Just
last month, Gay Black Men News (GBMNews.com) folded.
It was a unique online eZine because it brought a perspective
of the news as it related specifically to gay men of African
descent.
And
its circulation was global.
Ralph
Emerson, publisher and founder of GBMNews said: "We
are blessed with a large following of avant garde, artistic
people. While most of our site visitors are in the
USA, we have a good following around the globe. This we
believe is largely due to our global prospective and the
fact that the global people of color community are a priority
with us."
Emerson
has operated this publication out of pocket. And while clearly
the cost of operation was prohibitive causing the eZine
to cease publication, another reason, according to Emerson,
is the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ)
communities of African descent's lack of support for the
online site.
"Our
folk don’t rally around and support their own. When GBMNews
started everyone rushed to it, but with the advent of Facebook
the attention had shifted." Emerson told
"Out in Jersey" reporter Antoine Craigwell.
"We
didn’t have a groundswell of support for the site and for
the newspapers as I thought it should have had from the
community. As a community, we don’t seem to work together
and support each other as a collective, and as a result,
it collapses,” Emerson stated.
In
November 2009, when the "Washington Blade" folded,
the nation's oldest LGBTQ weekly, soon after it's 40th
Anniversary, it sent a message about this era of digitized
news, and the nation’s growing interest in Facebook.
But
Emerson's statement that LGBTQ people of African descent
don't support their own cannot be summarily dismiss as Emerson's
anger and bitterness for having to close shop. Rather his
statement speaks about our black LGBTQ’s history of not
financially supporting projects that are beneficial for
us.
“Many
of us sit in these homophobic churches and put money in
the offering plate. Surely we can send money toward a healthy
goal, Glen Glover of Roslindale stated.
Issues
of race, gender expression, and sexual orientation invite
a particular type of news reporting. One
of the biggest losses will be the unreported and underreported
news of our lives. GBMNews did local, national and international
coverage of us.
A
lack of financial support from the black LGBTQ community
has contributed substantial to all the print and online
black LGBTQ publications folding. I've had the pleasure
of writing for all these magazines but sadly my tenure with
these zines were short-lived
In
2007, GBMNews was founded, an all-volunteer
contribution site devoted to the LGBTQ community of color, by Ralph Emerson. In
2009, Emerson launched GBMMagazines and in 2010, he launched
RadioGBM, a ground breaking Internet radio station with
exceptional coverage of the music industry and emerging
artists. I joined GBMNews in December 2009 when Emerson
wrote, " I noticed your article submissions
and I’m contacting in hopes that you will become a regular
GBMNews contributor. I am certain our site visitors
would enjoy your journalistic dispatches, your opinions,
analysis and distinctive observations." But this November
28th GBMNews, GBMMagazines and RadioGBM shut its doors for
good. "I’m going to take a few months off to think
about my next direction. I’ve toyed for years with starting
an arts business,” Emerson stated
In
2000 Arise was founded by Glenn Alexander and the Rev.
MacArthur H. Flournoy, Associate Director of the Religion
and Faith Program @ HRC. The publication's readership
was the same gender loving community of people
of African descent. Its mission was "to challenge the
mind, encourage the sprit and affirm the value of all sexually
diverse people of African descent."
In
November 2003 the paper celebrated its 3rd Anniversary of
publication, and had become a national icon for the African
American LGBTQ community. Sadly a month later, "Arise
folded. In an email blast to "Arise" supporters,
the publishers wrote, "Despite our best efforts to
remain in print, it has become cost prohibitive to continue
to produce ARISE as we know it. It is not our desire to
compromise its quality to remain in existence. Therefore,
effective immediately we are closing the pages of ARISE
Magazine." Eight months since the decision was made
to close the pages of ARISE, a relaunch issue was
slated for January 2004, but that too failed.
In
1990's Venus Magazine was founded by Charlene Cothran, a
publication that for 13 years targeted the Black LGBTQ community.
As a staple in the African-American community, Venus
Magazine was the first and only queer magazine owned and
operated by a black lesbian that spoke to and about the
unique intersections of being black and LGBTQ in both the
African-American and white queer communities. And Venus'
loyal readership had hoped the magazine would do for its
queer population what revered publications like Ebony and
Jet magazines did for all people of the African Diaspora
- that is, change society's negative and misinformed perceptions
about us.
Charlene
E. Cothran sent shock waves throughout African-American
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities nationwide
when she wrote an article entitled, "REDEEMED! 10 ways
to get out of 'The Life' if you want out!" In it, she
wrote that she's now not only "saved," having
turned her life over to Jesus, but "straight"
as well.
And
as a fledgling magazine with the threat of folding always
hanging over its head, Cothran opted to take financial support
in 2007 from black churches funded by white right-wing Christian
organizations that emphasize "reparative therapies."
In fact, she opted to be her own magazine's "ex-gay"
poster girl, rather than let the magazine fold.
Those
of us who read GBMNews will feel its absence, hopefully
remembering why it's not here with us.
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.
|