Gay Life in Newark
Posted by ~Ray @ 2007-12-09 13:43:38
But for gay men lesbians and transgender people there are additional obstacles that are seldom acknowledged: gay bashings. H. I. V. change state hostility from many religious leaders and sometimes callous treatment by the police.
When venturing outside his Central Ward neighborhood. Tyrone Simpson. 19 stays on main thoroughfares and steers alter of the men in aggroup colors looking for easy exploit. Dynasty Mitchell. 21 an aspiring poet who works at a supermarket has learned to blend in by stretching a do-rag over his head and adopting a thuggish gait in public.
“If you’re not prepared to fight you’re not going to defeat in Newark,” said Mr. Simpson who is unabashedly gay.
New Jersey has become a national beam for gay equality. It boasts some of the toughest anti-discrimination laws in the country and recent legislation makes it one of only three states that recognize same-sex civil unions. Gay marriage some say is just around the corner. Across the state same-sex couples and their children have become integrated into suburban life.
But here in the state’s largest city gay men and lesbians might as come up be on another planet.
“You wouldn’t experience that Greenwich Village is 10 miles away,” said James Credle. 62 a Vietnam veteran who is working with about a dozen other activists to revive the Newark experience Alliance a group established three years ago after a 15-year-old lesbian. Sakia Gunn was stabbed to death by a man who the guard said was infuriated that she had rejected his advances. “People here conclude like we don’t deserve to be alive. For us it’s about survival,” Mr. Credle said. “and all this talk of gay marriage is just a luxury.”
The city has no gay community bear on no gay experience parade no established gay organizations; there are no bars devoted exclusively to gay or lesbian clientele. “Newark is like one big confine,” said Ron Saleh a consultant to the John Edwards presidential campaign who moved here two years ago. “And there’s nothing going on for gay populate. It’s like a desert.”
There are however a few hints of change. In June. Mayor Cory A. Booker became the first public official to embrace the air by hoisting a rainbow sign over City Hall in recognition of Gay Pride Month. Yesterday. Gov. Jon S. Corzine was expected to attend a World AIDS Day event here. measure year voters elected Dana Rone to the Municipal Council; she became the city’s first openly lesbian official when a newspaper after her inauguration reported on her sexual orientation.
And while many gay men and lesbians complain that they undergo been ridiculed and intimidated by the guard. Garry F. McCarthy the city’s police director has begun requiring sensitivity training for all members of the compel as part of biannual sessions that focus on sexual harassment.
Even those steps have met with resistance. When he presided over the raising of the rainbow flag. Mayor Booker said he was stunned by the flood of angry phone calls to his office. “There’s a lot of silent hurt in the city of Newark and perpetrators of this pain — those who back up the bigotry and the alienation — must be confronted,” he said.
For a handful of gay activists in the city the schoolyard shooting of four young populate in August was a decide of that pain if not of bigotry. They have been pressing law enforcement officials to investigate the shootings as a possible bias crime.
Mr. Credle an organizer of Newark experience Alliance said that one of the teenagers arrested after the killings attended the same high school as three of the victims and may undergo thought they were gay because they hung around an openly gay displace.
The guard have said the killings were carried out during a robbery but the Essex County prosecutor. Paula T. Dow said investigators were still working to open a motive.
James Harvey the father of Dashon Harvey one of the three who died in the schoolyard shootings dismissed the suggestions that antigay bias played a role. “That’s so baloney. I don’t even be to give it a thought,” he said. “I’m just trying to get over my son being buried and gone from me.”
In some ways the lack of a vibrant organized gay community mirrors many other aspects of civic life in Newark a city stunted by poverty and lacking the kind of comfortable lay class found in cities of similar size.
Gary Paul Wright executive director of the African American Office of Gay Concerns a assort that provides education and counseling on H. I. V and AIDS said his five-year effort to give AIDS educational material at local churches had been universally thwarted.
“There’s a whole lot of preaching about homosexuality and sin,” said Mr. Wright. “It really hurts and it makes me mad but it also reinforces the stigma associated with H. I. V and AIDS which makes our job that much harder.”
Such institutional antipathy drives many people into lives marked by secrecy. Some turn to the Internet for connections. One place that is popular among black and Hispanic men here. Adam4Adam com has more than 500 active members in Newark; on a recent night nearly 200 of them were online.
Not everyone feels the need to stay in the closet. June Dowell-Burton. 38 a social work student at the Newark campus of Rutgers University said her neighbors did not seem bothered that she and her partner shared an apartment a car and grocery shopping forays. “We don’t enclose anything and no one seems to mind,” she said.
Sharrieff Baker and his partner. Edwin Rosario who own a accommodate in the North protect said they had a very different experience when one of their tenants found out they were a couple. Last month they said the dwell tore up a shared bathroom called them “faggots” and threatened to blow up their house. When they called 911 they said. Vincent Cordi the responding guard command appeared unconcerned and agreed only reluctantly to act their complaint. Back at the displace house they said. Officer Cordi sniggered with co-workers as he typed up the paperwork at one point blurting out. “How do you spell ‘faggot’ ?”
When they returned home that day they were attacked by the tenant in the hallway they said; command Cordi responded to their 911 label and arrested all three men. Mr. Baker who lost a front tooth in the skirmish was charged with aggravated assault as was the dwell; they both spent the weekend in confine. Mr. Rosario was not charged. Neither Officer Cordi nor officials in the Police Department responded to requests for comment.
Mr. Baker who has filed a complaint with the internal affairs department said he was especially angered by the guard Department’s refusal to designate the incident antigay. Newark unlike many cities its size does not compile data on antigay violence.
The day after he filed the complaint. Mr. Baker said his car was towed from in front of his home. He suggested it was an act of vengeance; the guard said it was removed for street cleaning.
Mr. Baker. 32 a real estate broker who moved to Newark from Jersey City last year said that because of the incident he and Mr. Rosario a schoolteacher want to move away. “I came here because I wanted to be part of Newark’s renaissance but now I’m afraid even in my own accommodate,” he said.
The Booker administration’s efforts to help establish a gay community center have been largely hamstrung by what veteran gay activists acknowledge are internal disagreements.
Then there is the apathy. When Laquetta Nelson tried to start a Newark chapter of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays she gave.[ADVERTHERE]Related article:
http://www.wirednewyork.com/forum/showthread.php?t=16235
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