03) TAKE PRIDE IN
SOLIDARITY!
(The following
article is from the July 1-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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Pride 2010
statement from the Communist Party of Canada and the Young Communist
League
This summer, millions of people from
the LGBT communities and their allies across North America will fill
the streets for Pride parades. On the 40th anniversary of the first gay
pride celebrations, held in 1970 in New York, Los Angeles and San
Francisco, the Communist Party of Canada and the Young Communist League
send warmest greetings, and pledge our solidarity to the ongoing
struggles for full equality.
The
controversy around this
year's Pride Parade in Toronto highlights the true meaning of these
struggles. By trying to ban reference to Israel's apartheid policies,
the parade organizers have committed the tragic mistake of sacrificing
the rights of one group of oppressed people for the alleged protection
of another.
We recall
the words of Pastor
Martin Niemoller regarding the rise of Hitler fascism: "First, they
came for the communists, but I was not a communist, so I said nothing.
Then, they came for the social democrats, but I was not a social
democrat, so I said nothing. Then they came for the trade unionists,
but I was not a trade unionist, so I said nothing. Then they came for
me, but there was nobody left to speak out."
Fortunately,
many are speaking
out today, within the queer community and far beyond, in solidarity
with the Palestinian people and in defense of free speech. These voices
remind the world that Pride is about the right of individuals and
peoples to live free from oppression, whether this takes the form of
brutal homophobia or war crimes committed against the Palestinians.
In fact, the
dynamic response of
the LGBT communities to the banning of Queers Against Israeli Apartheid
has mobilized wider international solidarity with Palestine. Many
leaders of the LGBT communities have returned their Pride Parade
honours, calling on Pride Toronto to reverse this censorship, a demand
which we whole-heartedly support.
Forty years
after the first
Pride Parades, we welcome the expansion of more queer-positive
environments in the public realm, the growing numbers of trade
unions
with active Pride and LGBTQ caucuses, and the increase of gay-straight
alliances, safe school spaces and "Pride proms" in our schools. These
and other legal, political and cultural victories are the hard-won
results of decades of efforts by the LGBTQ community and allies.
But much
more remains to be
achieved. The burning issue today is not how to sweet-talk corporate
donors or pro-Israeli politicians, or to raise the visibility of the
military in Pride events. The issue is the ongoing violence and hatred
directed against gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, and trans people, and
those perceived as such by homophobes and gay-bashers.
Alarmingly,
police-reported hate
crimes are up sharply, according to a new Statistics Canada report.
Hate crimes motivated by sexual orientation more than doubled from 2007
to 2008, a much greater increase than crimes based on religion or
race/ethnicity. Hate crimes motivated by sexual orientation were also
more violent, and took place most often in cities such as Vancouver,
Hamilton, London and Guelph. This report confirms the anecdotal
evidence of a rise in gay-bashings in recent years.
We also know
that same-sex
marriage gains are threatened in the United States, and that the Harper
Tories still hope to reverse queer rights if they win a majority
government. Right-wing forces continue to scapegoat the LGBTQ community
and racialised groups, to divide working class resistance against
finance capital, corporate bailouts and global environmental plunder.
Despite
Canada's welcoming
image, queer youth seeking asylum from persecution in other countries
are still being extradited. Most LGBTQ students still report feeling
unsafe at school, and prosecutors are often unwilling to prosecute
vicious gay-bashings as hate crimes.
Globally,
violent expressions of
homophobia are on the rise, sometimes in response to courageous
attempts by gay-rights groups to hold public events like our Pride
Parades. The struggle to end the criminalization of sexual orientation,
gender identity and gender expression faces stubborn resistance in many
countries. Working class queer people suffer vicious discrimination,
along with women and racialized communities who bear the brunt of
neoliberal economic and social policies.
ILGA, the
association of
lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, intersexed peoples, reports that 76
United Nations member states still criminalize consensual same-sex acts
among adults. In seven countries, punishment for homosexuality still
includes the death penalty.
But progress
for equality is
being achieved in countries such as Cuba, South Africa and Nicaragua.
The myth that queer rights can only be won in wealthy capitalist
countries is shattered by these advances, and by the reality that
homophobic and racist concepts are exported from North America and
Europe. We also note that Canada is one of only 15 countries which
shamefully legislates a higher age of consent for homosexual activities.
Despite the
cultural and legal
shift in favour of equality and diversity, homophobia and transphobia
remain entrenched within the Canadian state.
Stephen
Harper voted against
same-sex marriage, and has left his options open on abortion if he wins
a majority. He snubbed the 2007 international AIDS conference in
Toronto, and appoints anti-choice, anti-gay judges to the courts.
"Focus on the Family" zealots are found among top Tory advisors, who
promote the patriarchal family model.
At a time
when the so-called
"war on terror" is used to remove civil liberties for racialized
communities, we must always remember that "an injury to one is an
injury to all." Just like racism, sexism, and national chauvinism,
homophobia and transphobia are weapons to divide working people.
Equality and human rights must be expanded to include full legal and
political protections for sexual orientation and expression, and gender
identity.
This demand
is not "divisive."
It is a vital part of the wider movement to drive the Harper Tories out
of power. Today the ruling class is using the economic meltdown to
carry out a vicious assault on all hard-won social equality gains. A
broad democratic and social resistance is needed to block and reverse
this corporate agenda. Together, we must build a powerful coalition
around a genuine people's alternative to this crisis - a common front
of Aboriginal peoples, youth and students, women, seniors, immigrant
and racialized communities, environmentalists, labour, peace activists,
the LGBTQ community, farmers, and many other allies.
Ultimately,
this struggle in our
communities and workplaces, and at the ballot box, will defeat the
right and open the door to a people's coalition government. The goal of
the Communist Party is to win fuller social freedom and genuine
people's power in a socialist Canada, where our economy will be owned
by all and democratically controlled. It will then become possible to
eradicate the intersecting forms of exploitation and oppression which
we face today, while defending our sovereignty and protecting our
common environment.