EFFY’s Big Gay Block plac LGBTQ wrtlg the dtry’s narrative - Outsports

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GCW’s 24-hour wrtlg event, Fight Forever, is gettg a lot gayer.

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DIFFERENT FIGHT, 'SAME GOAL': HOW THE BLACK EEDOM MOVEMENT SPIRED EARLY GAY ACTIVISTS

In a iendship birthed out of activism for the Black LGBTQ muny, Ernt Hopks and Philip Pannell have been fightg for s to ensure that Black gay, lbian, bisexual, transgenred, and queer people have a seat at the table of power. * black gay fight *

On April 25, 1965, three teenagers refed to leave Dewey’s Rtrant Philalphia after employe repeatedly nied service to “homosexuals and persons wearg nonnformist clothg, ” acrdg to Dm magaze, which was created by the Jan Society, an early gay rights teens were arrted and charged wh disorrly nduct, and Jan Society members protted outsi of the rtrant for the next five days, acrdg to Marc Ste, a history profsor at San Francis State Universy.

"Eric Cervi, LGBTQ Historian“Unlike so many other episos, kd of bed issu of homosexualy and trans issu, ” Ste, thor of “Rethkg the Gay and Lbian Movement, ” told NBC May 2, three more people staged a send s- at Dewey’s. Specifilly, s-s anized by gay activists the ‘60s appear to be directly spired by protts held 1960 by Black llege stunts at Woolworth’s lunch unter Greensboro, North Carola, agast racial stunts wa va for food service at this F. C., one of the first homophile groups ("homophile" beg the adjective of choice at the time), and he drew strategi directly om the Black civil rights movement, acrdg to Eric Cervi, a historian and thor of “The Deviant’s War, ” which foc on Kameny and the early gay rights movement.

A GAY UPLE RAN A RAL RTRANT PEACE. THEN NEW NEIGHBORS ARRIVED.

The gay rights movement wouldn't be where is today whout the Black queer muny. Let's stop erasg their ntributns om LGBTQ+ history." emprop="scriptn * black gay fight *

(In fact, 1979, activists would anize a Natnal March on Washgton for Gay and Lbian Rights, which drew an timated 200, 000 protters, acrdg to the Natnal LGBT Chamber of Commerce) hold signs as they participate the Natnal March on Washgton for Lbian & Gay Rights Washgton, DC, on Oct.

A aln of gay and lbian anizatns held a yearly peaceful prott at Inpennce Hall lled the Annual Remr om 1965 to 1969, which Ste said were fluenced by the early civil rights monstratns which monstrators were stcted to drs rpectably, wh women drs and men sus. ”Barbara Gtgs and other gay rights activists picket outsi the Whe hoe Tob Lahen / NYPLOn the other hand, gay and trans activists were also affected by the Black Power movement and urban uprisgs, acrdg to Ste.

”Crowd attempts to impe police arrts outsi the Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street New York's Greenwich Village York Daily News via Getty ImagCervi said FBI reports explicly nnect the Black Freedom Movement and the early homophile movement.

BLACK GAY HISTORY AND THE FIGHT AGAST AIDS

* black gay fight *

”“This ia of a aln between the two anizatns — that the Black Freedom Movement might be spirg this other group of Amerin cizens who are also margalized, and the fact that they may both be takg to the streets, perhaps ordatn — that is what sred them the most, ” Cervi said of the FBI and Southern racist Kameny and Mattache Society of Washgton members marchg New York, June Tob Lahen / NYPLHowever, the homophile movement, at least New York and Washgton, never ma that aln a realy, Cervi said he the word “plagiarism” to scribe how Kameny ed civil rights tactics whout workg wh or credg the activists whose tactics he ed. Kuromiya -found the Gay Liberatn Front’s Philalphia chapter and beme a spokperson for a homosexual workshop at the Black Panther’s Revolutnary People's Constutnal Conventn September 1970, acrdg to gave a prentatn “to the huge dience of the nventn to applse, ” Ste said of Kuromiya, cg this as one of many exampl showg that the movements weren’t agmented or divid at the time some ci.

Marshall’s legal strategy, which volved g the due procs and equal protectn cls of the 14th Amendment, served as a mol that the LGBTQ movement ed to challenge the crimalizatn of homosexualy and the nial of marriage rights.

