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"The prevailing thought today in the area of urban
development and city planning is that if you want
to revitalize a decaying city and get rid of its urban
plight you create gayborhoods. And new studies
reveals that these enclaves have overall
positive economic and cultural effects"
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Gentrification of neighborhoods always disrupts existing communities within them.
In the past several years, Harlem’s empty lots and burned-out buildings
have sprung up luxury condos, upscale restaurants, boutique shops,
hotels, B&Bs, and unimaginable improved services in an area the
city had long forgotten.
And the resentment of this shift has targeted both Harlem's recent and life-long LGBTQ communities.
"Look out black woman. A white homo may take your man” a towering sign
hung for months outside of ATLAH World Missionary Church on West 123rd
and Lenox.
The pastor of ATLAH, Rev. James David Manning opposes the
gentrification going on in Harlem and has implored its residents and
his congregants to boycott the new luxury condos, upscale restaurants,
boutique shops, and hotels. According to Rev. Manning the boycott would
maim the "white homo" where it hurts him the most- his pockets.
And Manning expounded why on the church's online video.
"He's
usually got money -- a white homo usually has an American Express card.
He usually has an opportunity at the theater -- homos love the theater.
They love to go out to dinners, parties, they love that kind of a
thing... "
Next month Manning’s church is scheduled for a public foreclosure auction due to over $1 million dollars in debt.
The tragedy here is not in seeing Manning leave but rather the many
life-long residents of Harlem and congregants of Manning’s church who
are now forced to, resulting in the permanent dislocation not only of a
people but also of the inimitable culture, lifestyle and worship space
they created.The query raised by many Harlem residents is why is their
neighborhood that has been long forgotten and completely disinvested
from both public and private real estate interest suddenly a hot land
grab?
The prevailing thought today in the area of urban development and city
planning is that if you want to revitalize a decaying city and get rid
of its urban plight you create gayborhoods. And new studies reveals
that these enclaves have overall positive economic and cultural effects.
“Gays have often been at the forefront of gentrification in New York
City and elsewhere in the nation, said Charles Kaiser, author of The
Gay Metropolis, a History of Gay Life in New York who's quoted in
“Harlem Journal: Gay White Pioneers, on New Ground.”
In February 2014 HuffPo Live did a show “ Why We Still Need
Gayborhoods.” On the show was Janice Madden, a Professor of Regional
Science, Sociology, Urban Studies, and Real Estate at Penn, to discuss
her new book “Gayborhoods: Economic Development and the Concentration
of Same-Sex Couples in Neighborhoods Within Large American Cities.”
Madden revealed that gay white men on the Northeast and West coasts had
significantly greater income to created gayborhoods that are “ lose to
or have easy access to the downtown and had older housing."
But white gay men are not the culprits gentrifying Harlem, although the
number of whites in Harlem in the last decade has nearly doubled from
9.9 percent to 16.6 percent.
Harlem is unquestionably a community in transition—and not only with its new residents.
In June 2010, Harlem saw its first Pride. But Harlem still remains as
both a complicated open and closeted queer social hot spot. Harlem’s
transgender community wrestles more than any of us LGBQs with Harlem’s
homophobia.
With a new black and visible LGBTQ face emerging in Harlem in the last decade so too is a white one.
When rents became prohibitive, especially in Greenwich Village—NYC’s
gay mecca—many Manhattan LGBTQs took either a bridge over to Brooklyn
or a train up to Harlem.
These new LGBTQ residents in predominately poor communities and
communities of color have brought unimaginable improved services to the
area the city has long forgotten, like police protection, Starbucks,
Wholefoods, and boutique shops, to name a few. But their presence
has also created great resentment by those who were forced to
relocate from these communities, but also those left to see the
uncomfortable changes.
Many life-long residents wonder what will become of Manning’s imposing
edifice that’s been in the community since 1957 as one of the revered
Harlem churches in its day.
Some of Harlem’s land grab, however, can render not only good outcomes but also redemptive ones.
The last thing Manning would ever fathom for the church space is it
becoming NYC’s, largest homeless shelter and resource center for
LGBTQ African American youth. And the Ali Forney Center (AFC) has
launched a fundraising drive to grab the space.
Ali Forney, who the center is named after, was African American who
identified as both gay and transgender and was murdered in December
1997.
Needless to say, Rev. Manning will be outraged should the Ali Forney Center win its bid.
But I’m reminded of the prayer Forney recited - and no black pastor
heard - before his death at his favorite event of the year: Talent
Night at Safe Space, a program for homeless youth in NYC.
“I believe that one day, the Lord will come back to get me.
Hallelujah! All my trials and tribulations, they will all be
over. I won’t have to worry about crying and suffering no more, because
my God, hallelujah is coming back for me.”
Many black churches, especially in Harlem like Manning’s, continue
to both unapologetically and unabashedly closed its doors to its
LGBTQ population. And despite the fact these kids looked to the church
for help these youth have neither a chance nor a prayer for
assistance.
The Ali Forney Center would be their answer.
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BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member and Columnist, The Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion columnist, theologian, and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific School of Religion. A
native of Brooklyn, Rev. Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College
and Union Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and served as a
pastor at an African-American church before coming to Harvard Divinity
School for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow. She was recently named to
MSNBC’s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible Prayers for Not’So’Everyday Moments. As an African-American feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society that is frequently invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com. Contact the Rev. Monroe and BC.
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is published every Thursday |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
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