Homophobia
runs deep!
So deep that it also impinges on the animal world.
Toronto's
zoo is splitting up a pair of same-gender penguins. These Happy Feet males, Pedro
and Buddy, jokingly referred to as "Brokeback Iceberg" have
been nesting with each other for a year.
The
reason for the boys split up, a zoo official says, is because African
penguins are an endangered species.
The pair has what's known as a "social bond," but it's
not necessarily a "sexual bond", Tom Mason, the zoo's curator
of birds and invertebrates told the Associated Press.
"Penguins
are so social they need that ... company. And the group they came from
was a bachelor group waiting for a chance to be paired up with females,"
Mason stated. "They had paired up there, they came to us already
paired, and it's our job to be matchmakers to get them to go with some
females."
But Buddy, I opine, may have been involuntarily "on the down
low" for breeding purposes until he was able to express his true
penguin passion with Pedro.
According
to the zoo's curator, Buddy, who's 21, had a female partner for 10 years
and produced offspring, but his female partner died. Pedro, on the other
hand, who's 10, has yet to produce offspring.
While we can banter and bicker about the heterosexist actions of
a zookeeper to our North, our actions of animal homophobia isn't any better.
For example, who would have thought that the politics of same-sex
coupling of birds would a debatable topic in the marriage equality state
of Massachusetts?
But during the summer of 2005, more than a year after same-sex marriage
became legal in the state, Boston's beloved pair of swans in the Public
Garden - named Romeo and Juliet - had been having a love affair that dares
not speak its name. And as Bay Staters bantered and bickered over whether
the two should be allowed to stay together or be separated, these swans
were being subjected to the same queries that have plagued same-sex couples
in heterosexist societies for centuries.
Assuming that the swans were heterosexual until one of the couple's eggs
went unfertilized, Boston's Parks and Recreation Department decided to
conduct a "detailed gender test" by examining the swans' reproductive
organs. The findings disclosed that Romeo and Juliet were really more
like Juliet and Juliet.
The city disclosed its findings, but very reluctantly, "for fear
of destroying the image of a Shakespearean love story unfolding,"
as reported in The Boston Globe.
But some people thought like Laura Elsheimer of Hudson, Mass., who told
the Globe that the city "should have a Romeo." And spokeswoman
Mary Hines of the city's Parks and Recreation Department told the Globe,
"Each year when the swans go in, the kids immediately come to us
and say, ˜Which one's Romeo and which one's Juliet?'"
Where the public might think a male is needed to make them a complete
or authentic couple, neither of the girls seems to be lamenting, "O
Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore art thou Romeo?" Why? Because on any given
day at the Public Garden you saw them swimming happily together in the
lagoon.
Moreover, the swans have been cohabiting for two years. Animal scientists
have observed the monogamous nature of swans whether they are in opposite-sex
or same-sex coupling - they stay with their mates until death, which can
last anywhere from 20 to 30 years.
While there was also debate whether Romeo should be renamed to reflect
the swan's gender, I can imagine Juliet saying about all this much ado,
"What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would
smell as sweet."
Same-sex coupling is not a new phenomenon in the animal world. However,
its disclosure and acceptance comes in a homophobic society that will
attempt to pathologize it.
But in fact, scientists at Oregon Health & Science and the U.S. Department
of Agriculture's Sheep Experiment Station are discovering that all sexualities
may be biologically driven. In a recent study on rams, researchers at
OHS found that 8 percent are gay, but with such a low percentage finding,
the Christian Right can still hold to its premise that homosexuality is
an aberrant behavior and found only in those lost few.
More controversial studies on animal homosexuality, being denounced by
Christian conservatives, are Bruce Bagemihl's "Biological Exuberance:
Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity," and the findings of
Deric Bownds, a University of Wisconsin-Madison zoology professor. In
fact, Bagemihl's book was cited by the American Psychiatric Association
in a "friend of the court" brief submitted to the U.S. Supreme
Court in the Lawrence v. Texas case that lead to state anti-sodomy laws
being found unconstitutional.
According to Bagemihl, homosexual activity occurs in more than 450 species
of animals both in the wild and in captivity, and same-sex couplings in
animals are as enduring and life-long as they are in humans.
For the religious fundamentalists, however, these findings are discarded
on the premise that man can fight such instincts whereas animals cannot
because God did not give them the capacity to reason.
"Yes, animals can be forced to perform homosexual acts, by depriving
them from the possibility to perform their reproductive function in the
natural way," Shams Ali wrote in "Homosexuality Among Animals
and Humans." "... All this means is that animals are not free
- they are driven by their instincts. ... But the difference between a
man and an animal is that Man has reason, which he uses to control his
instincts and urges."
And let's not forget how we have seen many religious fundamentalists
express their distain for same-sex coupling in us humans with the well-known
vitriolic protest placard: Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve.
The fate of Happy Feet males, Pedro and Buddy, being allowed
to stay together is swimming in a homophobic tide.
But for us humans, the lesson here is that a heterosexual-only
view of love not only constrains and constricts our human capacity to
love one another, it also limits our capacity to tell the whole story
about the birds and the bees.
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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