Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people
of African descent have no public voice in media. With major black
publications staying away from the subject of homosexuality, and
white media sensationalizing it, Black Commentator saw the need
for my voice - an African American lesbian ordained Christian minister.
In this era of the Christian Right, religion continues
to play a profound role in discrimination against lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender and queer people. And when the only voices
the American public hear on the issue of marriage equality concerning
gays and lesbians in the African-American community are those of
fire and brimstone, bible-thumping ministers, espousing ownership
of civil rights, Black Commentator provides the space to hear the
other side of the debate.
Why is Black Commentator so vital to the African
American gay and lesbian population?
What the American public knows of this population
is largely distorted. And what the American public see of this
population is seldom seen through the lenses of how both white
straight and gay racism and black compulsory heterosexism exact
a toll on our lives.
As a fractured group both politically and socially,
African-American lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer
people reside as resident aliens who too often live bifurcated
existences in African American and white gay communities. While
our black skin ostensibly gives us residence in our black communities,
our sexual orientation, most times, evicts us from them. And while
our sexual orientation gives us residence in the larger gay community,
racism constantly thwarts any efforts for coalition building, which
weakens the larger movement for sexual equality.
To be tangentially aligned to these communities
dangles our lives precariously on a thin thread with the nagging
feeling of marginalization, if not complete dispossession. and
the American public needs to know of our daily experience. And
I try to inform the public about our daily lives, especially of
the role religion plays in discrimination against us.
Why is this important ? For two reasons.
First, because homophobia is both a hatred of the "other" and
it's usually acted upon "in the name of religion.” And
by reporting religion in the news I aim to highlight how religious
intolerance and fundamentalism not only shatters the goal of American
democracy, but also aids in perpetuating other forms of oppression
such as racism, sexism, classism and anti- Semitism.
Second, because much that is written about lesbian,
gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people is by heterosexuals.
And much of who we are is seen and written through a complicated
prism of homophobia that projects and condones lies, fears and
violence perpetrated upon us for the holy sake of moral virtue
and family values, ignoring the distinctive epistemology that shapes
not only our identity, but also shapes our distinctive interpretative
lens we zoom onto the world about politics, race, class, gender,
sexual orientation, arts, music, and ostensibly religion.
Black Commentator provides a venue for engaging
in healthy conversations on the issue by including the voices and
stories of those left out of the public discourse.
You can contribute best by talking out a $50 one-year
subscription. To do so click
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Through your generosity, you will help to guarantee that The
Black Commentator is available to younger readers just starting
out and sisters and brothers with limited incomes.
Thank you,
Rev. Irene Monroe
BC Columnist
Click
here to contact the Rev. Monroe and BlackCommentator.
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