June 23, 2011 - Issue 432 |
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Provincetown's
Not Safe
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At the tip
of For the past several years now, the "Women
of Color Weekend" has brought hundreds of us LBT sisters of color
to P-town from all across the country. It is the one time of the year
many of us make the journey to P-town, anticipating we will feel safe
enough, for a few days, to let down our guard. But the sexual and homophobic
harassment many of us LBT sisters endure from many of our heterosexual
brothers of African descent back home in our communities, or imported
from one of the “A few years back I sent a letter about this very subject... and I received an email from the Provincetown Chamber of Commerce, instructing me to get in touch with them and the police if this happens again...well it has happened again and again,” Ife Franklin of Roxbury, MA wrote me. Franklin and her wife were at “Women of Color Weekend 2011,” and she and several sisters of color were continually harassed. “Now I will take ownership…I have not called the police or contacted the town Chamber..Why? Well, here is where this gets a little sticky for me...So, if I call and say ‘there are some Black men harassing me’ will they round up ALL of the Black men? Even the ones that have done nothing wrong?" Issues of race, gender identity, and sexual orientation trigger a particular type of violence against people of color that cannot afford to go unreported. Not reporting what is going on with LGBTQ people of color not only subjects us to constant violence that goes unchecked, it also puts the larger queer culture at risk. In the now defunct Boston LGBTQ newspaper, In Newsweekly, Will Coons in 2007 expressed in his "Letter to the Editor" his distress with the harassment. "I'm well aware of the white man's burden and the need to be open and sensitive to historical injustices, but the flip side works as well: are these Jamaican men sensitive to, aware of, and respectful of the gay men who vacation here? My impression over the past ten years is that most of them are not and I distinctly feel uncomfortable in their presence." The lack of reporting about these types of harassment and assaults from LGBTQ people of color is for two reasons - all dealing with race. The first reason is the "politics of silence" in LGBTQ communities of color not to openly report these kinds of attacks unless it results in death. With being openly queer and often estranged, if not alienated, from our communities of color, reporting attacks against us by other people of color can make victims viewed as “race traitors.” And Because of the "politics of silence" that run rampant in our LGBTQ communities of color, we end up colluding in the violence against us. The second reason has a lot to do with law enforcers,
newspaper reporters, and doctors who view the topic of violence and people
of color as synonymous. While On the morning of May 11, 2003, Shakia
Gun, 15, was stabbed to death when she and her girlfriends rebuffed the
sexual overtures of two African-American men by disclosing to them that
their disinterest was simply because they were all lesbians. Incensed
that the girls rebuffed them - and lesbians no less - the two assailants
reportedly jumped out of their car and got into a scuffle with the girls.
Stabbed by one of the men, Gun dropped to the ground and died shortly
after arriving at A groundbreaking study in July 2010 titled, "Black Lesbians Matter" examined the unique experiences, perspectives, and priorities of the Black LBT community. This report reveals that LBT women of African descent are among the most vulnerable in our society and need advocacy in the areas of financial security, healthcare, access to education, marriage equality, and physical safety. "Has there been ANY training or introduction
for these ‘workers’ educating them that they are in a mostly Gay culture?
that the women...Black women or other wise are
off limits?" As cheap and most often times exploited laborers,
the shops that line P-town's main drag, Sadly, it's now 2011, and nothing has changed. The issue here is our safety - physically and mentally - and that of ALL LGBTQ tourists. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion columnist, theologian, and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific School of Religion. 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. She was recently named to MSNBC’s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. 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. |
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