HEARG THE QUEER ROOTS OF BLACK LIV MATTERBY DAVID B. GREEN, JR.NATNAL CENTER FOR INSTUTNAL DIVERSY·FOLLOWPUBLISHED SPARK: ELEVATG SCHOLARSHIP ON SOCIAL ISSU·7 M READ·FEB 6, 2019--3LISTENSHARELEFT TO RIGHT AND TOP TO BOTTOM: JUNE JORDAN, PAT PARKER, MELV BOOZER, ASSOTTO SAT, AUDRE LOR, JOSEPH BEAM, BARBARA SMH, MARSHA P. JOHNSONTHIS PIECE IS A PART OF OUR SPARK SERI: THE BLACK RADIL TRADN OF RISTANCEWHEN PATRISSE KHAN-CULLERS, OPAL TOMETI, AND ALICIA GARZA — THE FOUNRS OF THE BLACK LIV MATTER MOVEMENT (BLM) — LLECTIVELY UTTERED THE PHRASE “BLACK LIV MATTER,” THEY HELPED TO REIGNE THE NTUED STGGLE FOR BLACK EEDOM, LIBERATN, AND JTICE THE UNED STAT. AS BLACK FEMISTS, THEY ROOTED THEIR FIGHT FOR EEDOM AND LIBERATN AN TERSECTNAL-JTICE PRAXIS THAT DISPTS THE TRADNAL AMEWORK OF BLACK ACTIVISM — A AMEWORK THAT HISTORILLY PRRIZED ADDRSG RACIAL JTICE OVER AND AGAST GENR JTICE AND SEXUAL EEDOM; A AMEWORK, WHOUT QUTN, THAT SILENCED AND SHUNNED “HOMOSEXUALY” AND OPENLY GAY ACTIVISTS ACROSS MUCH OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. AS THE BLACK LBIAN FEMIST AUDRE LOR OBSERV ABOUT THE 1960’S POLIL CLIMATE: “THE EXISTENCE OF BLACK LBIAN AND GAY PEOPLE WERE NOT EVEN ALLOWED TO CROSS THE PUBLIC NSCNS OF BLACK AMERI.” FOR BLACK GAYS AND LBIANS WHO WERE “OUT” AND SIRED LIBERATED-PUBLIC-POLIL PARTICIPATN, THE 1960’S BEME, LOR WR, NOT “A GUI FOR LIVG BUT A NEW SET OF SHACKL.”UNLIKE THE BLACK FREEDOM MOVEMENT OF THE 1950’S AND 1960’S, BLM IS HERENTLY A MOVEMENT STAED BY A POLICS OF BLACKNS THAT IS, CHARLENE CARTHERS REMDS , UNAPOLOGETILLY FEMIST, WOMANIST, AND QUEER. HOWEVER, WOULD BE UNWISE TO FET AND IGNORE THE BLACK QUEER CULTURAL AND POLIL NTEXT OM WHICH THIS MOVEMENT EMERG AND RTS UPON. THE POLIL SURGENCY OF BLM EVOK THE LIK OF EARLIER BLACK QUEER ACTIVISTS — LBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENR ACTIVISTS OF AIN SCENT — WHO, BEE OF TIME AND CIRCUMSTANCE, SPOKE VAR TON OF “HOW FELY PLEX ANY MOVE FOR LIBERATN MT BE.” INED, IF ONE WERE TO SEARCH FOR A HISTORIL NTEXT TO UNRSTAND THE IMPERATIVE AND VALUABLE NTEXT OF TODAY’S BLACK LIV MATTER MOVEMENT, THEN ONE WOULD HAVE TO TRACE S LEGACI ON THE PAGE AS WELL AS THE STAGE. WHILE BLACK LIV MATTER — ALL OF S GLORY, RHETORIC, AND POLIL PRAXIS — VERY MUCH DISPTS ANTI-BLACK PUBLICS, S LIVG LEGACY AS A NTEMPORARY POLIL MOVEMENT N BE TRACED TO BLACK QUEER ACTIVISM, WRG AND PUBLIC SPEECH THAT BOOK-END TWENTIETH CENTURY US POLICS AND EEDOM MOVEMENTS.BLACK & QUEER: A HEARG EN MASSEWHENEVER I RELL HEARG ALICIA GARZA SHARG THAT, RPONSE TO TRAYVON MART’S MURR — AND THE KILLG OF BLACK PEOPLE BY POLICE OFFICERS ACROSS THE UNED STAT — I NOT ONLY THK OF HOW SHE DID THGS WH WORDS, TO EVOKE J.L. AT, BUT HOW, HER EFFORTS “TRANSFORMG SILENCE TO LANGUAGE AND ACTN,” I HEAR SO MANY OF THE BLACK