The senate’s most left leaning member, presidential
hopeful Barack Obama, is now turning to the right.
And the turn, he’s finding out, is not as easy
as calculated.
On July 1 Obama announced partnering with communities
of faith. His proposed plan is to dole out $5 million a year
in federal funds through churches and other religious organizations
to God’s most disenfranchised - American’s poor.
“The challenges was face today - from saving
our planet to ending poverty - are simply too big for government
to solve alone,” Obama announced outside a community center
in Zanesville, Ohio.
While the moral imperative in any presidential
hopeful’s campaign should be to help the poor, the challenge
Obama faces today, that is too big to solve alone, is winning
evangelical Christians. And the poor, in this instance, become
Obama’s political pawn to win over this important demographic
group.
But by prohibiting these evangelical churches
and religious charities from considering religion in their
employment hiring, firing and serving the poor, this constituency
group is not buying Obama’s sales pitch. “For those of
us who believe in protecting the integrity of our religious
institutions, this is a fundamental right” Richard Cizik,
vice president for government affairs for the National Association
of Evangelicals told the Associated Press. “He’s rolling back
the Bush protections. That’s extremely disappointing.”
But Obama’s sales pitch is also extremely disappointing
for a voting constituency within his targeted group - poor
LGBTQ Americans.
While the requirements for receiving federal
funds in Obama’s faith-based program is to protect those in
need from religious organizations’ proselytizing, preaching
and providing religious instructions, poor LGBTQ Americans
would unlikely seek or receive help not only from anti-gay
religious organizations but from gay-friendly ones as well.
Why? Because implementing a theocratic model
for government to effect laws and government structures in
this country according
to one’s Christian ideal would not worked, on the best
of days, in the favor of LGBTQ Americans.
The inherent discrimination in religious organizations
like the Salvation Army, Catholic Charities and Bush’s faith-based
initiatives have all shown how uncompassionate Christian organizations
can be.
And why would Obama’s be any different?
For
example, I remember a fundraising letter in November 2002
from Elizabeth Birch, former executive director of the Human
Rights Campaign that stated, “The Salvation Army was in secret
negotiations with the White House to win the legal right to
discriminate against gay and lesbian workers in exchange for
supporting President Bush’s faith-based charity initiative.”
In terms of which groups get picked for
funding and which ones don’t, LGBTQ activists and our allies
have also shown the slim likelihood of queer faith-based groups
like Metropolitan Community Church
or Dignity would receive funding, compared to Christian
rights groups.
While many federal programs are in need of
prayer, as Bush’s faith-based Hurricane Katrina and Rita
disaster relief organizations have shown, these organizations highlight,
unfortunately, the fault lines of heterosexism, homophobia
and faith-based privilege.
After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, for example,
LGBTQ evacuees and their families faced discrimination at
the hands of many of these faith-based relief organizations
because of their sexual orientation, gender identity and/or
HIV status.
And
because the fault lines of race and sexual orientation are
on the “down low” in the African-American community, many
African-American LGBTQ evacuees experienced discrimination
from black faith-based institutions, like the Black
Church. With black churches a large part of the relief effort, and
unabashedly known for their homophobia, African-American LGBTQ
evacuees and their families had neither a chance nor a prayer
for assistance.
When you have an administration that believes
in less government involvement and more participation of faith-based
groups, it slashes needed government programs by calling on
churches and faith-based agencies, at taxpayer expense, to
provide essential social services that would also impact the
lives and well-being of its LGBTQ citizens. And with many
of these faith-based agencies touting anti-gay religious vitriol,
LGBTQ taxpayers and their families will be denied help, services
and needed medical care, or be mistreated or denied shelter.
Faith is a necessary attribute to possess when
engaging in acts of goodwill. Faith derives out of our shared
human experience of struggle, especially in the face of social
wrongs, human atrocities, and natural disasters.
But
who would have ever thought that the hard earned gains that
have been won to separate the church, an institution that
summarily can and has excluded LGBTQ people, from the institution
of the state, an institution that we have leverage to be included
in, would show up in Obama’s candidacy as it has in Bush’s
presidency?
BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion columnist,
theologian, and public speaker. 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. Reverend Monroe
is the author of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible
Prayers for Not-So-Everyday Moments. Click on the above
link to order now at pre-release pricing. As an African American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society that
is frequently invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com.
Click here
to contact the Rev. Monroe.