http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
This post/poem has been available on my gay-interest blog for a few years. I am repeating it here at the request of an overseas reader whose best friend was beaten to death by gang of homophobic thugs only last year. No witnesses have come forward so the perpetrators have not been identified. To date, no one has been charged with the young man’s senseless murder.
Now, it is one of the many tragedies of modern life that there are (still) people and groups of people that are so screwed up as to want to see an gay or transgender person hurt, even dead.
Politics, religion, a common humanity…all have their part to play in getting the message across to certain pockets of society that gay and transgender folks are just ordinary people who want to be left to go about their daily lives in peace. How we like sex and with whom is our own business.
Does a perspective on how (or even if) we like sex loom large in our appreciation of society as a whole? Did I hear you answer, no? So why should it matter if a person is gay?
Gay people are not irreligious monsters, although some religions would (still) make us outcasts…or worse.
It is also a myth that gay people are paedophiles. Historically, the vast majority of paedophiles are screwed up heterosexuals.
So come on, you holier-than-thou brigade and you others too busy playing lip service to political correctness to see the wood for trees…give us gay people (among others, worldwide) a chance to prove our worth, yeah?
What’s that? Gay people have never had it so good, did you say?
In 76 countries, gay relationships are still a criminal offence and punishable by death in six.
As with all forms of prejudice, the expression it takes is likely to turn on the socio-cultural-religious/ home-school-work environment in which people live…in a century that still has one hell of a lot to learn about love, peace, and a common humanity.
Gay bashing is not the only form of hate crime of course; none should be tolerated by decent people, local communities or countries worldwide.
A GAY BASHING
Found him late at night, bleeding
His fine features an ugly sight,
Left near drowning in a sea of sirens,
Copyright R. N. Taber 2005; 2019
[Note: An earlier version of this poem appears in A Feeling for the Quickness of Time by R. N. Taber, Assembly Books, 2005.]
This post/poem has been available on my gay-interest blog for a few years. I am repeating it here at the request of an overseas reader whose best friend was beaten to death by gang of homophobic thugs only last year. No witnesses have come forward so the perpetrators have not been identified. To date, no one has been charged with the young man’s senseless murder.
Meanwhile, I know of at least one
closet gay reader who has participated in n attack on another gay man because
he did not want to lose face with his so-called 'friends'. (What is it
with some societies that they continue to impose pressure on LGBT people to
play chameleon rather than look the world in the eye as they are?)
Now, it is one of the many tragedies of modern life that there are (still) people and groups of people that are so screwed up as to want to see an gay or transgender person hurt, even dead.
Politics, religion, a common humanity…all have their part to play in getting the message across to certain pockets of society that gay and transgender folks are just ordinary people who want to be left to go about their daily lives in peace. How we like sex and with whom is our own business.
Does a perspective on how (or even if) we like sex loom large in our appreciation of society as a whole? Did I hear you answer, no? So why should it matter if a person is gay?
Gay people are not irreligious monsters, although some religions would (still) make us outcasts…or worse.
It is also a myth that gay people are paedophiles. Historically, the vast majority of paedophiles are screwed up heterosexuals.
So come on, you holier-than-thou brigade and you others too busy playing lip service to political correctness to see the wood for trees…give us gay people (among others, worldwide) a chance to prove our worth, yeah?
What’s that? Gay people have never had it so good, did you say?
In 76 countries, gay relationships are still a criminal offence and punishable by death in six.
As with all forms of prejudice, the expression it takes is likely to turn on the socio-cultural-religious/ home-school-work environment in which people live…in a century that still has one hell of a lot to learn about love, peace, and a common humanity.
Gay bashing is not the only form of hate crime of course; none should be tolerated by decent people, local communities or countries worldwide.
A GAY BASHING
Found him late at night, bleeding
in
a street gutter, near dead
His fine features an ugly sight,
white
shirt turning red...
Called
an ambulance, did all I could
to
comfort, help ease his pain,
but
it seemed a long time coming,
and
he but barely breathing
as
I struggled to speak, anxious
he
stay awake, so scared
for
him that he close his eyes
never
to hear a human voice again,
feel
its warmth spread over him
like
my overcoat, not yells of abuse
chasing
him down centuries,
spilling
their ignorance and hate
on
streets much like this one
with
more horrendous tales to relate
for any who care to listen
A light rain began to fall like
tears
(a God of Love empathising?)
I, too, wept that he might even
die
believing the world against him
and siding with its sick
homophobes
even
though a part of me knew
it
was already too late - for them
as
for him - given a world
barely
even paying lip service
to
LGBT folks in parts,
hearts
sporting logos set in tablets
of stone, fronting public roles
that embrace liberality and
equality
while inwardly egging on
the
sheer bestiality of any criminality
seen
as justified wherever LGBT
spells SCUM,
deserving no less,
no
matter if (supposedly) we all of us
share
a common humanity
Left near drowning in a sea of sirens,
we'll
yet draw strength from straws
Copyright R. N. Taber 2005; 2019
[Note: An earlier version of this poem appears in A Feeling for the Quickness of Time by R. N. Taber, Assembly Books, 2005.]
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please keep any comments brief and to the point. No jokers please.