Showing posts with label Harvey Milk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harvey Milk. Show all posts

Monday, February 7, 2011

S.F. Plans Gay Walk of Fame

By Neal Broverman

Taking a cue from Hollywood, San Francisco's predominantly gay Castro District is preparing to install a Rainbow Honor Walk that recognizes LGBT notables like Oscar Wilde and Frida Kahlo.

Work is expected to start this year on the sidewalk plaques, which will be installed on Market and Castro streets. The first 20 people to be honored have been chosen by local residents and merchants, and while they include people like Sylvester James and Allen Ginsberg, Harvey Milk's name is not on that list. Bevan Dufty, the gay city supervisor who represents the Castro, says Milk is already honored throughout the Castro — including having a public plaza named for him — and there's no reason he can't be added in the future.

"I can’t imagine that he wouldn’t be included in the next 20 individuals," Dufty tells The Advocate. "Harvey is our legacy in the Castro." Dufty says Milk would be proud of the diverse group of people, such as Kahlo and James, being honored by the people of the Castro.

Dufty is running for mayor of San Francisco this year — he says he's raised $125,000 already and is preparing for a Victory Fund campaign training event in Las Vegas later this month.

"I got the biggest present when [state senator] Mark Leno decided not to run for mayor," Dufty says with a laugh. Aside from his LGBT voter base, Dufty is "working on building a base that includes the Westside, Republican voters, and the Chinese and Latino communities, and demonstrating my proven ability to build city services when our budget is challenging."

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Friday, January 21, 2011

HRC to share Harvey Milk’s Castro storefront with The Trevor Project

By Eric Ethington

Following a national outcry over its plans to convert the space that once housed the camera store owned by Harvey Milk into a gift store, the Human Rights Campaign announced they are donating part of the space to the Trevor Project.

The HRC says that part of the store space, located in San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood, as well as $10,000 a year, will be donated to the Trevor Project to be used as a call center to take crisis calls from LGBT teens.

“We are honored to partner with The Trevor Project in offering this important resource for LGBT youth across the nation from such a historic location,” HRC President Joe Solmonese said in a statement. “We are so proud of the work of The Trevor Project and I am thrilled to strengthen our relationship with this incredible organization.”

The Trevor Project, founded in 1998, operates the only nationwide, around-the-clock crisis and suicide prevention helpline for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth.

AIDS Memorial Quilt founder Cleve Jones, who campaigned for and worked with Milk, said last month that an organization serving gay youth would be a more fitting to Milk’s memory.

Milk became the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, when he won a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977. He served 11 months in office and was responsible for passing a stringent gay rights ordinance for the city before he and Mayor George Moscone were assasinated on Nov. 27, 1978.

“It is wonderful that Harvey’s message of hope will again emanate from the site of Castro Camera,” Jones said. “He spoke often of our responsibility to our young people and experienced firsthand the pain of losing loved ones to suicide…. I think he’d approve.”

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

HRC to Share Harvey Milk Storefront

By Advocate.com Editors

The Human Rights Campaign announced Tuesday the group will share Harvey Milk's old Castro Camera storefront in San Francisco with a crisis hotline run by the Trevor Project.

The HRC came under fire last month when it was announced the group would be setting up shop in the space where Milk launched his historic political campaign. Friends of Milk, including activist Cleve Jones, argued that the HRC represented "the antithesis of Harvey Milk's organizing strategy."

In an effort to quell complaints, the HRC will donate $10,000 per year and space inside the building to the Trevor Project.

The deal will continue for as long as the Washington, D.C.-based organization leases the store.

"We are honored to partner with the Trevor Project in offering this important resource for LGBT youth across the nation from such a historic location," HRC President Joe Solmonese said.

Read more here.

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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

AN AUDIENCE WITH STUART MILK

INTERVIEW BY ALEX HOPKINS



Photograph: Stirland Martin


Legends are not easy to live up to. As the nephew of gay hero Harvey Milk, Stuart Milk has taken it upon himself to keep his uncle’s light shining. Yet like the former Mayor of San Francisco, Stuart Milk refuses to rest on his laurels. He is determined to take the struggle for LGBT rights global and thereby continue Harvey’s simple yet infinitely powerful message of providing universal hope.


