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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 2003)
a g i 1 fl. 2003 and support the troops, and to some degree that’s always been the case. There was a strong pacifist m ovem ent before World War II, hut once Pearl Harbor h it...th e coun try was united for that period o f time,” he says. “ It will take some time for this to play * ** out. Dixon sees the connection between his sex ual orientation and his opinion about the war. “ I may he a little more skeptical about accepting the position o f my government, because I know there’s a huge amount of hypocrisy involved in how the government treats gays and les bians and, in particu lar, gay and lesbian servicem em bers,” he says. “S o I suppose it’s easier for me to ques tion the official line.” R eady FOR A T tC X ). “We have got to connect up with other movements and specifically with the peace movement if our work is going to have any meaning at all,” she says. “Queer people are a people who are defined by the way we love, and I think that it therefore falls to us to take leader ship in this peace movement.” hree months ago Catherine Sameh, founder of the women’s bookstore In Other Words, formed a new group to give activists a forum where they could discuss the connections T between radical queer politics and the peace movement and learn how to become more visi ble advocates for change. Out Against the War’s first meeting Jan. 19 drew a wide array of people, including anar chists, socialists, femi nists and unionists. Par ticipants critiqued capi talism, linked cuts in social services to esca lating militarism and called for a practical organizing response. Barbara Turrill, Les bian Community Project Barbara Turrill board chairwoman, has been involved in Out Against the War ever since. She believes queers, as a marginalized community, can relate to what the Iraqis are enduring. “We have a lot in common with some peo ple who are dealing with poverty issues, with issues related to racism and gender issues and all the social service cuts that have happened over the last couple of months,” she says. “We’re really familiar with being pushed to the edge like that, of being perceived as a commu nity that can be almost disregarded.... The war seems to be an effort to do the same, only in a different country.” Out Against the War made its presence known to the “mainstream” peace community by holding a feeder march during one of last month’s peace protests downtown. According to Turrill, the group has given activists a much- needed space to talk about their personal beliefs, the war and the increased stress they are feeling right now. “In general, I think whenever civil rights are threatened, the queer community is threat ened,” she says. “ It’s much easier to control peo ple when they’re afraid, so anyone who lives on a margin or is perceived as being different has much less security.” J H P ride at W ork O regon will hold its monthly meeangfrom 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. April 22 at O k Communication Workers of America Local 7901 , 2950 S.E. Stork St. For more information call 503-5 16-2498 or e-mail prideatworkpdx@yahoo.com. O ut A gainst the W ar will meet 7 p.m. April 27 at the Bread and Roses Center, 819 N. Killingsworth S t., and 7 p.m. May 4 at In Other Words, 3734 S.E . Hawthorne Blvd. For more information call Catherine Sameh at 503-335-8306 or Cheryl Nolly at 503-238-8591. The L esbian C ommunity P roject and the W omen ’ s I nternational L eague for P eace AND F reedom will co-sponsor a forum on how the Homeland Security Act affects women and queers from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. May 23 at the Northwest Cultural Center, 1819 N.W. Everett St. For mefte informatum call 503-227-0605. PHOTO BY s onnie Tinker says she i was a peace activist long before she became a Bonnie Tinker lesbian activist. But then her attention was diverted to her role as executive director of Love Makes a Family, which advtxates for queer parents. | “There really wasn’t room in the o peace movement for people who were | out queer activists 10 years ago,” she says. “Queer people are so busy trying to just ® maintain survival rights ourselves that we “ haven’t had a lot of energy to put into the ‘other issues.’ ” During 1991’s Gulf War most gay men and lesbians had other things on their minds— namely Ballot Measure 9, which would have specified that they were “perverse” and “abnormal” in the Oregon Constitution. Tinker likens the current war on terrorism to the “cultur al war” declared by anti-gay leader Lon Mabon. “It’s essentially those same people who are now pushing the military invasion of Iraq,” she says. “It’s the Oregon Citizens Alliance and the Christian C oali tion... who are sponsoring the pro-troop rallies. Their agenda is, quite simply, Christian dominance of the world, and they see that as a good thing.” Tinker realizes that not all gay, les bian, bi and trans people are opposed to the war and that she could losing funding from donors who disagree with her orga nization’s stance. But when the future of the planet is at stake, she believes it’s worth the risk. “For LG BT people it really behooves us to remember that if we don’t maintain a healthy respect for diversity and a healthy respect for the nonviolent resolution of conflict, we don’t sur vive,” she says. “The attack on Iraq is fundamen tally an attack from people...who do not respect even diversity of religion, much less sexual orien tation. And if they take over the world, we’re not gonna come out on top.” Love Makes a Family held a workshop April 12 to teach activists how to practice nonvi olent communication skills when speaking up for peace. According to Tinker, the program origi nally was developed as a way to talk to homo- phobic people during ballot measure campaigns but can be applied to the anti-war movement, c t io n ? he war on Iraq has left many members of the sexual minorities community feeling power less about what they can do to get their message through to the U.S. government. Here is some advice provided by leaders of the queer peace movement to help remedy this: • Express yourself. Identify yourself as a pacifist by talking to friends, participating in rallies, wear ing buttons, posting bumper stickers, contacting elected officials and writing letters to the editor. • Open your mind. Read international news sources and attend lectures, films and workshops related to the war. • Family matters. Help gay and lesbian servicemembers’ relatives, who can’t seek assistance if their loved ones are killed, injured or captured on the battlefield. • Give a little bit. Organizations like Servicemembers Legal Defense Network need financial support. But don’t forget all of the community groups that are doing day-to-day work in fighting AIDS, discrimination, etc. • G o online: Electronic activism is thriving at MoveOn.org and TrueMajority.org. • Vote. For registration information visit www.sos.state.or.us. | j É 1 a