Has
the Black Leadership Become the New White Moderate?
That’s the question on the minds of Black same-gender loving
people all over the country, after the deafening silence from America’s
Black leaders on the recent controversy surrounding former NBA All-Star
player Tim Hardaway’s admonition that he hates gay people.
But what if Tim Hardaway would have been a white NBA player? And what
if, as a white player, he said the following:
"You know I hate Black people, so I let it be known. I don't like
Black people and I don't like to be around Black people. I am racist.
I don't like it. They shouldn't be in the world or in the United States.
So yeah, I don't like them."
In his poignant and prophetic “Letter from Birmingham Jail,”
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. told his fellow clergyman that he was disappointed
with the “white moderate”. He went on to explain that he
had reached the “regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great
stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's
Councilor or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more
devoted to "order" than to justice”.
I often feel that the biggest hindrance to Blacks is not the white conservative
right but the people that look like us that are too afraid to disrupt
the order of things to do any real meaningful work towards my civil
rights as a lesbian.
Like the white moderates of King’s era who believed that Blacks
would eventually receive equal rights in good time, we are living during
times where Black leaders know that it is inevitable that gays will
obtain all of their civil rights, including marriage, and that the mistreatment
of gays based solely on their sexual orientation is wrong. But these
same Black leaders aren’t willing to rock the boat in the fight
for equality and would rather settle for being good Negroes, assuring
people like me that it will come one day, not today, but one day.
Tim Hardaway’s comments were hateful, demeaning, and hurt same-gender
loving people all over this country. But the silence from the Black
leadership hurts even more. Because from that silence, I was told very
loudly that my life as a lesbian has no meaning to them and that it
is morally just to hate gays, even if I am Black. Just don’t go
on a tirade in a comedy club about hating Blacks because then we’re
coming for you.
The double standard in today’s Black civil rights movement has
got to stop.
Hardaway’s comments were just as bad as what comedian Michael
Richard’s said about Blacks. It’s just that today we are
living in 2007, some 40 years after the Jim Crow Era and integration
where Blacks are now considered equal. We just haven’t reached
that point with gays. But had Richards made his comments forty years
ago, the furor that erupted from his comments today would have been
met with white moral justification to defend him and sadly today, Blacks
haven’t reached the point where it’s acceptable to defend
gays from verbal attacks like Hardaway’s.
If the silence from the Black leadership on Hardaway is any indication
of what we can expect as we roll into a heated Presidential campaign
season on gay issues, then we very well stand to see a repeat of 2004
where we had Black pastors urging Blacks to vote for a President that
opposed gay marriage and abortion while critical issues of importance
like healthcare, housing, and social security were overlooked.
Ignoring gays isn’t going to make us go away. We’re here.
There were gays before us and there will be gays after us. But like
King in the face of rabid opposition from the National Baptist Convention,
that vehemently opposed the civil rights movement and wanted King to
stay in his Negro place, we too will not be swayed from participating
fully, openly, and honestly in our faith, family, and community. It
just means it’s going to be that much harder on all us when we
have to take time to fight with each other over something as small as
ones sexual orientation, instead of working together on the bigger picture
which includes all of us, thus, bringing new meaning to King’s
observation that injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
BC Columnist Jasmyne Cannick, 29, is a social commentator,
nationally syndicated journalist and activist who was chosen as one of
ESSENCE Magazine's 25 Women Shaping the World. She is a member of the
National Association of Black Journalists and writes a popular daily blog
at jasmynecannick.com
and myspace.com/jasmynecannick.
She resides in Los Angeles. Click here
to contact Ms. Cannick. |