Mountain Pride Media
September 11 GLBT Impact Continues
http://www.mountainpridemedia.org/oitm/issues/2001/nov2001/news02_sep11.htm
by Pat Robinson
OITM Staff Writer
October 1, 2001: America is still trying
to recover from the terrorist attacks 20 days before and approximately 1000
people packed New York City’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender
Community Center to remember and honor those lost in and affected by the
tragedy. The event was co-sponsored by 80 organizations from New York City and
around the United States. Hosted by comedienne Kate Clinton, the show featured
performances by soprano Aprile Millo, vocalist Jodi Cardwell, the New York City
Gay Men’s Chorus, Congregation Beth Simchat Torah, and the Gay Gotham Chorus. A
candle lighting ceremony and moment of silence
followed
Richard Burns,
Executive Director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender Community
Center had this to say, “It was a way to say goodbye to members of our community
who were victims of this attack and a chance to recognize our heroes.”
October 4, 2001: The Rev. Louis P.
Sheldon, founder of the Traditional Values Coalition complained during a
Cybercast News Service that the American Red Cross and other relief agencies
were allowing the partners of gay victims of the Sept., 11th attacks to be
eligible for relief funds.
“[Relief
organizations] should be first giving priority to those widows who were home
with their babies, and those widowers who lost wives.” Rev. Sheldon further
said, “It should be given on the basis and priority of one man and one woman in
a marital relationship. This is just another example of how the gay agenda is
seeking to overturn the one man-one woman relationship from center stage in
America, taking advantage of this tragedy.”
Founded in 1980, Traditional Values Coalition is the largest
non-denominational, grassroots church lobby in America with a membership of
43,000 churches. TVC focuses upon issues such as education, homosexual advocacy,
family tax relief, pornography, the right to life, and religious freedom.
October 5, 2001: CNN runs a segment
profiling openly gay New York City firefighters and police officers who have
emerged as heroes from the front lines of ground zero at the World Trade Center.
CNN also profiled Mark Bingham, one of the United Flight 93 passengers who
participated in an on-board revolt that crashed the plane near Pittsburgh
avoiding another target by the terrorists. This report by CNN ran three days
after NBC’s less inclusive Dateline show. [National Public Radio first
broke the silence on September 22 with host Scott Simon’s essay on its
Weekend Edition Saturday program comparing the heroic actions of “gay
rugby player Mark Bingham, who hoped to go to the Gay Games in Sydney next year”
to the mean-spirited remarks of Christian evangelists Jerry Falwell and Pat
Robertson. “Who would you rather be sitting next to on a hijacked plane?” Simon
asked.]
The National Gay
and Lesbian Task Force criticized comments made the Rev. Lou Sheldon as “hateful
rhetoric.” A statement made by the NGLTF Executive Director Lorri L. Jean said,
“I sincerely hope the American people will rise up in protest against Sheldon’s
fanaticism, just as they did against Jerry Falwell’s,” making reference to the
controversy provoked by suggestions from Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson that
the United States may have brought on the attacks because of the activities of
“pagans, feminists, gays, and lesbians,” among others.
October 6, 2001: Senator Hillary Clinton
(D-NY) was the keynote speaker at the Human Rights Commission’s National Dinner
and ended her speech with, “We have to make clear that what we’re fighting for
is our values” and included as a value the ending of “discrimination against
gays and lesbians once and for all.” Gordon Smith (R-Ore) along with Judy
Shepard spoke and received awards.
Executive Director Elizabeth Birch
offered, “As we grieve, we should allow ourselves to be inspired and lifted by
the stories of unmatched courage from members of our community … we have seen so
much of humanity’s best.”
Ms. Birch also acknowledged to the crowd that Katherine
Lee Bates — author of “America the Beautiful”— lived with a beloved female
partner for more than 25 years.
Several victims’ partners attended the event including Tom Hay, partner
of David Charlebois, co-pilot of Flight 77 that crashed into the Pentagon; Nancy
Walsh, partner of Carol Flyzik, passenger on Flight 11 that crashed into the
World Trade Center; and Mike Lyons, partner of Jack Keohane who fell victim to
debris at the World Trade Center.
