Guest Editorial: We all have the right to be proud, even if you’re gay

Photo by Sharon McCutcheon on Pexels.com

by D. Kevin McNeir – Senior Editor, Washington Informer

The month of June is upon us and with it comes a host of activities related to Pride Month.

For those who may be unaware, Pride Month represents that time each year when Americans celebrate the lives and contributions of those who represent the LGBTQ community. And while cities like D.C. will finally get the chance to hold those highly-anticipated parades, parties, high heel races and other activities, the reality remains that many Americans, behind closed doors, would prefer that gay folk just disappear. Of course, the same could be said about Black people too, given the level of recent efforts to turn the clock backwards.

Still, as an advertisement for Virginia Slims cigarettes proclaimed back in the 70s, “we’ve come a long way, baby.” And indeed, for those who are part of the LGBTQ family, there are many reasons to celebrate.

Gone are the laws that forced gays and lesbians to live in the closet with fear. Medical advancements have made it possible to contract the HIV virus and still anticipate enjoying decades of a full and fruitful life. In some parts of the nation, it’s even possible for same-gender couples to marry or adopt children.

But like our nation’s sickness of racism that has been on our shores since America’s founding, there remain many Americans who look down on those who chose to live their lives and follow their destinies with alternative lifestyles. Challenges and threats lodged against those who are transgender have increased, often including heinous acts of violence.

Despite the parades and well-wishes, it’s still not safe to be gay in America.

Some members of the LGBTQ community still cannot freely worship in the churches, synagogues or mosques that have long empowered and sustained their families because of discrimination.

That’s why Pride Month and its related activities was first proposed decades ago. And that’s why they are still important and necessary, particularly for younger Americans who wrestle with their sexual identity and seek to embrace the person they feel they were born to be.

As a little boy, I remember my mother, an elementary school teacher, sharing a song with me and her pupils which said, “I’m proud to be me. But I also see. You’re just as proud to be you.”

I have always believed that this song and its lyrics were almost prophetic. After all, we all deserve the right to be “ourselves,” no matter how different that choice may be from the choices made by others.

If James Brown could lead us in shouting, “Say it loud, I’m Black and I’m proud,” then why can’t those who are part of the LGBTQ community shout similar refrains?

Make no mistake. Being gay is not an easy path to follow or lifestyle to embrace. Sometimes, it’s far easier to stay in the closet, clinging to our shirts or skirts.

And yet, despite the ridicule, the rebuke, the dangers, the hatred, the ostracizing that are often part and parcel to being LGBTQ, men, women and children who live that reality refuse to be deterred.

That’s what Pride Month has long represented – lifting up those rare tales of victory amidst a much larger narrative of hatred, sorrow and death.

So, happy Pride Month to all.

Let’s not forget, we’re all God’s children and are all worthy of being respected –even if the flag you wave is one that’s rainbow-colored.

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