Alef: The NEXT Conversation




Gay Pride 2011


President Clinton officially declared June to be Gay and Lesbian Pride Month back in 2000 (and Obama updated the terminology to include LGBT in 2009) but the celebration and what it stands for dates back well before the turn of this century and spans far beyond the reach of US borders. The Gay Pride Parade has already happened in Tel Aviv (and we’ve found the photographic evidence to prove it), but you can surely find events throughout the rest of the month that are significantly closer to home.

Last June, Alef ran a multi-week issue on just this subject, featuring writers of various genders and sexual orientations who even today are exploring what how they play a part in the greater Jewish community.

Also this time last year Lynn Schusterman – a major player in the Jewish community – wrote an op-ed urging all of us to be fully inclusive of the LGBT members of our Jewish communities.

If this is an issue that really gets you going, we STRONGLY encourage you to check out an organization called Keshet – they specialize in advocating for the inclusion of all gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Jews.  Alef did an interview with Keshet Executive Director, Idit Klein as part of our first Gay Pride issue.

Photo by Whistling in the Dark, licensed under Creative Commons.

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Why Gay Pride Matters to Alef


By Richard Skeen

Pride Star-of-David falgAlef editorial meetings are usually lively and opinionated (would you expect anything different?), but in a recent meeting where we decided to extend our Gay Pride issue an extra week, the difference in our views struck me as a story within a story. The debate was around how much of our audience – young Jewish adults – cared enough about Gay Pride stories to sustain another week. While traffic and participation suggested the theme resonated with many, some from our team argued that Gay Jewish identity was no different than any other Jewish identity, and shouldn’t get an extra week. How central, in the context of Jewish identity, is Gay Pride?

Today is the Gay Pride parade in lower Manhattan, my old neighborhood. While dropping kids off at Summer camp precludes me from actively participating, this day always brings me back to fond memories of my first New York home. I lived just off Gay Street (named after the Captain, not the identity, but still…), two blocks from the Stonewall Tavern (the birthplace of the American Gay rights movement – think Paul Revere, but riding in leather chaps) in the heart of Greenwich Village. My neighborhood, like the fashion magazine world I worked in, was bursting with LGBT folks drawn to the lack of prejudice and the vibrant scene of the Village. And while I was a floundering heterosexual, I was a huge beneficiary of living amongst my Gay neighbors: from top flight gyms and restaurants to colorful and clever stoops and doorways, the wide array of boutique shops to a happy-vibe on the sidewalks, the huge Gay presence created a kind of utopia and richer life for all of us.

While the various Jewish denominations take different views on same-sex marriage and the kind of love permissible under Halacha (Jewish law), our people have a better track record than most when it comes to Gay rights. Certainly among young Jewish adults, full acceptance of, and support for gay rights is common. Israel’s gay-rights record is well ahead of the curve, and Tel Aviv is among the top Gay vacation spots in the world. But is that good enough?

In a recent essay about the importance of including the LGBT community completely into the Jewish community, philanthropist Lynn Schusterman argues that despite much progress, we are still behind where we should be in providing an inclusive environment for all Jews: “In an era when all Jews are Jews by choice, our community and, in turn, our nation benefits from every source of Jewish vitality and strength, including the creativity and vibrancy of LGBT Jews.”

Though still new, Alef has explored many kinds of Jewish identity, and the issues confronted with being Jewish in a world that is pluralistic and complicated. We have learned a lot, been inspired and come to realize the huge value in the vast diversity of the contemporary Jewish experience. We recognize that many issues are nuanced and complex, but we are sure that the Jewish community is richer for having participation from the LGBT community, and hope that all of Kol Yisrael will work to grow that participation. We think this is important, and we hope you do too.

Photo by sgt fun, licensed under Creative Commons.

Read more posts from the Gay Pride issue.

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Being a Better Jew Helps Me Become a Better Queer


How Being a Better Jew Helps Me Become a Better Queer Helps Me Become a Better Jew
by Jake Goodman

ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
אשר נתן לשכוי בינה להבחין בין יום ובין לילה
Praised be the Eternal One
Who gave my heart understanding to distinguish between day and night
I don’t know any great Truths
But
Sometimes
There is Right and there is Wrong
And I can understand the difference
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
שעשני ישראל
Praised be the Eternal One
Who has made me Yisrael
My instinct is to run away
To send everything I love down the river
To hide alone in the darkness
But I’ve struggled with my shame
And I won
I’m here to take what is mine
Even if I have to take it back
From you
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
שעשני בן חורין
Praised be the Eternal One
Who has made me to be free
Life has many closets
And my life’s work
Is to destroy every one of them
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
פוקח עורים
Praised be the Eternal One

Who helps the blind to see

  • “As many as 40% of the homeless youth in the United States are LGBT.”  (Source:  Ali Forney Center)
  • “There is no federal law that consistently protects LGBT individuals from employment discrimination; it remains legal in 29 states to discriminate based on sexual orientation, and in 38 states to do so based on gender identity or expression.”  (Source:  Human Rights Campaign)
  • 1,138 rights and responsibilities are bestowed upon married couples.  Additional rights and responsibilities come from state governments with a marriage license – 1,324 in New York State, to give one example.  (Source:  Empire State Pride Agenda)
  • Since its implementation in 1994, more than 13,500 service members have been fired under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, a law that mandates the discharge of openly gay, lesbian and bisexual service members.  (Source:  Servicemembers Legal Defense Network)
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
מלביש ערמים
Praised be the Eternal One
Who clothes the naked
Lies!
Enabling delusion!
If not me, who?
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
מתיר אסורים
Praised be the Eternal One
Who releases the bound
I am Somebody
I deserve full equality
Right here
Right now
I am Somebody
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
זוקף כפופים
Praised be the Eternal One
Who straightens the bent

ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
שעשני לי כל צרכי
Praised be the Eternal One
Who has provided me every need
I have the time, the resources, the energy
To help those who do not have every need
I must step outside my own privilege
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
המכין מצעדי-גבר
Praised be the Eternal One
Who makes firm our footsteps
Now is the time for bold steps
I must step outside my own privilege
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
עוזר ישראל בגבורה
Praised be the Eternal One
Who girds Israel with strength
There was a time when we were weak
There was a time when we were the victims
There was a time when it took all our strength just to survive
For some, it is still that time
I must step outside my own privilege
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
עוטר ישראל בתפארה
Praised be the Eternal One
Who crowns Israel with splendor
We are powerful
We are subjects to no one
We are fabulous!
We are queens!
We must step outside our own privilege
ברוך אתה יי אלהינו מלך העןלם
הנותן ליעף כח
Praised be the Eternal One
Who gives strength to the weary
The odds against us are not too great
Full equality is not an idealistic impossibility
It is an inevitability
This is not a spectator sport
If I do not try to see and act outside of my own privilege
I will be on the wrong side of history

Read more posts from the Gay Pride issue.

Photo by Jnyemb, licensed under Creative Commons.

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