QUEER ACTIVISTS BEFORE HER TIME SPEAKG SUCH TTH TO POWER. AND I PECIALLY HEAR THE VOIC THAT EMERGED ACROSS THE LAST S OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY, THE 1980’S AND 1990’S. I HEAR BLACK-TRANS ACTIVIST MARSHA P. JOHNSON PROCLAIMG THAT “THE STREETS BELONG TO THE PEOPLE” AS SHE, ALONG WH PUERTO RIN-TRANS ACTIVIST SYLVIA RIVERA, ARGUED THAT BLACK AND LATX TRANSGENR YOUTH LIVG NEW YORK CY HAVE A RIGHT TO WALK UP AND DOWN STREETS WHOUT THREAT OR HARM OM EVERYDAY FOLKX OR POLICE OFFICERS. I HEAR BOTH JUNE JORDAN’S “POEM ABOUT MY RIGHTS” AND “WHO LOOK AT ME?” PROCLAIMG A BLACK WOMAN’S SIGHT AS AGENCY AND EMPOWERMENT AND ANTI-BLACK SIGHT AS DANGERO; I HEAR THE AO-HAIAN ACTIVIST, POET, WRER, AND PLAYWRIGHT ASSOTTO SAT’S THEATRIL PRODUCTN RISG TO THE LOVE WE NEED AND HIS CHARACTERS “SGG THE SOULS OF BLACK GAYS AMERI;” I HEAR JOSEPH BEAM CLARG THE 1980’S THAT “BLACK MEN LOVG BLACK MEN IS A REVOLUTNARY ACT;” I HEAR DIS-DIVA SYLVTER AND ARCH-BISHOP CARL BEAN’S LYRIL FUNK, G MIC AS A POLIL STMENT TO ADDRS AND END DRAG/TRANS/ QUEER/HOMO-PHOBIA; I HEAR BARBARA SMH AND MEMBERS OF THE COMBAHEE RIVER COLLECTIVE CHURNG RADIL EEDOM DREAMS TO EEDOM PRACTIC CCIAL TO BLACK WOMEN SURVIVG AND THRIVG THEN AND NOW. I HEAR AUDRE LOR’S “NEED: A CHORALE OF BLACK WOMEN’S VOIC” — A POEM, FACT, THAT FORCED LOR TO STOP DRIVG AND PULL OVER ON THE SI OF THE ROAD TO REMEMBER THE LIV OF BLACK WOMEN KILLED BY AN OPPRSIVE NATN-STATE.WHENEVER SCHOLARS AND ACTIVISTS LIVER KEYNOTE ADDRS WH THE NTEXT OF BLACK LIV MATTER, I HEAR MELV DIXON’S KEYNOTE SPEECH AT THE 1992 OUT/WRE CONFERENCE BOSTON, WHERE HE CLAR THAT GAYS AND LBIANS ARE THE “SEXUAL NIGGERS OF SOCIETY.” AND, SIMULTANEOLY, I HEAR — AS A PREEMPTIVE REA TO DIXON’S SPEECH — DC ACTIVIST MELV BOOZER STANDG ONT OF MEMBERS AT THE DEMOCRATIC NATNAL CONVENTN, REJECTG, 1980, THE PARTY’S NOMATN FOR HIS NDIDACY FOR VICE PRINT OF THE UNED STAT. BOOZER’S POLIL SENSIBILY MEANT THAT HE REFED TO ROMANTICIZE POLIL PROGRS FOR THE SAKE OF CREASED POLIL VISIBILY, THORY, AND POWER. AS A BLACK GAY MAN, BOOZER WAS KEENLY AWARE OF HOW RACISM, GENR EQUALY, AND HOMOPHOBIA NOT ONLY ENTRENCHED HIS LIFE BUT NTUED TO HAVE A STRANGLEHOLD WH THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY AND ACROSS ON THE UNTRY. HE SPOKE, BOLDLY:“WOULD YOU ASK ME HOW I’D DARE TO PARE THE CIVIL RIGHTS STGGLE WH THE STGGLE FOR LBIAN AND GAY RIGHTS? I N PARE, AND I DO PARE THEM. I KNOW WHAT MEANS TO BE LLED A NIGGER. I KNOW WHAT MEANS TO BE LLED A FAGGOT. AND I N SUM UP THE DIFFERENCE ONE WORD: NONE.” —MELV BOOZERBIGOTRY IS BIGOTRY.LIKE MANY BLACK AND CHIN@ FEMISTS BEFORE THEM, “THE TWO MELVS” UNRSTOOD THAT THERE ULD BE NO HIERARCHY OF OPPRSN. AS BLACK GAY MEN, THEY MAND THAT ANY FIGHT FOR SOCIAL JTICE BE TERSECTNAL.MOVEMENT BLACK: ALWAYS

