Office Of Multicultural Affairs

The Office of Multicultural Affairs (OMA) was established in 2002 to support the College’s efforts to attract, recruit, and serve both students of color and international students. Our mission is to create and sustain an environment that encourages and embraces the contributions of people from a variety of cultural and ethnic backgrounds.

Monday, October 19, 2009

DISCRIMINATION VS. FREEDOM

Rights Still to Be Won


By Julian Bond

Friday, October 9, 2009 (Washington Post)


The civil rights struggle for legal equality in America today is no less

necessary, nor worthy, than a similar struggle fought by blacks several

decades ago. Now, as then, Americans are denied rights simply because of who

they are. When lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans gather in

Washington on Sunday for the National Equality March, they will invoke the

unfulfilled promise in our Constitution that they, too, are due equal

protection under the law.


I will join them in their march because I believe in their equality and

believe in the 14th Amendment of the Constitution that promises to protect

it. I will join them because the humanity of all people is diminished when

any class of people is denied privileges granted to others. I will join them

because I know that when heterosexuals stand up and call for justice

alongside their lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender brothers and sisters,

the sooner justice will come.


In the ugly days of racial segregation, we had a dream. In August 1963 we

came to Washington and declared that dream to the nation. Among us that day

were LGBT Americans such as Bayard Rustin, the chief organizer of the '63

March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. His homosexuality caused

discomfort among some leaders of the day, and they played down his role in

the march. But his heroic work has served as a model for civil rights

organizers ever since.


We can no longer pretend that civil rights do not include rights for

lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans. Flimsy justifications for

anti-LGBT bias are giving way to evidence that society is strengthened, not

weakened, when LGBT people are given equal protection under the law. Where

they are free to marry those they love, the sky has not fallen. Where they

cannot be denied employment and housing simply because of who they are, the

sky has not fallen. Where they serve nobly in the military without the

burden of secrecy, the sky has not fallen. Rather, when all people are free

to live up to their full potential, all of society benefits. Yet the United

States still permits all these forms of discrimination.

And this is why we must march.


My friend Coretta Scott King said in 2000: "Freedom from discrimination

based on sexual orientation is surely a fundamental human right in any great

democracy, as much as freedom from racial, religious, gender or ethnic

discrimination." That is why the NAACP resolved several years ago that "we

shall pursue all legal and constitutional means to support

non-discriminatory policies and practices against persons based on race,

gender, sexual orientation, nationality or cultural background."

The civil rights movement has achieved tremendous victories in past decades,

and so we must again. The bias against LGBT people tolerated in this land,

even at the end of the first decade of the new millennium, is ugly. We must

create a better future, which will give us a past upon which we can look

back and be proud. This weekend, those who believe in the ideals of our

Constitution, those who have a dream that we will one day live in a nation

where people will be judged not by whom they love but by the content of

their character, and those who stand up for their ideals can be proud that

they stood up and spoke out for justice.


The writer, a professor of history at the University of Virginia and

distinguished professor in residence at American University, is board

chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

No comments:

Creative Commons License ALANA Network Official Blog by Usen Esiet is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at thealananetwork.blogspot.com.