The
federal King holiday has special meaning for America. It is a day
of reflection, particularly for African Americans who sought to
find the true meaning of what it meant to be born in a nation that
rejected their citizenship on one basis and one basis only-the color
of their skin. One hundred years after the abolishment of slavery
and the legislation of full and equal protection under the law was
legislated by amendment (the Fourteen Amendment) and political rights
were conferred (again by amendment), freedom, justice and equality
was still being refused to African Americans.
Even
in the face of the judicial decree (Brown vs. the Board of Education)
that meant to stop segregation and social alienation, the
southern part of the nation engaged the second biggest social rebellion
in America's history (after the Civil War) called "Massive
Resistance." Massive Resistance was an organized engagement
by Congress, the States and American society to continue the race
caste system that subjugated the rights and privileges of primarily
blacks (though other non-white citizens were also caught up in the
resistance). Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. attempted to lead a non-violent
social revolution in America.
Despite
political and judicial victories to bring about social and economic
equality in America, Dr. King's life was violently ended to preserve
white supremacy and white privilege. Fourteen years after his death,
the nation was guilted into honoring his life and his mission with
a national holiday. The only such honor conferred upon an individual
born in the 20th Century. While "King Day" has tuned into
everything from parade celebrations to chicken dinners, many have
chose to use the day as a reminder of the one person that sought
to hold a mirror up to a nation that refused to change and provide
an intellectual assessment as to how far the society had come since
the murder of a 20th Century prophet. Keeping King's "dream"
alive (one of social and economic equality that had, by and large,
not been attained) has been a perpetual discussion usually engaged
around the day that bears his name. Yet, the day has taken on a
different meaning for some.
For
the past few years, the King holiday has been an opportunity to
subvert the conversation of social and economic justice through
the interjection of political agendas surrounding same sex marriage.
In two of the past three years, I've been on panels or programs
organized to invoke the memory of King's life and advocacy, only
to end up debating (involuntarily) the merits of gay marriage rights.
The
first year it occurred, I viewed it as an anomaly in the context
of the evolving equality discussion of the 21st Century. The questions
of whether "gays rights" is the new civil rights and why
society should view non-traditional same sex marriage as central
to the nation's civil rights agenda have been persistent.
Absent
of a strong moral argument for legalizing same sex relationships
in traditional institutions like marriage, gays have chosen to use
the 200 year black equality struggle as the basis for their advocacy,
despite the fact that there has been movements in religion, gender
and immigrant movements that have occurred during this same period.
This
year, I've concluded that this is a strategy to tie the legacy of
Dr. King to a culture shift around same sex marriage that is short
on symbols and short on logic. The cooptation of the civil rights
movement is in full effect by gays and lesbians looking to rationalize
why society should adopt a cultural norm that has been rejected
since the beginning of time, the mainstreaming of homosexual practices
in the context of family and marriage.
Gay
activists have, in fact, correlated their struggle to that of blacks
in America and even monikered their struggle as the contemporary
equality movement, calling gay "the new black." This probably
wouldn't have gained much salience in the black community as the
black movement was (is) the most successful and protracted movement
in America, a door which all so-called minorities (ethnic, gender
[women], religious and disabled) have passed through. Sexual orientation
also made its way through the door within the past 25 years.
It
wasn't until the passing of Proposition 8, the traditional marriage
initiative, did the African American community find itself in a
quandary, as gay activists began assailing the black community for
not voting against the initiative. For the record, African Americans
voted for traditional marriage in the majority as did Whites, Latinos
and Asians. People grounded in religious affiliations disproportionately
voted in favor of Prop. 8 across the racial spectrum.
Traditional
values associated with marriage are reinforced in ALL the holy books
(the Torah [Old Testament Bible], the Gospel [the New Testament
Bible] and the Ingil [the five holy books revealed in the Qu'ran]),
yet African Americans were the only ones called out for the way
they voted, supposedly because "we" should have a greater
sensitivity to being discriminated against. It's a flawed and convoluted
argument that looks past African American's social conservatism
tied to their religious beliefs.