Stuart Milk was in London this weekend to speak at the second annual vigil against hate crime in Trafalgar Square. As an openly gay man who lost his uncle to violence 32 years ago this November it is a cause close to his heart. With the horrific spate of recent gay suicides in the United States and continuing homophobic violence on both sides of the pond it is also something that he knows has never been more relevant.


Although slightly jet-lagged, Milk’s eyes sparkle with a fearless determination as he talks about the fight that lies ahead. Central to his work is a belief that we must reach out to the international community to forge equal rights. This, he explains, was something that Harvey Milk recognised all those years ago.


“I have recordings of my uncle where he talks about young people hearing his message abroad. These are the people who really felt hopeless and even now I receive pre-suicidal messages from young LGBT individuals.


“We must remember that although 12 nations now recognise gay marriage, 75% of the world remains deeply homophobic. In places like Istanbul and Damascus the societal level of hatred is so pervasive that effeminate men, Trans people and noticeably butch women are forced to pay an extra tax if they buy a cappuccino in a coffee shop. I was shocked to find out that this coffee shop was an American run chain. America is seen to lead the way of LGBT rights and this shows just how influential they are in taking the struggle global.”


The key to meeting the challenges that lie ahead, Milk believes, lies in making allies with other minority communities. He is also adamant that we must accept that current president Barrack Obama is one of our greatest allies and cites his continued attempts to include the LGBT community in public statements and events.


“I think we are at a cross roads with LGBT rights in the United States. Most of our activists are very much to the left and we need to branch out to other communities and find common ground to reach people. We need to give the people who are against us something to hang on to. When you build your life on a dogmatic faith and then ask that faith to embrace LGBT people it is like unravelling a tapestry. It forces them to question and re-evaluate their whole belief system. This is incredibly scary for them and it just means that their intolerance becomes greater. We need to throw them a lifeline.”


This seems to be the message behind this year’s vigil in central London which now focuses on victims of all hate crime and not just homophobia. It very much chimes with Milk’s desire to forge links between all minority communities and seek out the shared obstacles as we tackle cultural barriers.


Last year 10000 people filled Trafalgar Square. Some justifiably commented that the gay bars should have been emptier and a stronger display of societal unity was needed. Apathy amongst the LGBT community remains something we must confront.


“For those who say this doesn’t affect them I would say don’t travel to 75% of the world because you will not be able to walk down the street holding hands in Milan or Rome and you cannot travel to the Middle East and be an openly gay couple without risk of being jailed. You will end up living in a very small bubble,” says Milk. They are firm and thoughtful words that we would all be well-advised to contemplate.

Stuart Milk's stay in the UK was sponsored by Out There magazine, with thanks to The Arch and Small Luxury Hotels of the World.

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Sunday, January 2, 2011

Harvey Milk speaks in 78: "Every minority group has had the same problem, there are people and organizations in every minority group that sit there and criticize other organizations, rather then go out and create change...I pay very little attention to these critics"

 

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

HRC accused of ‘spitting in face’ of Milk’s memory

Associated Press


Cleve Jones, others criticize organization’s plans for ‘Action Center’ at site of slain gay rights leader’s Castro Street store

SAN FRANCISCO — On the surface, the new tenant at the storefront where Harvey Milk waged his historic political campaign would seem like the last organization to anger people in the gay community.

The Human Rights Campaign, the United States’ largest gay rights lobbying group, wants to open up an information center and a gift shop in the building that would pay tribute to the slain gay rights leader.

But Milk’s friends and admirers are so incensed at the group taking over the slain San Francisco supervisor’s stomping grounds that they would rather see a Starbucks there, underscoring the tensions that exist within the various factions of the gay rights movement.

The organization is a frequent target of criticism from gay rights activists who consider its mainstream, “inside the Beltway” style ineffective. They believe the organization’s philosophy of incremental progress in the gay rights movement runs completely counter to the uncompromising message of gay pride championed by Milk.

