Lillian Faderman is the author of the new book The Gay Revolution: The Story of the Struggle. Her many other books include Surpassing the Love of Men and Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers.
Q:
You begin your book with two different stories, one that took place in 1948 and
one that happened in 2012. Why did you start the book that way, and what do
these incidents signify to you?
A:
What I asked after I told the stories is how did we get from one to the other?
What happened to that much-loved professor [E.K. Johnston of the University of
Missouri] in 1948, who was hounded out of his university [for being gay, and] how
we got to General Tammy Smith, who was not only promoted to general but the
Department of Defense told her, “Tell your story.” Tracey Hepner, [her wife,]
in a public ceremony, pinned the star.
It’s
a book about how we got from 1948 to a time when General Tammy Smith can
publicly admit she has a wife. It’s astonishing.
Q:
You write that the diversity of the gay community makes it hard to pick one
leader, “but if any one person deserves such credit, it is Frank Kameny.” Why
do you think so, and what is his legacy today?
A:
He was truly remarkable. He was a Harvard Ph.D. fired [from the Army Map
Service for homosexuality]. That radicalized him…
Frank
Kameny…decided he would make very public use of the way homosexuals were
discriminated against. His was the first in a series of very public protests
and demonstrations.
Nobody
had thought it was OK to be out enough to picket the White House, the State
Department, Independence Hall in Philadelphia. He organized pickets in 1965.
He
did more—he encouraged other people to fight back. He did not take the
government’s treatment of them passively. He helped people fired from civil
service jobs to fight and win.
He
encouraged Sgt. Leonard Matlovich to come out while serving in the Air Force
and say, I want to [remain] in the Air Force. They won, and the Air Force was
ordered to reinstate Sgt. Matlovich. This was the first time that had
happened—a homosexual openly admitted he was homosexual and wanted to stay in
the military.
Frank
Kameny was behind the American Psychiatric Association’s finally removing
homosexuality from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual in 1973.
He
said what he was [most] proud of was coining the slogan “Gay is Good.” He
coined that slogan, and it became a popular slogan in the LGBT community. It
was the first time people [in the community] wore buttons that said, I’m proud
of who I am.
To
the very end, he remained fighting battles. It was wonderful that at the end,
he was recognized by the president of the United States…
I
am not suggesting that Frank Kameny was the only who made a huge difference,
but he certainly was there from early on to his death. He was sort of the
Bayard Rustin of the movement, the strategist. He was so far-seeing…
Q:
You’ve mentioned the issue of gays in the military. What do you see as the
particular turning points on that issue?
A:
It has been a long, hard struggle. When Bill Clinton was president, he really
meant to do the right thing by gay people in the military. He pledged to gay
groups in 1992 that he would do the right thing, and get the ban repealed.
He
tried very hard. It was one of the first official acts he wanted to accomplish.
He was very astonished by the blowback.
Finally,
he agreed to a compromise, Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. It seemed it might work in
the beginning, but it became as bad as what the policy was before. It was
supposed to put a stop to witch-hunting, but it really didn’t.
I
think finally what happened in subsequent years was that gay people got
organized…there were poster boys like Dan Choi. Dan had been a lieutenant who
spoke several languages including Arabic. He was kicked out of the military
because he had started a group at the college where he went called Knights Out.
They
were very active in saying that gay people should be allowed to serve openly in
the military. He was invited on the Rachel Maddow show, and that was like
telling. He was kicked out of the military, and he didn’t go quietly. He did
some dramatic things to call attention to the situation.
He
appeared [at an event] where [Senator] Harry Reid had gone to speak in Las
Vegas. He gave his ring that he had gotten from his military university back to
Harry Reid in a public ceremony…Reid recognized he’d better say some good
things about the right of gay people to serve in the military, and that was a
turning point.
Of
course, President Obama’s support [was important]. As soon as he got into
office, he told the Joint Chiefs of Staff that he wanted to repeal Don’t Ask,
Don’t Tell. He said they had to find a way to do it…a survey of enlisted
military personnel indicated they didn’t care if gay people served alongside
them, so Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell could be repealed.
Q:
The issue of marriage equality has come to the fore in recent years. What do
you think accounts for the shift in public opinion that’s happened recently?
A:
I think so many things have helped—even the media was helpful and came over to
our side. Popular television was helpful. Modern Family apparently was the most
popular TV series around, and here was a very sweet male couple who had adopted
a Korean baby…
Here
were gay couples, married, coming into Americans’ living rooms. [Vice President] Joe Biden said
Will and Grace changed more minds than anything else. The fact that the media
supported us with wonderful programs on TV that showed that gay people were not
child molesters or monsters [was important].
It’s
important to remember that programs like Will and Grace, the Ellen show, Modern
Family, Glee, wouldn’t have existed if it weren’t for organizations [earlier
on] to fight the media…the organizations fought back [against negative
portrayals] and convinced the media to give us fairer representation.
Q:
What do you see looking ahead when it comes to equality issues?
A:
This isn’t the end of the battle. We have won important fights—the ability to
serve openly in the military, the single-sex marriage fight; we won that this
past June--but there’s clearly going to be blowback.
We
are going to have to keep fighting what happened in the county in Kentucky with
Kim Davis—it indicates the religious right has not accepted this.
[And
there were] the recent attempts in Indiana and Arkansas to pass a religious
freedom act that would permit businesses that served the wedding industry…to
opt out if they had an opposition to same-sex marriage…
What
was wonderful about what happened in Indiana and Arkansas was that both
governors were ready to sign the bills and there was so much protest in
Indiana…[Governor] Mike Pence backed down and did sign a religious freedom bill, but it
doesn’t include the ability to discriminate against gays and lesbians…
The
religious right isn’t going to give up. They are going to keep trying to find
ways to sabotage new laws that try to make LGBT people first-class citizens. I
anticipate they won’t give up…
Q:
Are you working on another book?
A:
This one was so big and so detailed, I think I want to enjoy the fact that this
one is finally [published].
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
The biggest thing I want to communicate in the book is that the LGBT movement
really is very much like the African-American movement for civil rights, and
was very much inspired by that. It’s taken many years to get this far, and the
fight is not over.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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