June
is Pride Month. And Black Pride contributes to the multicultural
aspect of joy and celebration in the queer communities. Black Pride
symbolizes not only black LGBTQ uniqueness as individuals and communities,
but it also affirms our varied expressions of LGBTQ life in America.
This
year will be our first Black Pride parade with an African American
as president. And, no doubt, Obama’s presidency engenders pride
but not much hope. In
Obama’s first days many of us want to know, what is it with Obama
and his team when it comes to our inclusion in his transformational
administration?
One
of our biggest obstacles in the African American community has been
and continues to be the Black Church. Obama
wooed Black homophobic black ministers to win black evangelical
voters during his campaign bid.
For
example, when it was disclosed that Obama’s inspirational gospel
singer Donnie McClurkin, poster boy for African American ex-gay
ministries, could be a potential liability, not only to his three-city
gospel tour to capture South Carolina’s black evangelical voters,
but also the nation’s LGBTQ voters, he went into damage control.
As an appeasement plan, Obama invited an openly white gay minister,
the Rev. Andy Sidden, pastor of Garden of Grace United Church of Christ (formerly
MCC Columbia) to speak at the gospelfest.
The
Obama camp thought they had stopped the fire before it got out of
hand. But it backfired.
Instead
it actually outed black closeted ministers and some of the black
gospel chitlin’ circuit’s closeted gays ministers who usually are
the biggest opponents of queer civil rights.
And
Obama’s act didn’t get him out of hot water with another constituency
in the African-American community – black LGBTQ voters. Many of
us denounced the Obama campaign for choosing a white minister.
“It
boggles the mind that the Obama campaign would select a white pastor
to deal with a situation that is awash in black homophobia,” Pam
Spaulding of the highly acclaimed blog “Pam’s House Blend” wrote.
Unfortunately
Obama’s choice reinforced two myths many black evangelicals hold:
homosexuals are white and homosexuality is an abomination.
Frustrated
with Obama’s inattention to our issues, Edwin Greene, an African
American gay man from Cincinnati said, “I think that if black LGBTs
want Obama’s attention we need to “make some noise”, so to speak.
Let’s organize a black LGBT demonstration / march on Washington, DC, this year. The noisy wheel gets
the grease, so to speak. Let’s show Obama, the nation and the world
(and ourselves, most importantly) that we mean business.”
For
many of us LGBTQ African American religious activists across the
country, but especially here in Massachusetts, we feel that Obama is not serious
in making a dent in combating black homophobia or reaching out to
the black LGBTQ community.
For
example, Joshua Dubois who is the head of the White House Office
for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships is to coordinate outreach
to religious and community organizations. But many of us are scratching
our heads because we have never seen or heard of Dubois. Sylvia
Rhue, Director of Religious Affairs for National Black Justice Coalition,
the only African American gay civil rights organization in the country,
knows nothing about Dubois.
Since
Obama’s announcement of him, those of us involved in making our
black churches open and affirming are looking for Rev. Joshua Dubois,
especially here in the Greater Boston area. Dubois, a young African
American Pentecostal minister, directed the religious outreach for
the Obama campaign. He’s reported to have worked as an associate
pastor at a Pentecostal church in Massachusetts.
But where?
“I
know W.E. B. Dubios, but who is this guy Obama put in office? Has
anyone seen or met him? We don’t know of his contributions to the
black gay community here and where he stands on the issues. We need
a strong and visible religious advocate for the LGBT community,
but specifically the African American community,” said Rev. Glen
Louis Campbell of Central Congregation, an openly gay African American
minister in Boston.
The
honorable Mayor E. Denise Simmons of Cambridge,
first African American lesbian to hold office doesn’t know him.
And Cambridge’s former mayor, Kenneth Reeves, an African
American gay male doesn’t know him either. None of Boston’s political and religious allies to the
African American LGBTQ community knows him.
But
most importantly Dubois has never been spotted at events important
to the black LGBTQ community here in greater Boston and throughout
Massachusetts, like our annual Bayard Rustin Community Breakfast,
an HIV / AIDS awareness forum for LGBTQ communities of color and
their family and friends. The Breakfast is a staple in our community
and has been for seventeen years.
Every
time Obama has nodded or winked at our community we have taken his
gestures and even his words at face value to tether our hopes to.
But we are getting the feeling he’s not marching with us in our
parade.
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. 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. |