
the U.S. Department of the Interior designated 51 and 53 Christopher
Street (the location of the Stonewall Inn), the street itself, and the
surrounding streets as a National Historic Landmark. In 2009,
commemorating the fortieth anniversary of Stonewall, President Obama
declared June to be National Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender
Pride Month. I find these actions a bit ironic, given the fact that the majority of states in the U.S. still ban gays from marrying, and that this is considered one of the most contentious issues of the upcoming U.S. presidential election.
I
write GLBT romance and erotica. I believe that the experience of love and desire is
universal. It really doesn't matter what kind of genitalia your partner
has. I think that the romance and erotica communities may be more tolerant than
society as a whole in this regard. Still, think about what it would be
like if you couldn't buy M/M or F/F or M/M/F fiction—if it were illegal,
labeled as obscene or deviant. We've come a long way, but it could
happen - witness the #amazonfail fiasco and Paypal's more recent strong arm tactics. The only way to prevent this sort of thing is to follow the lead
of the people involved at Stonewall. Stand up and tell the world that
you believe in a person's right to love whom they choose—and that you're
proud to say it.
Stonewall wasn't the first time the LGBT community fought against police oppression. If you want an interesting read, try Gay LA by Stuart Timmons and (ack, can't remember her name!) but it shows the LAPDs ridiculous moves against the LGBT community and how it became the epicenter for gay political power as a direct result of those actions.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.amazon.com/Gay-L-A-Politics-Lipstick/dp/B000WCTS3Q/
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kathleen! I just ordered a copy. Sounds fantastic!