Monthly Archives: May 2007

Attorney General Coakley supports same-sex marriage

In stark contrast to her predecessor Tom Reilly, Attorney General Martha Coakley told members of the Mass Lesbian and Gay Bar Association that she would challenge the constitutionality of a ban on same-sex marriage, should the voters approve it in November 2008. The Boston Globe (5/12/07) reported that in her speech, Coakley noted the success of more than 8500 same-sex marriages. She said, “the sky has not fallen, life goes on. The institution of marriage is alive and well in the Commonwealth. . . . It has been made more inclusive. I think a seamless integration of an ancient institution with the modern but welcome recognition of the reality of the diversity of sexual orientation has made our state stronger.”

The LGBT community has a strong ally in Attorney General Coakley.

Is your legislator on board with equality?

The Massachusetts Constitutional Convention will now meet June 14 to vote on a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. We are still 8 votes short of defeating this amendment. We need your help now to convince legislators to put an end to the marriage debate once and for all. To find out where your legislator stands, go to the MassEquality website.

Even if your legislator is a supporter, you can help by checking out districts where legislators are not in support and seeking out friends and family in those districts to lobby their representatives. For instance, if you know people who live in Gloucester, encourage them to be in touch with Representative Tony Verga, who in the past has failed to support marriage equality. The MassEquality website also has numerous other actions you can take to ensure victory on June 14.

Courting Equality authors featured on radio

You can listen live to Patricia Gozemba and Karen Kahn, authors of Courting Equality, on Sunday, May 13, at 8:50 pm, on WFNX, 101.7 FM in Greater Boston and 92.1 Southern New Hampshire. They will be featured guests on gay news show, One in Ten.

On Monday, May 14, the authors will be live on The Agenda, the HRC radio show hosted by Joe Solmonese and Mary Breslauer. For more info, http://www.hrc.org/theagenda/blog/audio/.

For those on the West Coast, tune into WKPFK, Feminist Magazine, at 7:20 Pacific Time, on Wednesday, May 16.

Laura Kiritsy notes ACLU’s commitment to marriage equality, Bay Windows, 5.10.07

ACLUM’s commitment to Courting Equality is but one example of the pivotal behind-the-scenes role the organization has played in the struggle to achieve and preserve marriage equality in Massachusetts. It’s a commitment that stretches back to the 1990s, when ACLUM lobbyist Norma Shapiro represented the organization in what was known as the “Group of Groups,” an informal coalition of LGBT and allied organizations that was planning, strategizing and negotiating to advance the cause of legal recognition for same-sex couples in the state legislature. Initially the Groups’ focus was domestic partnership legislation; in the early 2000s it shifted to civil unions. Along the way, they also fended off attempts to pass DOMA legislation. Most notably, they helped coordinate the strategy in which legislators, led by then-Senate President Tom Birmingham, killed the anti-gay constitutional amendment via parliamentary maneuvering at a 2002 constitutional convention. More

Laura Kiritsy of Bay Windows says meet the authors

What better way to celebrate the third anniversary of the first legal same-sex marriages in U.S. history than at the release party for Courting Equality (Beacon Press), perhaps the most vivid rendering of the struggle to achieve and maintain marriage equality in Massachusetts — and more importantly perhaps, the profound impact it has had on LGBT couples and families — that will ever be put between hard covers.Courting Equality was authored by Pat Gozemba, co-chair of The History Project, and her spouse Karen Kahn, and illustrated with page upon glossy page of photos by Marilyn Humphries, a longtime Bay Windows contributor who has spent decades documenting the life of the local LGBT community. It’s required reading both for the thousands of revelers who celebrated the betrothed at Cambridge City Hall on May 17, 2004, when “the city block rocked with cheers at 12:01,” as Gozemba and Khan note, and those fair-minded folks who may still be uncomfortable with the idea of same-sex marriage.

For progressive activists Gozemba explains, Courting Equality serves to validate “what we have done to preserve equality for all people. We want progressives to see that and be proud of what their achievements have been and to bolster us as we go ahead to continue the struggle.” As for those less inclined to support equality, Gozemba hopes that they’ll see the book “and they’ll look at what the issues are, they’ll look at the political struggle and they’ll also look at the families, in particular, and see how critical this is to people” across the “whole spectrum of life,” from young couples with children to older folks facing their twilight years with limited resources. “People aren’t really thinking about how our lives are affected along the whole spectrum of life,” says Gozemba.

Gozemba, Kahn and Humphries will be signing copies at a book release party at the Cambridge YWCA from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. on May 16. ACLUM Executive Director Carol Rose will play host for festivities that will include remarks from Mary Bonauto, the Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders attorney who masterminded the Goodridge case. “It’s really a celebration of the launch of the book and a kind of rededication to preserve marriage equality,” Gozemba says of the event.

BostonNOW Weighs In

Chronicling the battle for romantic rights
Same-sex marriage in words, photos
John Black, jblack@bostonnow.com
 
Sometimes, we are told, things happen for a reason. In the case of authors Patricia Gozemba and Karen Kahn and photographer Marilyn Humphries, they happened for a very good reason.

