La Famiglia

La Famiglia
The book our gay men’s book group read and discussed this week is the story of an Italian family, una famiglia. It’s called All This Talk of Love by Christopher Castellani, himself an American from an Italian family. A mother, father, and two grown children (and one deceased) are the book’s main players, but their family, the Grassos, becomes the real protagonist of the novel.

Given how family importance gets heightened during the December holidays, Castellani’s book was a good choice. And as always happens in that group, smart guys discussing a work produced insights that I hadn’t thought of.

It being a family story, discussion of All This Talk of Love slid into tales that several men in the group related about their own families, tales that made the evening even richer. Some men in the group are from Italian families who sound not so different from the Grassos; but same nationality or not, families seem to stand in two-way mirrors that reflect the same picture.

In my experience, thoughts about family bring back memories good and bad, often vying with one another. I strive to remember the good things about my family, mostly now deceased. But it’s easy for those times to get buried under moments and relationships that left one wanting, caused by others and, when I’m honest, by myself as well.

What I’ve found curious about families is that the need does not vanish when an actual family does. Gradually we reach out and create new families — a lover or partner or a distant cousin who grows closer, maybe a teacher or student, maybe a good friend who takes over as welcome sister or brother. With my immediate family all gone, I turn to friends, to be sure, and also to nieces, nephews, and even their children. I’m doing my best to establish a cadre of younger folk who will come around and provide help when needed. Don’t go too far away, please, I’ve hollered. You may get a plea to attend an aging uncle!

Everyone lately has been touched by stories of families who were torn apart by shootings or strangulations, deeply sad tales. The events were examined by a jury of citizens, and the findings they returned have been so controversial, often acquitting a police officer, that protests erupted locally and across the land. Presumably the panel believed in justice as much as those who later protested their findings, but it’s easy to see otherwise. Regardless, men died under circumstances not clear. And those men, part of a family, maybe a lover or husband or brother, certainly a son, are gone.

The Hebrew Bible is filled with family stories of jealousy and betrayal as well as those of love. It seems that the sages who wrote the stories are alerting us to the frequency of unhappy, even murderous family relationships. Accept that we humans were not made perfect, those stories say, and know that to make your family whole needs care and nourishment, and a large measure of forgiveness.

This month, with the wonderful days of Chanukah and Christmas, I think I’ll review the love that was portrayed by Castellani in the Grasso family, and see if I can’t find a little more good to remember in my own.

Stanley Ely includes many family stories in his new memoir, Life Up Close, in paperback and ebook.

www.huffingtonpost.com/stanley-ely/la-famiglia_b_6285108.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Inspired by Robbie Rogers, high school soccer star comes out at homecoming by dancing with boyfriend

Inspired by Robbie Rogers, high school soccer star comes out at homecoming by dancing with boyfriend

Michael Martin: ‘If I can come out in a small town in West Virginia and be accepted, and dance with the homecoming king, it shows things are changing’

read more

gregh

www.gaystarnews.com/article/inspired-robbie-rogers-high-school-soccer-star-comes-out-homecoming-dancing-boyfriend161214

Gay Cafe Manager Hailed As A Hero For Giving His Life to Save Others in Sydney Siege

Gay Cafe Manager Hailed As A Hero For Giving His Life to Save Others in Sydney Siege

tori-johnsonThe openly gay manager who lost his life in Sydney’s Lindt Café siege is being hailed as a national hero for helping other hostages escape after the terrifying 17-hour ordeal.

News.com.au reports that Tori Johnson, 34, was attempting to wrestle the gun from hostage-taker Man Haron Monis, who had begun dozing off, when the weapon discharged early Tuesday morning, killing Johnson along with another hostage, Katrina Dawson, 38.

Australian police believe the manager’s heroic efforts allowed the other hostages to escape after the tense and prolonged stand-off. The gunman was then killed when police stormed the café after hearing the shots that killed Johnson and Dawson.

Johnson’s parents released a statement saying, “We are so proud of our beautiful boy Tori, gone from this earth but forever in our memories as the most amazing life partner, son, and brother we could ever wish for.”

Friends of Johnson — who is survived by Thomas Zinn, his partner of 14 years — described the him as “a loving, placid, and very gentle soul” and “a true gentleman.”

A former colleague posted the following on Facbeook: “R.I.P. Tori Johnson, at times we both hated each other, and at other times we’d be hysterically laughing. You gave me so many chances even when i was a little s*** eating all the lindor balls and pretending I was a barista. You had a good heart, and I knew you were in there protecting everyone.”

Winston Gieseke

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/wmZJhyx0fGc/gay-cafe-manager-hailed-as-a-hero-for-giving-his-life-to-save-others-in-sydney-siege-20141216

Philly Gay Bashing Suspects Held On All Charges, Will Be Back In Court On January 6

Philly Gay Bashing Suspects Held On All Charges, Will Be Back In Court On January 6

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The three suspects accused in a heinous attack on a gay couple in Philadelphia on September 11 will stand trial on charges of felony assault and conspiracy, among other charges, Philadelphia Magazine reports. As previously reported, the defendants are 26-year-old Kevin Harrigan, 24-year-old Kathryn Knott, and 24-year-old Philip Williams. Today’s preliminary hearing was to determine whether the prosecution had met the burden of proof required to charge and try the defendants. Judge Charles Hayden Found they had:

The defendants, who previously pleaded not guilty and remain out on bail, appeared in the courtroom with their families, with Knott’s mother crying throughout many points of the proceeding. State Representative Brian Sims was also in attendance in the courtroom, which was crowded but not full.