Blacks
are not homophobic, and are probably more sensitized to gay lifestyles
than most of the public, given most African Americans have gays
in their families. This also means that tolerance of gays are higher
because of family and friend relationships. While tolerance breeds
acceptance of the norm, it doesn't default to support for modifying
their core beliefs around cherished institutions. Blacks had religion
when they didn't have anything else, and religion is the last thing
they will separate with. It was their religion that got them through
the viciousness and inhumane conditions of slavery and segregation.
It was family that gave them strength in separation and assault.
The
flaw in the gay advocacy is the unreasonable expectation that anyone
would go against what they believe, particularly when it is re-enforced
by their spiritual belief system. Slavery and segregation were legalized
(but unconstitutional) caste systems that called for a total indiscriminate
exclusion of African Americans from American society. That is NOT
the gay struggle. Sexual Orientation is seen by most as a choice,
and even if it is not a choice, it is a right of enjoyment by which
the government has no role. Who you love and who you cohabitate
with is a right of privacy that is not denied gays.
There
were no signs up that said, "No Gays Allowed." Or "Straights
Only." Blacks had no "closets" to hide in to mainstream
themselves until they decided to marry. There was NO PLACE to hide
for blacks. Even when blacks passed for white, they could be separated
(outted) if one of their black relatives came around. The Lovings
case (1967) that outlawed inter-racial marriage was a decade
long attempt of a white man to bring his black wife "out of
the closet" of social separation. America's history of lynchings,
whippings and bombings were are active demonstration to keep blacks
out of the mainstream of society. "Coming out" was never
a choice for the African American, and the only place where they
could find solace was the church--as the church led the movement.
Same sex activists' problem is they want to go against the church
without attacking the church. They, instead, find it easier to attack
African Americans for siding with their religious beliefs, and call
themselves "the new black" in an effort to sensitize society
to their own cause and guilt blacks into supporting them. That was,
and still is, their most serious mistake, and one that needs to
stop.
The
church is the biggest barrier to this cultural shift. Why doesn't
the gay movement confront the church? Or declare gay marriage "the
NEW BIBLE?" In fact, I DARE THEM TO. If they wanna� be bold
and blasphemous, BE bold and blasphemous--if their desire
is to bring about a culture change with the church standing the
way. They won't, because they know gay marriage will never come
about then. They need a religious symbol that society reveres.
Thus,
enter Martin Luther King, Jr. and his philosophy of love and compassion.
King took on the white church when they sit silent on segregation
and criticized him for direct action in Birmingham (Letter From
A Birmingham Jail). King dealt with the conflictions of church's
morality as they related to segregation. King could also argue (for
the first time since Reconstruction) that the law was on his side.
But there is nothing in the historical literature, anywhere, that
suggests King advocated for equality in sexual orientation. In fact,
the civil rights movement had their issues with gayness in the movement
and for that reason offered gay activist, Bayard Rustin, little
more than an organizing role in the movement because of his sexuality.
It's
a far stretch to suggest if King were alive, he would have supported
gay marriage. Yet, gay rights activists have this pressing need
to tie King to their cause, to legitimize their movement. They can't
find adequate venues to engage the black community on the issue
of gay marriage so they hijack King Day programs where they can
dominate question and answer periods by interjecting questions around
gay marriage. And they never want to have a morality conversation,
as critical as that conversation is to a conversion (and shift)
of America's cultural mindset.
I
just think it's time the gay marriage activists host their own forums
on gay marriage and why society (not just Blacks) should support
it. And we should resist the effort to implicitly our struggle with
theirs. Black people are not going to be guilted or bludgeoned into
support. Culture shifts for race and gender equality took 100 years.
Gays are in the first 25 years of their advocacy. And the law (not
black people) isn't on their side. That's reality. The legal challenge
currently before the California State Supreme is the best way to
pursue the violations of gays' constitutional rights. Force the
courts to challenge America's (and the State's) view of marriage
mortality and the church's stand on traditional marriage. That's
their constitutional right.
I
wish they would stop hijacking King's dream by an inferred association
and find ways to bring about their dream, gay marriage. Come out
of the closet on the conversation, and leave African American comparisons
out of it. With a legitimate rationale to educate the public and
the law on their side, there just might be more support in the black
community.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing director
of the Urban
Issues Forum and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com.
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contact Dr. Samad. |