October 10, 2001: From Gay & Lesbian
Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) Executive Director: “… in the wake of the
tragedy, heroes have emerged from within our community. Mark Bingham
participated in a revolt that crashed the hijacked United Flight 93 into a
remote field outside Pittsburgh.
“Father
Mychal Judge was killed while ministering to a fallen firefighter at ground
zero. And Graham Berkeley, Daniel Brandhorst and Ronald Gamboa, David
Charlebois, Carol Flyzik, Jack Keohane, Sheila Hein and many others who had
lived brave, openly gay lives were among those lost to the terrorist
attacks.
“Media coverage of these gay and
lesbian heroes and victims of the Sept. 11 attacks has been and continues to be
a primary focus for GLAAD, because our community has been uniquely impacted by
these events. Our relationships are not afforded basic, equal protections under
the law. As a result, some surviving partners will find themselves unable to
qualify for state aid and Social Security benefits, and may find themselves
unable to obtain bereavement leave, inheritance rights, or even access to the
memorial of a partner.”
Love Sees No Borders,
the recently established organization focused on raising awareness of the plight
of same-sex bi-national couples and their fight to remain together, today
announced that same-sex bi-national couples are facing dire consequences as a
result of the terrorist attacks of Sept 11. Bi-national same-sex couples already
found themselves in a precarious situation before the attacks, and the worsening
of the economy and the toughening of regulations only made it worse for loving
committed couples who just want to be
together.
With no recourse to sponsor their
foreign partners, Americans in same-sex bi-national relationships find
themselves facing potentially escalating difficulties right now. The Immigration
and Naturalization Service has frozen all applications and petitions for visas.
The current economic conditions, tremendously worsened by the attacks, place
H-1B (work) visa-holders in a more precarious situation with no job stability.
It is estimated that a large percentage of same-sex binational couples rely on
H-1B visas to remain together in the U.S. Proposals submitted by the White House
so severely narrow degrees of separation from suspected terrorists that innocent
foreigners in same-sex relationships may find themselves in jails post-September
11. The passage of the Permanent Partners Immigration Act, H.R. 690, would
alleviate the suffering of bi-national couples by guaranteeing that their
families can remain together in the U.S., and providing Americans in same-sex
relationships the basic human right to build a family of their choosing in their
homeland.
October 15, 2001: The former partner of
San Franciscan Mark Bingham, a victim of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, watched
as Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation bringing California’s domestic partnership
law closer to marriage on several fronts. Adding health care, estate planning
and adoption benefits now enjoyed by married couples to the measure Davis
approved makes California second only to Vermont in granting legal rights to
domestic partners.
“Given what happened, I think Mark would want me here,”
said Castro resident, Paul Holm, 40, the friend and former partner of Bingham,
31, who helped fight off the hijackers on United Airlines’ Flight 93. The plane
crashed into a Pennsylvania field, killing all aboard. “We both wanted fair and
equal treatment of people, regardless of their
orientation.”
The measure
was written by Assemblywoman Carole Migden (D-San Francisco) who called it the
foundation of an “everlasting fight for gay and lesbian equality.”
October 23, 2001: In the
October 23 issue of The Advocate, Editor in Chief Judy Wieder had this to
say to her readers regarding the lead story of gay heroes, “If tragedies like
this make it clear that in the end, all human lives are equal — regardless of
gender, nationality, sexual orientation, race, religion, financial status,
whatever — why is it so hard to make this point outside of horrific, cataclysmic
events? If gays and straights are equally heroic, equally vulnerable, equally
courageous, equally frightened, equally lucky, equally unlucky, and just plain
equally human, then why are some of us still fighting for equal rights and
opportunities in this country?
“In the aftermath of all this
horror, when the call went out for people to give blood, gay men could not. If
the United States goes to war, gays and lesbians cannot serve openly. And
without marriage, all the gay widows and widowers have no legal rights to their
chosen families.
“Yes,
The Advocate still has something vital to say. The magazine needs to tell
the stories of the gay and lesbian heroes who died September 11, 2001, as
equals, because if they hadn’t died, they’d still be fighting for that equality.
So with mixed feelings of great sadness and pride, we honor their lives
here.”