
|
 |
By
Michael Bronski
It was a just another hot, sticky
night toward the end of June.
The streets of Greenwich Village were
filled with cruising men,
displaced street youth, drug dealers
and random musicians trying to
make a few bucks from small audiences.
But when New York City's Finest
raided the Stonewall Inn in the early
hours of June 28, something
extraordinary happened.
Police raids on the city's gay
bars took place all the time, but
that night was different. That night
people fought back. They were
angry. Maybe it was because gay icon
Judy Garland died two days
earlier, or because the heat got to
everyone. Or it just might have
been that gays couldn't take it any
longer. But that evening, and for
the next two evenings, Christopher
Street was filled with gays, as well
as the neighborhood's more motley
denizens, heckling, taunting, and at
times engaging in physical exchanges
with the police. It was the birth
of a new era of queer life. But exactly
what that new era was is up for
debate.
Stonewall, or rather the myth of
Stonewall, has become an
intrinsic parts of our history. It is a
milestone and touchstone of gay
freedom and revolution, but it has also
become a millstone weighing us
down with its historical burden. Have
we, as a community, given such
incredible weight to Stonewall, and
turned it into a sentimental story
of singular self-assertion, that we
have actually distorted what it
actually means, or might mean?
Maybe if we really understood the
complexity of Stonewall --
rethink it in the tangled web of late-
1960s history from which it has
too often been removed -- we could see
it for exactly what it was and
better understand our relationship to
it.
My own connection to Stonewall is
complicated. At the time I was
a 20-year-old college student across
the river in Newark, New Jersey.
On the big night I was probably in New
York for a hamburger and a
double feature of art films. The
following day I heard about the first
riot, but figured that it was a one-
shot deal and never thought that
the energy would be sustained -- albeit
greatly abated -- over two more
nights. But even then the event didn't
seem like front-page news, and
nobody called it a riot; it was
slightly more than a minor skirmish
with the police, the sort of thing that
happened all the time on the
hot city streets.
Although within weeks of the
event I would become very involved
in the new gay liberation movement,
Stonewall did not mean much to me
at the time. Nor, I must say, does it
mean a whole lot to me now. At
Dartmouth College in this past March --
where I teach courses including
'Introduction to Gay, Lesbian,
Bisexual, and Transgender
Studies' -- I found myself
spending an entire class trying to
get students to attach less importance
to the Stonewall riots and to
see them in perspective.
It's not so easy. Some students
think Stonewall was simply the
first gay pride parade with floats and
an after-party. (I'm not sure
why they think the word 'riot'
is included.) Others imagine
full-scale street fighting, and once a
student asked me how many gay
people died at the Stonewall Inn. Their
more informed classmates
understand the relatively small scale
of the event but presume that its
reverberations were felt immediately --
the high-pitched scream heard
Ôround the world.
To understand Stonewall we need
to place those valiant acts of
street power and street theater into a
larger historical perspective.
The first fact I impress upon my
students is that for almost 20 years
before Stonewall the country saw the
growth of a vibrant homophile
movement. The Mattachine Society,
founded by Harry Hay in 1950, was the
first gay rights organization in the
US, followed five years later by
the lesbian Daughters of Bilitis,
founded by Del Martin and Phyllis
Lyon. The Society of Individual Rights
was founded in San Francisco in
1964 and the North American Conference
of Homophile Organizations came
into being in 1966.
These groups completely changed
the public discourse about
homosexuality in the entire country.
Without these homophile groups
nothing that happened in 1969 and the
years afterward would have been
possible. In praising Stonewall, as we
do now, we all too often
completely erase the profoundly
important work that these groups did
for nearly two decades. Stonewall was,
in a very real sense, both a
continuation of this work as well as a
radical break from it, as it
brought the very idea of homosexuality
from the realm of the private
into the public world of the street and
used anger, not reason, as its
impetus.
The second thing I try to impress
on my students is that without
the prevalence of the Vietnam War
protests, without the women's
liberation movement, without the
example of the Black Panthers, the
Young Lords, and the counter culture's
mantra of 'sex, drugs and rock
and roll,' there would have been
no Stonewall riots. There would
have been no gay liberation movement
(at least not as it happened in
1969.) The queens -- and let's remember
that they were aided by the
street people in the Village, men and
women we would now call homeless
-- rioted at Stonewall because
everybody was rioting; they protested
because everyone was protesting. The
Stonewall riots were completely in
sync with the crazy, frantic, angry,
and yes, sometimes heedless
political activities -- including the
bombings by anti-war groups like
the Weather Underground, as we were
reminded of so frequently during
this past election -- of the late
1960s.
The gay liberation movement was
not made up of non-
profit groups raising funds and
lobbying to enact laws.
It was a grassroots movement, a
groundswell of women and men who had
reached the breaking point. The first
major gay activist group to form
after Stonewall was the Gay Liberation
Front -- a name borrowed from
the Woman's Liberation Front, which in
turn borrowed it from the
Vietnamese National Liberation Front,
which claimed the spirit and
moniker of the Algerian National
Liberation Front, which fought French
domination in Northern Africa. The
phrase 'gay is good' was
derived from 'black is
beautiful.' Gay power emerged
naturally
from black power.
It wasn't that we were copying
other movements, but that we saw
ourselves as part of a broader
struggle. Gay liberation was possible
because the whole culture was being
transformed and transfigured.
