Gay rights pioneer, dies at 90
thinkpink & NGLTF | 25.10.2002 09:49
In 1949 Harry Hay founded one of the first gay-rights groups in the US. His political activity goes back to 1930 when he was active in the Communist Party and the labour movement. In the height of the anti-communist witch-hunt Hay's was ousted from the leadership of his group and had to appear before the 'House Unamerican Activities Committee'
From the NGLTF: (www.ngltf.org)
"Today our movement lost one of its treasures. The death of legendary gay activist Harry Hay leaves a heavy sadness in our hearts and minds," said Lorri L. Jean, Executive Director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. "Harry was one of the pioneers of the gay rights movement. His courageous and visionary leadership laid the groundwork for today's activists seeking full equality for the GLBT community. We join Harry's countless friends and loved ones in mourning his passing."
In 1950, Harry Hay and four others formed one of the nation's first gay rights organizations, the Mattachine Society. The idea that homosexuals should organize for civil rights was formed at an election - year party in Los Angeles that was attended exclusively by gay men.
The organization was named for the Matachinos, court jesters of the Italian Renaissance who, behind their masks, were free to speak the truth. The Mattachine Society was the first to propose the idea of
gay and lesbian people as an oppressed cultural minority.
In the 1960's Hay helped organize the first "gay pride" parade in Los Angeles, was chair of the L.A. Committee to Fight the Exclusion of Homosexuals from the Armed Forces and chair of the Southern California Gay Liberation Front. In the late 70's and early 80's, Hay became increasingly concerned with spiritual issues and formed
the Radical Faeries, a movement devoted to ecology, spiritual truth and "gay-centeredness."
NGLTF honoured Hay at the October 1999 Creating Change(TM) conference. In his award acceptance speech, Hay said, "I want you to realize, of course, that by honouring me you are all honouring yourselves.
In 1948, when I first rifled through Alfred Kinsey's best-selling book "The Sexual Behaviour of the Human Male," I sensed then that this book should require that all Americans forevermore recast their thinking about homosexuals. His chapter five was implying to me
that we were a class of people with the social and political dimensions of a cultural minority. Indeed, a viciously oppressed minority, who, were we to organize, might someday even liberate ourselves under principles protected by the American Constitution."
From the NGLTF: (www.ngltf.org)
"Today our movement lost one of its treasures. The death of legendary gay activist Harry Hay leaves a heavy sadness in our hearts and minds," said Lorri L. Jean, Executive Director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. "Harry was one of the pioneers of the gay rights movement. His courageous and visionary leadership laid the groundwork for today's activists seeking full equality for the GLBT community. We join Harry's countless friends and loved ones in mourning his passing."
In 1950, Harry Hay and four others formed one of the nation's first gay rights organizations, the Mattachine Society. The idea that homosexuals should organize for civil rights was formed at an election - year party in Los Angeles that was attended exclusively by gay men.
The organization was named for the Matachinos, court jesters of the Italian Renaissance who, behind their masks, were free to speak the truth. The Mattachine Society was the first to propose the idea of
gay and lesbian people as an oppressed cultural minority.
In the 1960's Hay helped organize the first "gay pride" parade in Los Angeles, was chair of the L.A. Committee to Fight the Exclusion of Homosexuals from the Armed Forces and chair of the Southern California Gay Liberation Front. In the late 70's and early 80's, Hay became increasingly concerned with spiritual issues and formed
the Radical Faeries, a movement devoted to ecology, spiritual truth and "gay-centeredness."
NGLTF honoured Hay at the October 1999 Creating Change(TM) conference. In his award acceptance speech, Hay said, "I want you to realize, of course, that by honouring me you are all honouring yourselves.
In 1948, when I first rifled through Alfred Kinsey's best-selling book "The Sexual Behaviour of the Human Male," I sensed then that this book should require that all Americans forevermore recast their thinking about homosexuals. His chapter five was implying to me
that we were a class of people with the social and political dimensions of a cultural minority. Indeed, a viciously oppressed minority, who, were we to organize, might someday even liberate ourselves under principles protected by the American Constitution."
thinkpink & NGLTF
e-mail:
thinkpink@pandora.be
Homepage:
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Comments
Hide the following 7 comments
Wait one second!
25.10.2002 14:23
Truthfiend
Respect !
25.10.2002 16:45
thinkpink
APPALLING LACK OF INTELLECTUALITY!
26.10.2002 08:54
Truthfiend
Think again, Thinkpink!
26.10.2002 10:15
People who fight one form of oppression in order to establish another kind of oppression are higly dubious in my eyes.
The communist party you, indirectly, praise is an embryo of a totalitarian rule which brutually would subjugate every individual in the country.
You can´t fight love between humans successfully and the same goes for the love of human freedom.
I´m sick and tired of communists posing as freedom fighters.
Simon
Strange reactions
27.10.2002 08:55
First, I am not a communist and second I can only guess that these reactions have more to do with homophobia than anything else.
This is a simple obituary for a man who played a significant role during some part of the gay liberation struggle in the US.
It appaired in newspapers and press. com..
thinkpink
?
27.10.2002 10:49
Gary
It's an obituary not a manifest,
27.10.2002 14:31
I posted this obituary as a tribute to a gay man, who happens to have been member of the Communist Party in the US in his youth.
I don't know weither this man died as a communist, nor if he was a autoritarian.
According to the obituary in the New York Times (hardly a communist paper) Harry Hay 'became a fixture of West Coast progressive politics, of the antidraft and antiwar campaigns, worked in the Women's Strike for Peace during the Vietnam War, and with Native American activists, especially the Committee for Traditional Indian Land and Life.'
The obituary was published in several mainstream and alternative 'non-communist' media worldwide!
The fact that he did something for the gay movement and others is praised even by liberals.
The fact that he used to be a communist isn't the point here.
thinkpink