The Stonewall Rts, also lled the Stonewall Uprisg, took place on June 28, 1969, New York Cy, after police raid the Stonewall Inn, a lol gay club. The raid sparked a rt among bar patrons and neighborhood rints as police hled employe and patrons out of the bar, leadg to six days of protts and vlent clash. The Stonewall Rts served as a talyst for the gay rights movement.
Contents:
- THE GAY LIBERATN MOVEMENT
- UNTEND NSEQUENC: THE LEGACY OF THE GAY LIBERATN FRONT
- GAY RIGHTS MOVEMENT: ONE VICTORY AT A TIME
- GAY LIBERATN MOVEMENT
- GAY RIGHTS MOVEMENT
THE GAY LIBERATN MOVEMENT
Activists were advotg for LGBTQ Amerins s before the gay liberatn movement of the 1960s. * goals of gay liberation movement *
E., for lbians, gays [homosexual mal], bisexuals, transgenr persons, and queer persons); seeks to elimate sodomy laws; and lls for an end to discrimatn agast LGBTQ persons employment, cred, hog, public acmodatns, and other areas of life. ) Gay rights prr to the 20th century Relig admonns agast sexual relatns between dividuals of the same sex (particularly men) long stigmatized such behavur, but most legal s Europe were silent on the subject of homosexualy and bisexualy. Dpe Paragraph 175 and the failure of the WhK to w s repeal, homosexual and bisexual men and women experienced a certa amount of eedom Germany, particularly durg the Weimar perd, between the end of World War I and the Nazi seizure of power.
In the Uned Stat this greater visibily brought some backlash, particularly om the ernment and the police: the ernment often fired gay civil servants, the ary attempted to purge s ranks of gay soldiers (a policy enacted durg World War II), and police vice squads equently raid gay bars and arrted their patrons. In the Uned Stat the first major male anizatn, found 1950–51 by Harry Hay Los Angel, was the Mattache Society (s name reputedly rived om a medieval French society of masked players, the Société Mattache, to reprent the public “maskg” of homosexualy), while the Dghters of Bilis (named after the Sapphic love poems of Pierre Louÿs, Chansons Bilis), found 1955 by Phyllis Lyon and Del Mart San Francis, was a leadg group for women. In Bra 1957 a missn chaired by Sir John Wolfenn issued a groundbreakg report (see Wolfenn Report) remendg that private homosexual liaisons between nsentg adults be removed om the doma of crimal law; a later the remendatn was implemented by Parliament the Sexual Offenc Act.
In the 1970s and ’80s, gay polil anizatns proliferated, particularly the Uned Stat and Europe, and spread to other parts of the globe, though their relative size, strength, and succs—and toleratn by thori—varied signifintly. Now headquartered Geneva and renamed the Internatnal Lbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Associatn (ILGA World), plays a signifint role ordatg ternatnal efforts to promote human rights and fight discrimatn agast LGBTQ and tersex persons.
UNTEND NSEQUENC: THE LEGACY OF THE GAY LIBERATN FRONT
* goals of gay liberation movement *
This support, along wh mpaigns by gay activists urgg gay men and women to “e out of the closet” (ed, the late 1980s, Natnal Comg Out Day was tablished, and is now celebrated on October 11 most untri), enuraged gay men and women to enter the polil arena as ndidat. At the lol and natnal levels, the number of openly gay policians creased dramatilly durg the 1990s and 2000s, and 2009 Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir beme prime mister of Iceland, which ma her the world’s first openly gay head of ernment.
In Ai, Asia, and Lat Ameri, openly gay policians have had only limed succs wng office; notable electns to natnal legislatur clud Patria Jiménez Flor Mexi (1997), Mike Waters South Ai (1999), and Clodovil Hernans Brazil (2006).
GAY RIGHTS MOVEMENT: ONE VICTORY AT A TIME
Gay Rights Movement: • 1960s • 1970s • UK • USA • Liberatn • Activists • Lears • History • Vaia Magaze * goals of gay liberation movement *
Other issu of primary importance for the gay rights movement sce the 1970s clud batg the HIV/AIDS epimic and promotg disease preventn and fundg for rearch; lobbyg ernment for nondiscrimatory polici employment, hog, and other aspects of civil society; endg the ban on ary service for gay and lbian dividuals; expandg hate crim legislatn to clu protectns for gays, cludg transgenr dividuals; and securg marriage rights for same-sex upl (see same-sex marriage).
Ary’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy (1993–2011), which had permted gay and lbian dividuals to serve the ary if they did not disclose their sexual orientatn or engage homosexual activy; the repeal effectively end the ban on homosexuals the ary.
Although members of the gay muny were divid their opns about the rt, hundreds of people returned to the scene for the next several nights, some to ntue vlent opposn to the police and others to exprs their sexualy public for the first time. After Stonewall, however, a more radil polil nscns veloped that rulted om the formatn of many new groups, cludg the Gay Liberatn Front and Radilbians, whose members rejected the strategi and lled for a more ant rponse to homophobia. The papers clud sectns voted to muny updat, cultural events, and personal ads, but they also highlighted new polil ncerns, namely efforts to raise awarens about the problems of gay people prisons and ncerns about gay health.
GAY LIBERATN MOVEMENT
Public health thori, journalists, doctors, and even many the gay muny blamed gay liberatn and the looseng of sexual rtrictns for the epimic, but no one the medil or scientific muny actually unrstood the behavr of the vis.
Key potsIn the late 1960s and 1970s, Native Amerins, gay men, lbians, and women anized to change discrimatory laws and pursue ernment support for their terts, a strategy known as inty groups, whose aims and tactics posed a challenge to the existg state of affairs, often met wh hostily om dividuals, lol officials, and the US ernment. Increased fundg for Native Amerin tn, healthre, legal servic, hog, and enomic velopment followed, along wh the hirg of more Native Amerin employe the rightsDurg this era, the stggle for gay and lbian rights tensified as well.
Shortly thereafter, the Gay Liberatn Front and Gay Activists’ Alliance were formed; the anizatns began to prott discrimatn, homophobia, and vlence agast gay people, and promoted gay liberatn and gay advocy anizatns lled for gay men and lbians to e out—reveal their sexual orientatn—gay and lbian muni moved om the urban unrground to the polil sphere.
GAY RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Ostensibly memoratg the birth of the gay liberatn movement, Pri also pots to the outsize fluence of Stonewall as a sgular talyst for sparkg LGBTQ yet, there were activists advotg for LGBTQ Amerins s before the gay liberatn movement of the 1960s. This history has been largely fotten, bee their work was tied to a radil social movement criqug to the Cold War and the “Red Sre, ” gay rights activists ma a lculated cisn the 1950s to cut ti wh this movement and to purge this history om the story of the fight for LGBTQ rights. While that strategy might have been polilly advantageo for some, reclaimg radil queer history is sential to unrstandg the full spe of LGBTQ liv and polics the 20th 1932, leftist journalist John Ptman published “Prejudice Agast Homosexuals” his radil Black newspaper, the Spokman.
“What Negro and homosexuals both sire, ” Ptman wrote, “is to be regard as human begs wh the rights and liberti of human begs, cludg the right to be let alone, to enjoy life the way most agreeable and pleasant, to live secure om terference and sult.
As a Black leftist who was mted to revolutnary polics, Ptman well unrstood how prejudice stctured Amerin life, and he was unyieldg his opposn to all s reason that leftists — munists, socialists, anarchists and labor anizers pecially — ncerned themselv wh sexual polics was bee radils often found themselv shared urban spac wh gay men and lbians, notably lol YMCAs and public parks.