Considering the enormous changes that
took place as a result of these
movements, it truly was the second
American Revolution. There was a
decisive break, and afterward things
were different for gays, women,
people of color, and young people. It
may not look like that now -- or
at least not all the time -- but
America changed in those years, and
all for the better.
But even as I write this I feel
that there are details missing.
While all of these connections are true
-- even as they are forgotten
in most remembrances of Stonewall --
they lack concrete details and
feel like radical rhetoric. So let's
look at exactly what was going on
during the five years before Stonewall
that, along with the important
work the homophile movement had done,
set the stage for this remarkable
event. As Bob Dylan sang in 1964, 'The
Times they are
a-Changin',' and when we look
back at the massive cultural and
political changes that were occurring,
it is impossible to imagine that
Stonewall wasn't inevitable.
In March of 1964, Cesar Chavez
and the grape pickers union called
for the first nationwide boycott of
California grapes, while at the
same time the University of California
Berkeley closed its campus in
response to students demanding their
right to speak out against the war
in Vietnam. Later that month, the
Supreme Court granted married couples
right to birth control. In response to
an increasingly angry civil
rights movement, Congress passed the
Civil Rights Act in June. Even
with this minor commitment to justice
the next year ushered in a wave
of violence.
In February of 1965, Malcolm X
was assassinated, and while
Congress passed the Voting Rights Act
guaranteeing federal protection
for voter registration, August saw the
first truly serious race riots
in Los Angeles in which almost 1,000
buildings in the Watts
neighborhood were looted, burned or
destroyed. As if the world wasn't
mad enough, Harvard professor Timothy
Leary urged Americans to 'turn
on, tune in, drop out' -- the
drug revolution hit the streets.
In 1966, race riots destroyed
large sections of Chicago and three
African-American teenagers were killed
by National Guard troops. Things
only got worse in 1967 as full-scale
riots in Detroit and Newark, as
well as serious conflicts in 33 other
cities, left 66 people dead and
10,000 more homeless. Antiwar protests
escalated as the US sent nearly
half a million soldiers to Vietnam,
many of them African-American men
from the inner cities. On the domestic
front, CBS ran a groundbreaking
news show called 'The Homosexuals,'
which was the first time
self-identified gays talked about their
lives on television. In
November, the Oscar Wilde Bookshop
opened on Mercer Street in Greenwich
Village -- the first gay bookstore in
the world.
In April of 1968, the
assassination of Martin Luther King led
to
riots across the country that left 39
people dead and thousands of
others hurt. Robert Kennedy was
assassinated two months later. In the
midst of this gays become more visible
when Mart Crowley's
groundbreaking play The Boys in the
Band opened on Broadway. Women's
liberation became increasingly visible
when feminists staged a mass
demonstration at the Miss America
pageant in September. In the midst of
this upheaval it made perfect sense
that a frightened America would
elect Republican Richard Nixon to the
presidency that November.
It was really only matter of time
before gays got angry enough to
start fighting back. Beginning in March
of 1969, the New York Police
Department stepped up its periodic
raids on gay bars; the June 28 raid
on the Stonewall Inn was simply
business as usual. After three nights
of unrest women and men began to
organize and weeks later the formation
of the Gay Liberation Front was
announced. The group was a direct, and
important, result of the Stonewall
riots.
But Stonewall was not the end of
this national narrative, just a
small moment in time. Two months after
the birth of the Gay Liberation
Front, Students for a Democratic
Society staged its largest national
demonstrations. National protests
against the war in Vietnam increased
and in November an unprecedented
quarter million people marched on the
Pentagon. Although inconceivable a
decade earlier, American society was
in full-throttle revolt against racism,
oppression of women, sexual
repression and the deadly foreign
policies that were destroying lives
in the US and abroad. Is it any
surprise that by the middle of 1970
there were already more than 300
independent chapters of the Gay
Liberation Front across the country? It
wasn't just that gay liberation
was an idea whose time was ripe, but
rather that in this context of
multiple fights for massive social
change it was an idea that was
inevitable.
What was incredible about the Gay
Liberation Front, and what is
so sorely missing from our gay rights
movements now, is that it saw
itself as a multi-issue radical
movement.
It was as concerned with ending wars
abroad, fighting racism and
securing reproductive freedom for women
as it was with fighting
homophobia. Members of the Gay
Liberation Front also understood that
they needed, pragmatically and
philosophically, to work in coalition
with other movements.
For me, as a young queer who had
already been working with
Students for a Democratic Society and
had been involved in civil rights
and women's rights issues, gay
liberation was a revelation that
brought
together all my political and emotional
concerns.
The vision of the Gay Liberation Front
linked freedom for gays to the
freedom of all other oppressed groups.
It is a vision that neither the
homophile groups that preceded it nor
the gay rights groups that
followed understood or embraced. It is
a lesson the gay rights movement
just might be learning now.
The importance of Stonewall
resides not in a sentimental vision
of it as a sort of community coming-out
story but in its unique place
in the panoply of movements, events,
riots, demonstrations, political
actions, social revolts, bad behaviors,
and bursts of anger that
defined the second half of the 1960s.
By all means, let's celebrate the
40th anniversary of Stonewall this
month but let's also remember that
it is not just about gay equality; it
is about the broadest vision of
social change and social justice the US
has experienced in our
lifetimes.
|