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We are not criminals.
Posted By Pastor Dan On May 29, 2010 @ 17:16 In Ecumenical Issues, LGBT Rights, Public Affairs, Coming Out, Uncategorized | No Comments
I know “criminals.” They are people who have been convicted of crimes. All of us break laws, but criminals are those who are caught.
I recently learned (where have I been?) what a RAP sheet is. It is an acronym for Record of Arrests and Prosecutions. It is part of my continuing education about crime and justice, especially in light of our congregation’s emerging [1] Mariposa Ministry, its outreach to prisoners and parolees. We have developed relationships with more than a dozen current and former inmates in California prisons. And this year we expect to help –spiritually and tangibly– at least three men who will be paroled in Los Angeles County.
So I know criminals. But what I also know is that many ordinary people, who break laws, are never arrested or prosecuted largely because of privilege or good luck. It is sad to admit that the world is not divided between “good” people and “bad” people, but between privileged and lucky people and under-privileged and un-lucky people.
Decades ago, when I was dating, it was still a crime for two persons of the same gender to have sexual relations. This was long before Lawrence v. Texas, and the sodomy laws in almost every state had the authority to put decent, upstanding people behind bars. I was one of the privileged and lucky ones. Knowing my gay brothers who are in prison, I realize I could have been in prison myself in the 1970s and 1980s, simply for being who I am.
But our entire world is still struggling to enlarge its understanding of human diversity and to stop using laws as a moral bludgeon to punish or destroy what it does not understand or does not want to see.
This spring, as we have watched the blunt force of African nations, specifically Uganda, trying to blame perceived social ills as a Western degradation, with a proposed death penalty for homosexual acts, I have been encouraged that sane voices have spoken up world-wide. Thank God for the likes of Anglican Bishop and Nobel Peace Prize recipient Desmond Tutu for leading this fight in Africa (see: [2] Desmond Tutu leads fight to halt anti-gay terror sweeping Africa.”
The battle is not over. But at least two gay men in Malawi have now been spared a near-certain death sentence (14 years of hard labor) for pledging their love to one another. Their pardon came about, apparently, because of world moral pressure in the form of a meeting of the Malawian President Bingu wa Mutharika with U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
The [4] CNN story released today quotes the White House as saying that gay people are “not criminals and their struggle is not unique.”
We are still mid-struggle in America for LGBTQI rights, and one of the battles we fight is with other oppressed peoples (including but not limited to African-American people) who don’t want to bestow the honored label of “civil rights struggle” on our movement. All it would take, I know, for our Black brothers and sisters to stop being protective of their struggle is for more Black gay men and lesbians to come out to their families and their communities. African-American sexual minorities, who have very little to fear by way of criminal conviction in this country for their sexual orientation or gender identity, could put their faces on the world-wide struggle for dignity, purpose and freedom. I hope the example two brave gay men in Malawi, Steven Monjeza and Tiwonge Chimbalanga, will encourage them.
—Pastor Dan Hooper
Article printed from Indwelling Spirit ~ A Blog for LGBTQ Christians: http://indwellingspirit.org
URL to article: http://indwellingspirit.org/2010/05/29/we-are-not-criminals/
URLs in this post:
[1] Mariposa Ministry: http://www.hollywoodlutheran.org/Mariposa.html
[2] Desmond Tutu leads fight to halt anti-gay terror sweeping Africa: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/apr/04/homosexual-africa-arrest-desmond-tut
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[3] Image: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/apr/04/homosexual-africa-arrest-desmond-tut
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[4] CNN story released today: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/africa/05/29/malawi.gay.couple/index.html?eref=igo
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