“It’s spitting in the face of Harvey’s memory,” said AIDS Memorial Quilt founder Cleve Jones, who received his political education at Milk’s side in the 1970s.

“What’s next? Removing the Mona Lisa’s face and replacing it with the Wal-Mart smiley face?” asked Bil Browning, the founder of a popular gay issues blog.

The Washington-based nonprofit organization announced last week that it was moving its San Francisco “Action Center” and gift store into the site of Milk’s old Castro Camera.

It’s a historic site in the gay rights community. A sidewalk plaque outside that marks the spot’s historical significance and encases some of Milk’s ashes is a popular stop for visitors making pilgrimages to San Francisco gay landmarks.

In the 32 years since Milk was assassinated at City Hall along with Mayor George Moscone, the building has housed a clothing store, a beauty supply shop, and most recently, a housewares emporium.

HRC President Joe Solmonese said the new location will stock items bearing Milk’s words and image, with a portion of the proceeds going to a local elementary school named in Milk’s honor and the GLBT Historical Society. The organization also plans to preserve a Milk mural the previous tenants installed, Solmonese said.

“People are rightly protective of the legacy of Harvey Milk, and we intend to do our part to honor that legacy,” Human Rights Campaign spokesman Michael Cole-Schwartz said. “Bringing an LGBT civil rights presence to the space that has previously been several for-profit retail outlets is a worthwhile goal.”

Not according to activists like Jones and Dustin Lance Black, the screenwriter who won an Oscar for Milk — the 2008 Sean Penn movie about the first openly gay man elected to a major elected office in the U.S.

During his life, Milk railed against well-heeled gay leaders he regarded as assimilationists and elitists — Black devoted two scenes in Milk to the subject. Some of the leading activists he crossed swords with went on to launch the Human Rights Campaign, which sometimes is criticized for focusing on lavish fundraisers and political access at the expense of results, Jones said.

“He was not an ‘A-Gay’ and had no desire to be an A-Gay. He despised those people and they despised him,” he said. “That, to me, is the crowd HRC represents. Don’t try to wrap yourself up in Harvey Milk’s mantle and pretend you are one of us.”

The Human Rights Campaign has been struggling to regain its credibility with gay activists who favor a more grassroots approach since at least early 2008, when the group agreed to endorse a federal bill that included job protections for gays and lesbians, but not transgender people.

The disillusionment grew later that year with the passage of a same-sex marriage ban in California. Although HRC donated $3.4 million to fight Proposition 8, the devastating loss provoked young gay activists to take to the streets and to question the organizing and messaging abilities of established gay rights groups.

Since then, HRC has been accused of taking too soft an approach with President Barack Obama and the Congress that until last month’s election was controlled by Democrats. To some, the group’s failings were epitomized by the U.S. Senate failure last week, for the second time this year, to repeal the ban on gays serving openly in the U.S. military.

Black said HRC’s failure to talk to anyone close to Milk before it leased the Castro Street storefront demonstrates that it is out of touch. He and Jones think the space would be put to better use as a drop-in center for gay and lesbian youth, or if HRC partnered with another local nonprofit to ensure its sales benefit San Francisco.

“If any LGBTQ political organization is to move into Harvey’s old shop, there is a higher standard to be met, because such a move begs comparisons,” Black said. “Because it has become a tourist destination, whoever moves in that’s a political organization is in some way adopting Harvey as their own.”

HRC creative director Don Kiser understands the concerns and says he is open to suggestions, but thinks the criticism is overstated. The group obtains about one-third of the new names on its mailing lists from visitors to its retail stores in San Francisco, Provincetown, Massachusetts, and Washington. Each tourist who goes in to buy a Harvey Milk T-shirt or an HRC tote bag is a potential activist, Kiser says.

“They live in small towns in Texas and flyover states. Those are the people we need to help find the spirit that Harvey Milk had,” he said. “If they can go back and take a little of the spirit the Castro has, we will see sea changes.”

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