"It was perilo to be a black gay boy Ameri," Jon says of the fear and isolatn he experienced growg up Texas the 1990s. His new memoir is How We Fight for Our Liv. * black gay fight *

Outlg the group’s posn on the two emergg movements, Newton wrote: “Whatever your personal opns and your securi about homosexualy and the var liberatn movements among homosexuals and women (and I speak of the homosexuals and women as opprsed groups), we should try to une wh them a revolutnary fashn.

EFFY’S BIG GAY BLOCK PLAC LGBTQ PRO WRTLG THE DTRY’S NARRATIVE

People sometim wre off a gay mans fightg skills but Damon knows gay men n fight! Back the day here was a gay du their neighborhood and he was known for beg able to kick people's butts. * black gay fight *

That tersectn is as old as the morn fight for LGTBQ rights, and perhaps no moment illtrat that as well as the movement’s most famo turng pot: the 1969 Stonewall Rts, the uprisg sparked by a police raid at a gay bar New York Cy’s Greenwich Village neighborhood, and the tone to which Pri Month is pegged. As they are today, members of the LGBTQ muny were disproportnately targeted by police durg the 1950s and 1960s, “the most homophobic perd Amerin history, ” says historian Hugh Ryan, thor of When Brooklyn Was Queer: A History. Trans women of lor played a key role the Augt 1966 Compton Cafeteria Rts San Francis, and a police raid on the Black Cat tavern Los Angel on New Years’ Day 1967 rulted anized public protts agast police harassment of gay, trans and genr non-nformg people.

THAT’S WHAT I THK: GAY MEN CAN FIGHT!

This vio rurfaced yterday followg the passg of John McCa (people were sayg was McCa and Obama 2008) and I n’t stop watchg . Mostly bee ’s hands down the gayt fight ... * black gay fight *

For historian Ryan, the Haven Rt 1970, which took place at the Haven gay bar Greenwich Village, was also a landmark event and monstrat that there was a nsistency to the ancy beyond the sgular moment of Stonewall.

INTRODUCG THE MOST OUTRAGEOLY GAY FIGHT VIO OF ALL TIME

The fact that several members of the Black Panther Party, cludg Angela Davis, Afeni Shakur and Joan Bird, had also spent time the prison speaks to the shared nnectns a broar stggle, Ryan says, as lks emerged between the Black Panther Party, the Gay Liberatn Front, radil lbians and the femist and women’s movements. It was after she saw the prison how the opprsn of gay people was nnected to the opprsn of mori that Afeni Shakur went on to anize a meetg between the Black Panther Party and the Gay Liberatn Front at Jane Fonda’s penthoe apartment on the Upper East si 1970.

But the tth is, the two Black gay men are the foundg rnerston of the Black Pri experience that lns experience yearly and the policy advancements that have slowed the spread of HIV/AIDS and uplifted the fac and voic of the Black LGBTQIA muny the U. As a native of Newport News, Virgia, or as he scrib , "a son of the segregated south, " Pannell's anizg for gay liberatn, which kicked off the summer of 1969 the Greenwich Village, found a home the District.

LIL NAS X CALLS OUT BET FOR AWARDS SNUB: 'BLACK GAY PEOPLE HAVE TO FIGHT TO BE SEEN'

As a founr of both Black Pri and a one-time lear the Capal Pri ftival, Hopks has been a leadg advote for changg how the Centers for Disease Control and Preventn rpond to the proliferatn of HIV/AIDS among Black gay men. He explored issu of sexualy and black inty his work, and his avant-gar story “Smoke, Lili, and Ja” is thought to be the first explicly gay story published by a black RUSTIN (1912-1987)Bayard Rt his Park Avenue South office New York Cy, April 1969.

In 2013, Rt was posthumoly award the Printial Medal of Freedom, the natn’s hight civilian honor, for his tirels work promotg equal BALDWIN (1924-1987)Author Jam BaldwTed Thai / LIFE Picture Collectn/Getty“There isn't a sgle black gay wrer of lerary fictn or nonfictn that has not been fluenced by Jam Baldw on some level, " Charl Stephens, executive director of the Counter Narrative Project, told NBC News. A wrer and social cric, Baldw is perhaps bt known for his 1955 llectn of says, "Not of a Native Son, " and his groundbreakg 1956 novel, "Gvanni's Room, " which picts them of homosexualy and AILEY (1931-1989)Dancer and choreographer Alv Ailey.

*BEAR-MAGAZINE.COM* BLACK GAY FIGHT

Different fight, 'same goal': How the Black eedom movement spired early gay activists .

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