Homophobia is part and parcel of the world of male
professional sports, and with many African-American male professional
athletes also of the hip-hop generation, the combination is lethal.
Tim Hardaway, a retired professional basketball player, is of
this generation of hip-hop athletes. And in an interview on Miami’s
sports radio station, 790 The Ticket, Hardaway was asked recently
how he would interact with a gay teammate. The topic came up because
of fellow former NBAer John Amaechi’s recent announcement,
in his book “Man in the Middle,” that he is gay. “You
know, I hate gay people, so I let it be known. I don’t like
gay people and I don’t like to be around gay people,”
Hardaway said. “I’m homophobic. I don’t like
it. It shouldn’t be in the world or in the United States.”
His vitriol, sadly, hurt more than just his post-career endorsements.
It hurt the hundreds of young sports enthusiasts and athletes
that revered him. “His words pollute the atmosphere,”
Amaechi responded. “It creates an atmosphere that allows
young gays and lesbians to be harassed in school, creates an atmosphere
where in 33 states you can lose your job, and where anti-gay and
lesbian issues are used for political gain. It’s an atmosphere
that hurts all of us, not just gay people.”
And although the NBA banished Hardaway from its All-Star weekend
in Las Vegas because of his anti-gay remarks, and a number of
public relations apologies immediately followed, Hardaway nonetheless
expressed his true animus toward gays that even his first public
apology couldn’t conceal. “Yes, I regret it. I’m
sorry. I shouldn’t have said I hate gay people or anything
like that,” Hardaway said. “That was my mistake.”
But Hardaway’s homophobia is shaped by a particular type
of black masculinity that no longer has to break through this
country’s color barrier to represent the race and prove
athletic prowess or manhood in sports. It is now a black hyper-masculinity
and urban aesthetic shaped by hip-hop culture and “video-mercials”
that not only exploit women, but also unabashedly denigrate gays
and lesbians, and they care little about its deleterious effects
on all children — straight and gay. The aggressive posturing
and repudiation of gay people allows athletes like Hardaway to
feel safe in the locker room by maintaining the myth that all
the guys gathered on their team are heterosexual, and sexual attraction
among them just does not exist.
“I don’t think he should be in the locker room while
we are in the locker room,” Hardaway said during that Miami
interview. “If you have 12 other ballplayers in your locker
room that’s upset and can’t concentrate and always
worried about him in the locker room or on the court or whatever,
it’s going to be hard for your teammates to win and accept
him as a teammate.” This myth allows men like Hardaway to
enjoy the homo-social setting of the male locker room that creates
male-bonding — and the physical and emotional intimacy that
goes on among them displayed as slaps on the buttocks, hugging,
and kissing on the cheeks in a homoerotic context — while
such behavior outside of the locker would be easily labeled as
gay.
In his book, Amaechi states, “The
NBA locker room was the most flamboyant place I’ve ever
been. Guys flaunted their perfect bodies. They bragged about sexual
exploits. They primped in front of the mirror, applying cologne
and hair gel by the bucketful. They tried on each other’s
$10,000 suits, admired each other’s rings and necklaces.
It was an intense camaraderie that felt completely natural to
them. I couldn’t help chuckling to myself: And I’m
the gay one.”
The most potent strategy for discouraging
female participation in athletics has always been raising questions
about the femininity of female athletes, assuming that all female
athletics are lesbians. Women who chose to participate in sports
often go to great lengths to display traditional heterosexual
markers through their clothing, hair style and mannerism. Both
gay and lesbian athletes must constantly monitor how they are
being perceived by teammates, coaches and endorsers, in order
to avoid suspicion. They are expected to maintain a public silence
so that their identity does not tarnished the rest of the team.
Today’s society awards celebrity status to professional
athletes of all races, and the popularity of African-American
hip-hop athletes has reached unprecedented levels; their influences
go far beyond the court and field.
So, do these athletes have a responsibility to their fans and
society?
While black hip-hop athletes no longer have to be representers
of the race, they do need to remember how they got there. Racism
was addressed through sports when Jackie Robinson became the first
black Major League Baseball player in 1947, and in this year’s
landmark Super Bowl with its two black coaches.
Sports programs are a particular challenge when attempting to
make schools, playgrounds, and locker rooms safe of our children.
But sports can also provide innumerable opportunities to teach
valuable life lessons and can be a powerful influence in addressing
myriad social issues. And eliminating homophobia can be one of
them. That’s something Hardaway and his hip-hop cohorts
need to think about.
BC columnist,
the Rev. Irene Monroe is a religion columnist, public theologian,
and speaker. She is a Ford Fellow and doctoral candidate at Harvard
Divinity School. As an African American feminist theologian, she
speaks for a sector of society that is frequently invisible. Her
website is www.irenemonroe.com.
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here to contact the Rev. Monroe. |