Is Gay Pride Necessary?
There's nothing wrong with a yearly parade, but as the movement matures,
there are more difficult battles to fight
by Robert David Sullivan
The first Gay Pride march in
Boston, in 1971, included 150 people, most of them walking arm-in-arm and
holding yellow balloons printed with the word GAY.
In 1977, the crowd total reached 7000, and a highlight of the defiant
post-parade gathering on
Boston Common
was a man burning his insurance policy,
his Harvard diploma, and a
Bible.
It was a tumultuous time. The parade took place just 12 days after Save Our
Children leader Anita Bryant
reached her zenith as a political figure,
persuading voters in
Dade County,
Florida, to repeal a gay-rights law. Almost
immediately after the Bryant victory, California gubernatorial candidate and
Bryant ally John Briggs filed state legislation banning homosexuals from
teaching in public schools. In Massachusetts, meanwhile, the State Senate had
passed a gay-rights bill just five days before the parade (but it would take
another dozen years for it to become law).
Gay and lesbian activists in Boston must have felt a kind of whiplash from the
contrary political currents. Yet they were certain of one thing: if they were
going to have any chance of stalling the newly energized anti-gay movement,
gays and lesbians had to become more visible. To win rights, the first step is
to be seen.
That was especially clear in the disastrous Dade County campaign. Gay business
leaders urged gay and lesbian activists to keep away from Florida and instead
let straight liberal politicians like San Francisco Assemblyman
Willie Brown
appeal to the voters. The result was that television viewers regularly saw
Bryant leading grassroots supporters in patriotic chants, but they rarely saw
gays and lesbians speaking out for themselves.
After the loss came a number of gay-rights demonstrations -- in San Francisco,
New York, and Denver -- but also violence. In San Francisco, gay bashing
increased sharply, culminating in the brutal murder of a gay man and the
beating of his lover by a gang of youths yelling "Faggot, faggot!"
Times have changed. From 7000 participants in 1977, the parade hit 120,000 in
1995. On June 8, this year's co-chairs are hoping for a record 150,000 -- more
than a quarter of the city's total population. In 1971, the
Boston Globe
summarized the first Pride march in eight paragraphs on page 20, under a
news-briefs column and sandwiched between
Jordan Marsh ads. In 1980, the
Globe finally put Gay Pride on its front page; ever since, the story has
appeared on either the front page or the front of the Metro section.
In fact, Gay Pride has in all likelihood maxed out in Boston. Not only is
there a finite number of gays and lesbians in the area, but there are now Pride
marches across New England,
reflecting a newfound comfort with coming out in
smaller cities and towns. (Last year, there were marches in
Cape Cod,
Portland,
Hartford,
and Worcester, among others.)
And Pride is no longer the only holiday
on the queer calendar, thanks to
National Coming Out Day
and Gay and Lesbian History Month,
both in October. In Boston, gay dollars and organizing power
also go toward the annual
OutWrite
literary conference; the
Human Rights Campaign's
election-season fundraising dinner;
AIDS Action Committee's massive
AIDS Pledge Walk
(held the Sunday before Pride) and Dance-a-Thon; and dozens of
smaller conferences, benefits, and arts festivals.
Indeed, with all this activity, the
ACT UP chant "We're here, we're queer, get
used to it" now seems rather quaint. Visibility no longer seems a
life-and-death issue, as it did in the wake of Bryant's victory. Look at the
cultural landscape in 1996:
The Birdcage
is the most popular movie of the year;
k.d. lang and
Melissa Etheridge
are on the covers of national music
magazines; Tower Records stocks gay porno videos a few aisles down from the
Disney flicks;
and same-sex marriage is a hot topic on talk shows and on the
campaign trail (it came up in the first debate between
Senator John Kerry and
his challenger,
Governor William Weld,
a few weeks ago).
If mere visibility is no longer an imperative, what about a more specific
political program? Well, don't expect a Queer
Contract with America to be
unveiled at Gay Pride. For one thing, the Gay Pride Committee in Boston can't
do any political lobbying
because of its non-profit 501C3 tax status. And it's
not clear what 150,000 gays and lesbians would rally for, anyway. Massachusetts
already has a gay-rights law, and Boston's representatives in Congress don't
need to be persuaded to support a federal version. The AIDS Pledge Walk, held
the Sunday before Pride, is a better platform to support the rights of
HIV-positive people
and to call for more resources to fight the disease. As for
same-sex marriage, the Gay Pride Committee is planning a symbolic "commitment
ceremony" before the parade, but it doesn't mean official support for what many
queer activists still call a "patriarchal" institution. ("We can educate but
not endorse," says new co-chair Sabrina Taylor.)
If Pride has a message, it's likely to be vague opposition to
Buchananism and
the religious right,
which has almost no adherents in Boston anyway. (In
another example of preaching to the choir, the
National Organization for Women
last month organized a "Fight the Right" march in San Francisco, of all places.
NOW predicted a turnout of 100,000; the
Park Service counted 13,000.)
So it's no wonder Gay Pride in Boston has lost some of its energy. At one
point, there was a rumor the parade wouldn't come off this year -- several
Pride Committee members resigned, and there were suggestions of mismanagement
in the wake of last year's parade -- but the mood in the gay community was more
one of embarrassment than of fear or panic. Many of my contemporaries, gay men
in their late 20s and 30s, have stopped making a big deal about the annual
event. We can't help but ask ourselves, "Is Gay Pride necessary?" And we wonder
what to say to straight acquaintances who glimpse the parade on TV and ask,
"What exactly are you marching for?"
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