Two witnesses testified today for the prosecution. Geoff Nagle observed the attack from a third floor window and stated that he heard “cursing and yelling in male and female voices, including language such as ‘fucking faggot.'” The other witness was one of the two victims, Zachary Hesse:

Hesse said that when the pair encountered the group at 16th and Chancellor, Harrigan asked, “Is that your fucking boyfriend?” “I said, ‘Yeah, that is my fucking boyfriend,” he testified. “‘Do you have a problem with that?'” Then he testified that Harrigan said, “‘So you’re a dirty fucking faggot?’ So I approached him and said, ‘Maybe I am a dirty fucking faggot.’ He pushed me, I pushed him.”

Then Hesse says that he was surrounded by the group. “I was terrified,” he testified. “It’s scary to have people surround you, and your arms are being held.”

Before closing the hearing Judge Hayden wished all of the defendants “good luck.”

Formal arraignment for the plaintiffs is scheduled for January 6th.


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/philly-gay-bashing-suspects-held-on-all-charges-will-be-back-in-court-on-january-6-1.html

The Past Is Never Dead

The Past Is Never Dead
NOTE: Like our previous posts, this is co-authored by Stuart Gaffney and John Lewis and should be jointly attributed. Thank you!

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Federal Judge Carlton W. Reeves in his eloquent opinion striking down Mississippi’s marriage equality ban noted William Faulkner’s famous observation: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.” Judge Reeves then went on to apply his in-depth knowledge of the history of prejudice against LGBT Americans to support his holding that Mississippi’s marriage ban violates the U.S. Constitution.

Judge Reeves focused particularly on discrimination during the 1960s civil rights movement to illuminate “the long tradition of Americans from all walks of life uniting to discriminate against homosexuals. It did not matter if one was liberal or conservative, segregationist or civil rights leader, Democrat or Republican; homosexuals were ‘the other.'” Judge Reeves highlighted especially the struggle of Bayard Rustin:

Another person targeted for his homosexuality was longtime civil rights organizer Bayard Rustin. Rustin, an African American, had been active in the Communist movement, was a conscious objector to World War II, and helped guide the Montgomery bus boycott – all of which made him suspect. When he drew attention in Mississippi, the Clarion-Ledger called him a “sex criminal” owing to a 1953 conviction for being caught in a gay sex encounter in California.

The most interesting part of Rustin’s story, though–and the reason why he merits more discussion here–is that he was subjected to anti-gay discrimination by both white and black people, majority and minority alike.

Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, a black Democrat, threatened to feed the media a false story that Rustin was having an affair with Martin Luther King, Jr., unless Dr. King canceled a protest at the Democratic National Convention. “The mere assertion would be extremely damaging.” “King, however, held steady, and vowed that the picketing would go on as planned, which it did.” Other persons within the civil rights movement were similarly “put off by Rustin’s homosexuality.” Roy Wilkins, an NAACP executive, “was particularly nasty to Bayard Rustin–very hostile,” in part because he “was very nervous about Bayard’s homosexuality.” Dr. King eventually had Rustin resign “because of persistent criticism of Rustin’s homosexuality and Communist ties and because of Congressman Adam Clayton Powell’s threat.”

Rustin reemerged years later as one of the principal organizers of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. A. Philip Randolph and Dr. King wanted Rustin as the march’s chief organizer, but Wilkins pushed back “because [Rustin] was gay…something which in particular would offend J. Edgar Hoover.” The group ultimately “decided Randolph would be in charge of the march, that Rustin would be the principal organizer, but that he would stay somewhat in the background.”

The concern about offending Hoover was prescient, as the FBI Director and other top officials soon moved to use Rustin’s homosexuality against him. In August 1963, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, and President John F. Kennedy urgently reviewed the transcript of an FBI wiretap in which Dr. King acknowledged Rustin’s homosexuality. A day later, Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina “rose in the Senate to denounce Rustin for sexual perversion, vagrancy, and lewdness.” FBI “headquarters badgered the field offices for new details” of Rustin’s sex life for months.

In November 2013, President Obama bestowed the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, on Bayard Rustin posthumously. In November 2014, the struggle Rustin endured fifty years ago contributed to Judge Reeves’ advancing marriage equality for LGBT Americans today. Indeed: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”

John Lewis and Stuart Gaffney, together for nearly three decades, were plaintiffs in the California case for equal marriage rights decided by the California Supreme Court in 2008. They are leaders in the nationwide grassroots organization Marriage Equality USA.

www.huffingtonpost.com/stuart-gaffney/the-past-is-never-dead_1_b_6328872.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Oxford Schoolboys Are Giving Us Major Holiday Cheer In Their Latest A Cappella Video

Oxford Schoolboys Are Giving Us Major Holiday Cheer In Their Latest A Cappella Video

Screen Shot 2014-12-16 at 10.39.29 AMLast we heard from the Oxford-based tonal wonders Out Of The Blue, they were getting sassy to Shakira’s “Hips Don’t Lie,” raising money for charity along the way while they racked up an impressive 5.2 million hits on YouTube.

The well-educated all male a cappella group is back with an adorable rendition of Mariah’s “All I Want For Christmas,” and judging by the pop diva’s latest performance of the tune, we’ll stick with the Oxford Boys this holiday season.

The new clip supports the Helen & Douglas House, which offers hospice services to children and young adults.

Check out the video here:

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/JZbyYOhowzM/oxford-schoolboys-are-giving-us-major-holiday-cheer-in-their-latest-a-cappella-video-20141216

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