“For a long time I’d known about Marilyn’s work as a photojournalist covering a number of progressive causes,” Gozemba said. “I always felt that what she was doing would make a great book, but she said she didn’t have the time to write one because she was so busy. That’s where Karen and I stepped in.”
The result of the collaboration of these three women is Courting Equality, A Documentary History of America’s First Legal Same-Sex Marriages, now available from Beacon Press.

The book uses words and images to tell the story of the battle for gay marriage in Massachusetts, from early efforts by LGBT activists for family and parenting rights to May 17, 2004 at 12:01 a.m., when Susan Shepard and Marcia Ham were issued the first legal same-sex marriage in the country.
“There was a wealth of material to draw from, but it was still a challenge to find the right tone for the stories we wanted to tell,” Gozemba said. “We never wanted to come across as preaching to people because that could drive them away. We didn’t want it to be cold, either, because, after all, it’s a story about love as much as politics.”

Now that the book is done and on the shelves, the ladies are rolling up their collective sleeves and getting to work making sure the message of the book gets out where people can read it.

“We’ve had great success from people and organizations who already support the cause of same-sex marriage,” Gozemba said. “Now we want to make sure everyone else reads it, too.”

Courting Equality book launch, Wed., May 16, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Cambridge YWCA.

Great Review in Salem News

Thursday, April 26, 2007
Salem couple’s new book chronicles struggle for gay rights
By Alan Lupo

It’s been almost three years since gay people began legally marrying their partners in Massachusetts on a day in May, which happens to be the very month that my wife and I will be celebrating our 45th anniversary.

People with a lot of time on their hands and fear or ignorance in their hearts predicted that allowing gays to marry would sabotage the institution of traditional marriage.

Well, mine’s fine, as are the marriages of lots of male-female couples we know. If there are any glitches, such as, “Fah cryin’ out loud, will ya please clean up after yourself!!”, they have nothing to do with Frank and Harry enjoying their lives legally together.

The gay-marriage bashers haven’t given up. They continue to lobby the Legislature to allow citizens to vote someday in a referendum that they hope will negate the Nov. 18, 2003 state Supreme Judicial Court’s 4-3 decision that denying gays the right to marry violated the Massachusetts Constitution.

Perhaps not since those for and against slavery fought each other verbally and physically in the years before the Civil War has the Bay State witnessed such passion over an issue of essential fairness and dignity.

Three local women have captured the history and angst of that fight in a new book, “Courting Equality: A Documentary History of America’s First Legal Same-Sex Marriages,” published by Beacon Press.

The authors are Patricia A. Gozemba, a former professor of English and Women’s Studies at Salem State College, and Karen Kahn, former editor of “Sojourner: The Women’s Forum.” Gozemba and Kahn, married in 2005, live in Salem. The photographer is Marilyn Humphries of Beverly, a photojournalist for various publications over the last quarter-century.

Now, I do not do book reviews; but I must say that Gozemba and Kahn know how to write, and Humphries does with a camera what painters do with oils. They have put together a historic narrative that ought to be used in teaching journalism students how to write history and history majors how to write, period. Taste this, for example:

“The marble halls, the finely wrought furnishings, the historic murals, the aura of history that emanates from every inch of the State House usually seems much more majestic than the mundane business conducted there. Fast gaveling, a wink and a nod, backslapping, and arcane parliamentary procedures often leave the ordinary citizen lost in any attempt to follow a piece of legislation.

“Moments of genuine thoughtfulness, soul-searching, and stirring eloquence occur infrequently. Opportunities to extend justice and equality in a very broad sense are rare in the day-to-day work of legislators. But as the citizens of the commonwealth and the world would soon discover, given the opportunity, twenty-first-century legislators could rise to levels of eloquence, insightfulness, and passion equaling that of their predecessors whose words and austere portraits surround them.”

The book is the work of people who understand the politics and behind-the-scenes tactics that characterized how the gay-marriage issue played itself out over the years. They understand too well the history of bigotry and discrimination that forced gays to remain in the closet for so long as well as the courage it took for gays to come out of that closet and fight for the dignity due all humans.

The controversial court ruling, they wrote, “recognized individual rights to privacy in intimate relations and acknowledged that choosing one’s marriage partner is an essential part of exercising one’s freedom as a human being.”

Their book captures the emotions of legislators who had to confront something alien to their earlier beliefs, and of gay partners and their children who suddenly gained the societal and legal benefits of marriage.

There is no need for us to vote on this issue. Courts exist, in part, to protect the rights of minorities in a democracy.

As Justice John Greaney wrote in concurring with the majority in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health, the landmark SJC decision, “Simple principles of decency dictate that we extend to the plaintiffs, and to their new status, full acceptance, tolerance, and respect. We should do so because it is the right thing to do.”

Let those who continue to oppose this most human and humane concept use their energy to confront our common concerns regarding poverty, street crime, and the lack of affordable housing or efficient transportation. Leave alone those who do not interfere in your traditional marriage or mine.

Alan Lupo, a veteran Boston columnist who appears regularly on these pages, can be reached at alupo@comcast.net